The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 18, 1900, Page 7

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AIUEEKENT& (SN THE HIT OF HITS! HOPKINS TRANS-OCEANIC VAUD‘?VLLLE COMPANY PHEUM HILDE Wnk ING BIP.L: U a‘T\“hIHE ) SEE REMFMBER WEEK OF A R NifLLOK: KuMANCE z - Excellently Pre- v\R JA fl S NEILL S SUF RI3 COMPANY. “CAPTAIN LEHLRéfum" BEA TI *"E”Mé’@LE* AMIAWIZ? CONME AND SEE! F‘\GP“O‘ S “UCCESS “THE wl’ZK“RD pular ". COLUME!A s An Unceasing Rush for Seats ! wm. H. \.‘UI:\S'K s BIG thios Bataniny OPERA HOUSE LE CITY YORK 'S FAMOUS— AN BIRL = "fiff’r? “R "WEEK ano CONTINUED SUCCESS! “QU0 VADIS!” & "H A SUCCESS AT THE ZAR. D EFORE A Seats Six Days in Advance. Pn.Cr_S—iac 2.¢, 85¢, 50c. oL YMm PIA T EDDY ST., COR. MASON #° VAUDEVILLE SHOW IN | CITY. L‘) EROTHERS, Head-to-head Balancers. ROV THE Bl '\t.‘( BARTONS of Colored Comedy. “AYMOND, 4 Lady Cornetist. STOCK COMPANY. ANT N FREE. ERY FRIDAY. C'?;\CEI\T HOUSE {72124 O'FARRELL ST. i rop T PEOPLE. K’E"(A 0R) UNE DIME! | Vot “Fite RUSH. CHUTES AND 200. =_1,Ag;_-;_« IHT THE AMAT! | HANDICAP. | TCURS AT CAKEWALX CONTEST SATURDAY NIGHT. Phone for Seats, Park 23. | THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, 0 TEACH CITY GOVERNMENT IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS | Board of Education Has the Proposition Now Under Consideration. —— Directors Mark and Kineaid Approve the Practical Study and Will In- troduce It on a Small Scale Next Term. ORI {T The Board of E ering cation, Is now consid- introduce the practical 1l government in the his city. The plan con- peration of a “'school city,” panying official depart- heads, and has been d in one of the a to plax rticles have been pub- which 1 in several of the ates has been de- d the local School a of giving the subject at the make all the necessary this very important ernment to the course e largest schools.” Schools Webster i: t the result. He fs Iflun. but as he has ghly into it he sa: ed to modify his further investi- s that the danger introduction of a bad 1 the proposition and of discipline, which 1s introduced in one of s, iE:ALL FOR REPUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION, In accordanc | PUBLICAN ~a rention ons given by the trict, in the same f a Representative said district; therefore, REPUBLICAN ~ STATE CALIFORNIA, of eald £ the absence of the del. election of the delegates of the lon shall be under the direc- gressionzl Committee of euch accordance with the call of the mgressional Conventions shall b One delegate for each As {ot within the Congres that where any A re than one cou egate for each county a county in such As one delegate for each 30 Gage, Republican and one delegate for each frac- fractional District, for Henew r . for the election of a State ittee, and for the transaction of art business as may be brought be- fore the eaid Stats Convention. ected that where primary 3 E 4 that contests must be ¢ of the Congressional riting, with a full statement s of the contest, five days pre- convention. ‘contest before the said Commit- must be transmit- ate Central Com- acon of the 1ith Committoe n therein, retary of the S menta, before A 1600, - acpted by the REPUBLICAN TRAL COMMITTEE at San €. 1500 AR " Secritary. AEW WESTERN HOTEL, NY AND modeled and removated. KING, WARD & European plan. Rooms, ic to $1 50 day: $ 10 3§ week; 38 to $20 month. Free baths e2d colg watér every room: fire grates in ¢ oy : elevatar runs ail night. W, T. HESS, NOTARY PUSLiJ AND LTTURNZY-AT-LAW, Tenth Floor, Room 1015, Claus Spreckels Blag. ‘Teiephone Brown $3L Residence, 521 Celifornia st., below Powell. | gan Francie SUMMER RESORTS. 'THE GEYSERS, fome ONE OF NATURE'S WONDERS. Natural steam baths, swimming, fishing, Senting nad Tivey:. Welke T pasghier Y WERTHEIM Manager. AMUSEMENTS. CENTRAL PARK, &% fet TWO WEEKS, Beginning Saturday. April 14th, GENTRY’S o2 Fo Trained Animal Show! Larger and_Grander than Ever, Twice its ‘ former size. Three Hundred Elephants, Ponies, | Monkeys and Dogs. Giving positively the most umque and povel exhibition ever witnessed under canves =Kepreseniing the highest pos- sible_deveiopment of animal intelligence. 76— | WONDERFUL ACTS 7. More startiing and difficult than ever performed by their human prototypes in the sawdust aren: The fad of ihe fashicnables and an instructive show for old | and youns. A most moral and refined enter- | and . best dressed ex- | | Markst ‘The cleanest on tour. Admisgion—~Children, 10c; 2ic. Performance at 3 o'clock after- noon, §:30 night. See Grapd Parade at noon | each'anv Ehow rain ar ~iine. | WESTERN TURF ASSOCIATION. TANFORA i PARK. SIXTH MEETING, April § to 20, inclusive. £ix bigh-class runfiing races every week day, rain or shine, beginniug at 1:30 p. m. e idenl winter Tacetrack of America. Pa- | trons step directly from the railroad cars into a superb grand stand, glass-inciosed, where, | comfortably housed in bad weather, tney can enjoy an unobstructed view of the races. rains leave Third and Townsend streets at 20:00, 10:40 and 11:30 a. m. and 12:15, 12:35, 12:60 nnd 1:25 p. m., returning Immldhuly after the successful | said Mrs. Kincald, | resent time, | of | act in case the delogates | GETTING CLO SE UPON CHARGES OF FORGERY —_————— Photographs, Checks and Letters Take Place of Sensational Testimony in the Fair Case. 0400000000 =SS Z= ey .2/ 92, [(laa e an asas b oo ae ae el sl CONTRACT SIGNATURE BETWEEN TWO OTHERS TAKEN FROM CHECKS, ITNESSES who saw and heard have made their exit in the Fair ul 13 -gg B o o f i of the cavernous sable box, but all WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, of Senator Fair drawn from {he recesses that 1900. BUT ONE NEW PLAGUE CASE AT HONOLULU o Girl Thirteen Years of Age Succumbs to the Disease. President Dole Arcuses a Storm of Protest by Naming an Unpop- ular Fire Claims Board. e HONOLULU, April 10.—But one case of plague has been reported since last ad- vices. The case was that of a half-caste girl, aged 13 years, ending fatally. Two suspiclous cases of sickness were reported on the 6th at Koolau, a small village on this island. The attending doctor reported the cases as being plague. Two ph from this city were sent out, making examination, declared there were no indications of plague. Hilo and Kahului are both clean agaln. The Hilo peoplc have declared their port a clean one and reqt that no shipments be made from Honoluin For the first time since the outbreak of the plague the steamer Australia will be allowed to carry stecrage passengers from this port for San Francisc: will leave hern on the 17th with Iwr steer- acked with men who have been wait- s to get out of u. olulu. tive order bearing date that court of commizsioners to ta 52 Josses caused by the burning of China: town in Honolulu and to make awards and judgmen loss! The court appointed by 3 Kinley. The member: goon, George avis, Andrews, A. Noa Kepoikai and Alfred F. Judd Jr Al are ‘members of the bar. The an- ‘ case for the time being and in :rt;s‘]gs:;r;vf:'*;n 11;{1;?3;*!:“&%‘3 photo- nounoe:‘nem}?[ thelr appointment was not their place has come the expert negal e speci- | received with satisfaction the commu- with his Hncs and dots oot maglcs. . The | mgne of handwriting. nity; in fact it raised a wave of indigna- e zles. | Before Kytka mounted the witness | tion. It s’ considered proper that busi- rtain has fallen on the first act of the | stand and told the court what he knew | ness men should be represented on the respondent’s play and the three charac- |about documentary photography and what | board. ~The Chamber of Commerce has Iva, Dunand and Simpton, have an expert he was. Stewart, the | protested_against the court, The Japan- and g They were called to|? ountant of the F ate, identified | ese and Chinese residents in mass- | oroye that Honsfor Baie anl e Cravae the iture of Jam air on a batch | ing have denounced it, and final ® s of checks. Attorne: Crothers passed | Council of State has ot married with the full solemmty were his work will tend toward of the mar And the pencil deeds luced by the defense in »w_that Mrs. Craven's s-examination that the tor provided for her by a gift of the on and Sansome street properties was false, yme_to pa n\l-;ms‘ns: reach & ur the proof th nim! ad he record of the Should this agreement be i much time and expense will opened yesterday tka, expert in chi- pher of documents, Two Insolvents. Louis Rothenberg, salesman, residing in this city, filed a petition in insolvency t in the United States District liabilities are $34,809 41 and he principa has no l'ln clerk, Sacramento; assets. Gruetli Verein Festival. > spring festiv; the singing sec- the San Francisco Gruetli Verein will take place at Turner Hall, 323 Turk street, next Sunday evening. ADVEBTISEMENTS - of £ ife This is a critical perfod | fm the life of every woman | and no mistakes should be made. The one’rocognized and reliable help for women who are approaching and passing through this | wonderful change is SHINGTON STS.—RE- | That the utmost reliance 'can be piaced upon this great medicine is testi- fied to by am army of grateful women who have | been helped by it. [ { | | Mirs. Pinkham, who has ' the greatest and most | suceessful experionce in the world to qualify her, will advise you free of |charge. Her address is Lynn, iiass. Write io her. $5.00 2 No More Dread of the Deatal Chair’ 22-k Gold Crowns Gold Filllngs.. Si ver Fillings.. Teeth Without Plate... NO PLATES ¥ew York Dental Parlors HISTORY BUILDING, 722 MARKET ST. Portland otfleo—nm?.h and Morrison p. m. Seats in rear cars re- Tved for women and their escorts. No smok- | Tng. Valercla street. 10 minutes later Ean . d Way Stations—Arrive at San Brgnn)‘: . Leave San Druno at 4:00 £ TR Tpaen n, Tenteg, e . ng adm i tncluding mlon, o, ¥ H flllN. Becretary and Mguager. The sec vl.d act will be all for the expert, | creditors are check after check, signed by Senator Fair, |into the evidence. There were twenty-one )f them In the first bundle, ade between the 20th and . the time at which the contract is claimed gned. made and 1894, the time of the pencil deeds, was troduced and Amitted besides !Ellt‘ S written at the same tjme. The Pence attorneys made no objection to the agmission of these check: d let- ters and Yhe cross-examination of Stewart brief. Lafe Pence asked for other checks signed by Senator Fair and was satisfied with the promise of attorneys to produce them at the call. On a_request from Lafe Pence to post- to have Another bundle of signed in Sen(emhnx been pone the trial until to. at 2 p.m. the court adjou: Mrs. Craven's ! nining a d signa tudded arou ind the contiact 1 be the the Fair Before the Mail Boat Got Away. Eleven Out of Twenty-Six Austrian Contract Laborers Bound for Hawaii Made Good Their Escape From Ship. - The Occidental and Orlental Steamship | Company’s steamer Dorlc sailed for the Orfent via Honolulu yesterday with a very large cargo and a crowd of cabin passen- gers, Among the latter were Chang Hai Kwan of the Chinese embassy in Wash- ington, who is going home. Commanders A. R. Condon and George Cowie, U. 8. N., were also passengers. The latter goes out to take charge of the machine shops at Cavite, while the former will take com- mand of one of the warships. J. H. Clai- borne, secretary for Pope & Talbot, is making the trip for his heaith. He takes with him some very fine samples of Cali- fornia woods and will exhibit them in China and Japan. There was a big rumpus just before the Doric got away. Twenty-six contract la- borers were supposed to sail on the vessel, but only fifteen of them materfalized. The men are Austrians and came to the United States under contract to work in the Hawallan canefields. When they reached here they learned what they would have to do In the islands, and all made a break for liberty. large, but when the Doric salled the other fifteen were securely locked up in the forepeak of the ship with a strong guard over them. The Southern Pacific detec- tives are now on the trail of the escapes, and {f they are mughl they will be sent on to Honolulu on the next steamer. Nippon Maru Arrives. The Japanese mall steamer Nippon Maru arrived from the Orient via Hono- lulu ?cdtprdny. There were no new cases of plague reported on the islands, but, nevertheless, Dr, Kinyoun ordered the vessel into quarantine. Late In the after- noon the cabin passengers from Hong- kong and Yokohama were landed, but the Honolulu passengers will be k_Ft aboard until the vessel is released. he cabin passengers on the Nippon Maru were: Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Sims and child, Busbridge, 8. Okada, Aldl >, Terry and in -m Mrs. Morrison, K. Mat- and Mrs, M. Rathlesberger, R. W. Mr. Kabayashi, J. C. W H. Mrs. Paul Devaux, Miss A. L. ek, Niedick, J. E. Aizerats, Tev. Julius Soper, - Sehmide, W J, Réese, W, M Behrens, B L Clank, Br. W. €. Noble, H. Waterhoust and wife, A’ Waterh E. E‘ hillips, A, Gart- Toy X Skidhoit, J. M Patton, 8. Chamberlain Midy 3, MeDorald, Mrs. H N L err; BN dre lon, Hl“ A. P Adnml Miss M. Mr’ and Mrs. C. F. Scholl, J. W. Bergstrol Young Loock, A. C. Paulsmeyer, Mr. and Mrs. K. Matsuno,’ Mi Minton, . Laanz, Dr. F. R. L. Ash, H. F. l‘luh hail, x&;. Burk‘ B e . Farrin n, Cl'llw I Eavon® €' D Vineen Oulbenkun, nitig Tai. M. Keatiokololl. The Nippon Maru brought over 480 Asi- aties in t e steerage. these 266 are Chinese and 214 Japanese. The latter will all be landed, unless it can be proven they come _here as contract laborers. Among the Chinese there is the usual percentage of “native 80l The Mail lt(u‘nfl brings a valuable a larg quantity of raw lmx and belldel 7 packages of oplum and $1,025,000 in treasure. Water Front Notes. The California Navigation Compan: hn purchased two steamers for the mento River trade. When the Kloadlh boom was at its height the Alaska-Yukon Tran: nomuon Company came into ex- istence. It h: three river hoats con- tructed_at the Fulton Iron Woflu—chg ames Eva, Walter J. Scammel Iing. The James Eva was Tosts while one or Bnnd M;l,:rwvedwaf Rumpus on the Doric Just| Elcven of them are still at | priate the money nece: to carry on its work. The only way out of the difficulty will be for President Dole to request the resignations of the court and then appoint new men who wiil be ac- ceptable to the business interests. | _“T certainly will not ask the members of the Court of Claims to resign,’” said Pr dent Dole. But notwithstanding the Pre: ident’'s desire not to change the court, it is believed that public opinion will compel him to change his mind. Friends of the Forest. Lincoln Lodge No. 2, Friends of the For- est, has arranged for a social to be given to its friends in its lodge room in Odd Fel- lows' building, when an entertaining pro- gramme will be presented. Mizpah Lodge No, 4 ot the same order will give an en- t nment and dance in Mission Opera to-morrow evening, on which occa- a number of people well known in Mission district will 2 ir and take the part. O+t + 4444444 44444440 two other disasters ruined the and Barling The Scammell P since been lying at the Fulton Iron Works, but now they ar ] t retirement and join the Cali gation Company's fleet. he has been renamed the Onisho of the calling places for the s the Sacramento River. The Norwegian steamer from Port Arthur ard Viad last yesterday. She is consi | Blum & Co., and will load Riv Last_year a big fi of salling vesseis londed here and on the Sound for ‘hl‘ Siberian cost, but this year not a wind jammer will be chartered. Instead tramp steamers will do the work, and the Tyr is the first of the fleet to get here, and will make her initial trip up the river Max K . manager of the Humboldt Steamship Compa is_on a fying visit to the city. He was in Eureka last wee and leaves for Seattle next Friday. The steamer Humboldt I now on the Tun be- tween Seattle and Skaguay The naval reserve training ship will not come down from the for three weeks. It will be a fort before the Government can finish pa. ing and cleaning her. The Sunday after she is turned over Captain James and his Jolly tars will go to Mare Island and bring her down to San Franeisco. The ex-transport Westminster has been purchased by John Rosenfeld’s Sons and will In future carry coal from Nanaimo, B. C., to Ban Francisco. o { Talk about snaps. Puy a kodak and vou can take all the snaps you come to. It's a new line with us, but our line of photographic supplies is the most com- lete in the city. We carry a full line of Eastman’s Kodaks. We do printing. de- veloping and mounting in the latest styles. Try us. Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Market street. e e After five years of effort the Methodist churches of Albany are free of debt. — e a pair at the Boston Shoe Co., 775 Market.* HOTEL ARRIVALS. W WESTERN | HOTEL. |L Perkins, Vanec ‘H Buck, Vancouver D M Hawley & w, Ind IM Hull & w, Cal’ |F A Brown & w, Wash /H Wulff & w, B C J J Roomey, Stockton G Hatch, Sunol 1 ¥ R Orende. ¥ Turner, San Diero P W Olwell, Modesto |PJ McDermott, Cal W H Judson, Cel Grenfell & d, Cal R P Judsen, Los Ang |W B Hunt, Oakdaie PALACE HOTEL. Armistead, Va_(Mrs W G Mercier. Ia Kahn, Stanford | Miss M Mercler, Ia Watson, Sacto - [G W Mercler, Tawa Cramer, N Y Mrs W J Owens, [ Hensley, M: Miss Owens, Va 1 Clark &'w. NY, W i Knapp, W B Ayer, Portland%|J S T & w, Gepningham, Oaicd | 11 Lefavor & w,USN H Va ape, Bates, San Mateo |J B Osborne, Atlanta Chancey, Cal |Gen C A Lack; N o Mrs E Morrison, China F R Day & w, Honolu € P Devaux, Belgium O F_Aldis, Chicago |O W Aldis, Chicaro H_Guiberkiar, ke W G Martin, Germany P Niedieck, 'Lobberick V A Busbridge, Engld A G Williams, 'Eneind W_ Rottisberger & w, Fresno| Boston E Short & w, Koenig, Leite & w, Chicago! Steward, Chicaxo Curtis, Towa v Penfield. Chicexo well, Los Ang \lennn L Johnson, N Y A Frankenverz, N Y isse N Whelbey, N Y/H H Stout & w, UB A GRAND HOTEL. C Hills, Oroville G Turner & w, Modsto W _Hartley, VacavilMr Schmidt, L' Ang A Boggs, St Louls |J C Paine, Fowler J Larsqn, Lodl J B La Craig, Capay G _Church, Chicago A Kauffman, Wood! ing osdeteld, Colusa Hoppine, Ci Ventura ldwn. Sacrament Moore, Sacto hapman, L Ang | lossom, Stocktol acto ewell, Oakland ding, St Louis J Schiott, Mo Watsonvl MD. >>0u gar 22Oy E 3 ¥ Somtingman, il w4 imn, 8 enn, sville (A F Bell B Barbara A Smith & w, s[l:?};ltfleld W uxton, ‘orces R Hardy & w. Wyo Mrs J R Trask, Sp B ¥ Nance, Pomona e EE> 2 3, £ 3 Petc! L uoud Bureka M A Coburn, Colo nEd By ft, Los Angeles Benedict & w, O Glaser, 8an Diego Joknson & Ww.Ctl| Jomuon & w. Blulbury. Portlnd H Hart, New York Gmnlue. West Kans Gflnlllll. Olkl-nd !lallnl.n.u x4 2 Mich o egflc‘mr»:oa>g:vooxr>n gw” PELLTHe EEEWPE g} -wnon»~>: wgn:«o" 3 Ladies' fine kid shoes, worth $3, for $1.25 | S Mat | THE GOLDEN AGE OF XVIIL. THE ELIZABETHAN AGE. BY VIDA D. SCUDDER. Golden Is a good adjective to apply to all aglow with light. The sunshine of the great Elizabethan day is pure and | fresh and joyous at the beginning, in the poetry of Sidney and Spenser; it is sl rious with radiant warmth in the magr cent work of Shakespeare; it is increa: ingly though lovely, and suffused with tragic crimson at last, as it stoops to evening in the Jacobean drama. We must remember that the Elizabeth- an period lasted really only a very short | Centuries had dragged thelr slow length along with only here and there a voice lifted to break the stillness; then cuddenly, in the last quarter of the six- teenth century, chorus of song. time. We call the literary pe- zabethan literature, for that literature | England burst forth in a | > carery ENGLISH LITERATURE Copyright, 1900, by Seymour Eaton. GOLDEN AGES OF LITERATURE. RO RAR S R G century more. hich cre: All the the litera- | ing a quarcter of | forces, however, | ture of the ren: wce were well under way before Shakespeare died: after him they were in their decline, and no new method or power manifested itself till the dying renaissance, the domi m. and the promise of the stately classi- cal ‘reaction, all met in the work of Mil- on. From 157 to 1616 than half a cen- tury, but in sizn and bea it means more thar ages that had gone before. And it wi 2 complete and profoundly inte erary devel- opment in three clearly marked phases The first phase lasted until the publica- tion of the first three boc rie Queen” in s » matic period. thoug ¢ drama is begin- ning. Sir Philip Sidney and enser are its two characteri: r Spenser in particular s all. The rest of dominated by the “dra drama it passes through two dis moods, though we cannot put our fing: L e e R e e e SRt ] @ z e R S 2n o A A 2 g b 1 | R V/ i' § ¥ :-3 f % ; > b (/ \S} ! O L 4 R > 3 ® . = ’—\\\ §¥5 . Vo> i ® RS N ) . le \ 257y O & + N b ¢ ® @ * * )4 . 33 WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE. * - Qo060 0500000bsdedeitedsiesdsiesisiesieiesie® riod that followed the Elizabethan age, but it does not really coincide with the | reign of the great Qu»en She had a cended the throne in 7, the land. We cannot wonder at this when we realize that men were vet breathless as it were with the shock and terror of the experien flicted on the nation in the refgr Queen Mary. Men wh fathers had perhaps burned at t were in no mood to ch: in the silence of the y Elizabeth’s reign the keen observer can trace ample signs of promise. All things indeed made ready for a great imagina- tive expansion. The foundatic f the tional power had at last been la The young nation was at pea enjoylng a new commercial pre abroad she was measuring herself in n ble warfare against Spain, a heroic foe. Excited by the still recent discovery of new worlds and of the classic past, men looked away from the heavens whereon their gaze all through the middle ages had been_ fixed, beheld with a thrill of freedom the horizons of earth ever widen- ing, receding, beckoning, and felt them- selves, with Puck, able to clap a girdle round the carth. A new temper was aris- ing, a temper of unbounded enthusiasm for human art, beauty and learming, for human passion and for human life. Tread softly, for we are entering the days of Shakespeare, the days of Spenser also and of Sir Philip Sidney. of Bacon and Hooker and Raleigh and Ben Jonson. the days of the sweetest lyrics England has ever heard, preme drama. It was in the year 1579 that three nota- | ble books were published—Euphues, quaint romance which attempted the un- accustomed feat of describing with what | tried to be realism the experiences of a ntleman of the day ¥ of “Plutarch’s Liv Shakespeare was nourished, and Spenser's lovely series of pastoral ec- logues, the “Shepherd’s Calendar.” The Elizabethan period of literature had be- un. BT mark its close Is less easy. We may take the death of the Queen. in 1603, the vear after that in which “Hamlet" wa | acted. Or, and this is more sensible, we take the death of Shakespeare, in 1616. Or we may go on still further, for great things continued to be written dur- and during the | first half of her reign a hush rested upon | of a noble reflective prose, of a su- | | on the exact date when one mood changed into the other. t us look at the first phase. When rious impulse toward ar- gan to stir, men did riously. They toyed try and prose. They to use a fine word with felicity of phrase. They trie untless 1 eriments. for instance, F.mr!xs‘) verse s right way of hould they copy a ed measures o the anclents s. answered for a time some of the best critics. Absurd though this answer appear to us, w der that it was given then. What, nity and beau cla meters fell fresh on pe ears, and of English models the d few or none. So they set to work solemnly to concoct hexameters, sapphics, what you will—an extraordinary work they made of it. But the lovely, new-born verse of English song laughed at their pedantry, and her laughter rip- pled through their veins like music, and in spite of themselves they began to sing —these would-be learned poets. Soon they became intoxicated th the beauty of their own words. They did not approve of rhyme, but rhyme they did. with delicate wanted to and mel- opment has ever been seen ike that of the Elizabethan age. What caused forth at once n‘ The more we grow at the | the Elizabeth . inspir great poets like Sidney and aleo hosts of minor singers, | unknown. lished during he whole nation to break Who ean tel amazed w that was in g not on Spenser, but unnamed and The numerous anthologies pub- this perfod attest the Their ve: and sw ging quality n strength of the lyrical impul name ness. s are redoient of fan “The Paradise of I asy inty Devices “A Gorgeous Gallery Inven- “The Phoent sionate Pilgrim, Davison's_Poe apsody’” arg some of them 1 of these have been re- *tive modern editions. To is to wander through a fragrant ga breathing spice and sweetness on every side. Note—This study will be concluded to- morrow. BUSY TIMES FOR THE DOG SHOW OFFICIALS Closing Days in Wh.u:h Entries May Be Made Bring a Rush of Work to Kennel Club Officers. Probably the busiest place in the busy city just now is the office of the San Francisco Kennel Club, 228 Montgomery street. With a larger clerical force than ever before employed, and working from § a. m. until 10 p. m., “Dave’” Sinclair and his assistants have all they can do to cope with the rush of entries. Only six days remain in which it is possible to enter a dog, and the owners of fine dogs realize that it is impesative that they be entered at once. No pedigree Is necessary to show a dog, for once before the judge the candidate for the blue ribbon is judg- ed entirely on his own merits. Among the notable cocker spanlels en- tered is a red pupp} dog owned by Mrs. B. Clark. Mrs. D. H. Hogan has entered a field spaniel DUDD} do‘ that will make his older competitors do their best to de- feat him. The bull terrier men are esp cially energetic. John D. Spreckels has entered his kennel and will try conclu- sions with all the cracks the other fa ch-r! may import from England and the East. Mrs, Timothy Hopkins will show her mastiff, Lola K(nntex. by Chino Don ex Lola. This young mastiff has developed wonderfully ‘since last year, when she easilly won the first prize in the puppy class. Mrs. James L. Flood will show a mngnlncenl brace of mastiffs—Caesar F, Roderick Dhu _ex Baby Ruth, and LIyrn ¥, Major II ex Queén Bess. Coi- onel Flood will show his handsome collie the club Maxwell. Handsome prizes are offered b{ lar mone: ue from §: for trick dog Besides the re; rizes, trophies ranging in val o $75 are offered in nearly every class, besides a large and varied assortment of medals. ——— e Baptist Missionary Meeting. The twenty-fifth annual meeting of the Woman's Baptist Forelgn Missionary So- -r—rcafc ety o fornia_is to be held at’ the Fh‘lt Baptist Church, Eddy street, to- OTTOW. session wiil open at 10:30 n. m. and lnt till 4 p. m. Delegates are pected to present from all parts of the State. The Iulln of the First Bap- tist Church have arranged to provide a lunch for those in attendance. ————————— Butchers at a Barbecue. The Journeymen Butchers’ Association is making extensive preparations for its annual excursion next Sunday to San Jose. A great barbecue will be the prin- cipal feature of the occasion. The com- mittees in charge of the lflllr are as fol- low- Arrangements—Be: vis, Schade, William Weis, Ben Osswald and J. Lyons; dancing—C. oor man- ; F. Krauer, H. R. C. and M. R.’ Jager; 1e—Ben . J. W. Borchers, H. Bar and C. berg; officers—Past president, John O'Keefe; president. R. C vice president, William Weis Ben vis; financial tary ec - and treasurer, C. Rinsin- Osswald, H. Kockler, ADVERTISEMENTS. MAN A great paln recently ap- plied to me for treatment. He had tried va- rious remedies and doubted if there was any cure for him. At last he used my Dr. McLaughlin Belt. Here is his report: GRASS VALLEY, Cal., April 5, 1900. Your Belt treatment has cured me of all my sufferings. 1 would not be as I was for the earth, and I wish [ had seen your advertisement before. It would have saved me lots of pain and money. You can refer to me. CHRIS TENBY. What volumes this speaks for a treatment, natural and sympathetic! My new method of applying Electricity relieves pain and builds up nerve power. Send me your address, Inclose this advertisement and I will mail to you my finely illustrated book, free. DR. M. A. McLAUGHLIN, 702 Warket 8., Cor. Kearny, 8. F., And Burdick Block, co-. Spriag ead Sessad Sts., Les Angsle:. NEVER SOLD IN D3UG STORES. BROWN'S frcees (Qade only by John L. Brown & Son, Bostom.) give instant relief in Hoarseness

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