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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1900. aANmEReEERR Warner’s Safe Cure Is a scientific vege- takic preparation for the restoring to health of tired-out kldneys and overworked livers. When these great ordans are in health there can be no impure blood, headaches or con- stipation. Men cannot Improve on nature, hence It I8 emusing to read of medlicines which clalm to “remove impurities from the blood”—"The kidneys enrich and vitalize the blood,” etc: The kidneys, liver and lungs purify the blood and they alone. Neither medicine nor man can do it. War- ner's Safe Cure, by helping nature, Is an ald, an assistant—simply that and nothing more. The twentieth century man or woman Is a reesoning, sensible person and seldom decelved by misstatements. - - [ ] @ ] F L -~ x - " B B Cdal Ly OPEN SAN FRANCISCO T0 CHICAGO Santa Fe Route The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway System begs to announce the completion of its railway from San Francisco to Chicago—255C miles. It is the only railway which owns and controls its track from the Pacific Ocean to Lake Michigan. It proposes to furnish prompt and satisfactory service, and it hopes to receive a generous proportion of the public patronage. May 1st freight will be handled reguilariy to and from the East end all points in the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California. Freight Depot: Corner Spear and Harrison Streets. The date for inaugurating passenger train service will ennounced later. be JOHN J. BYRNE, EDWARD CHAMBERS, General Passenger Agent, General Freight Agent, Lines west of Albuquerque. W. A, BISSELL, Assistant Traffic Manager, Santa Fe System. *TIVOLIx | Am | a Wiz? Come and See ! 2 20 TWENTY-EIGHTH TIME TO-NIGHT | ALL TOP.NOTCHERS normous Comic Opera Success, THE WIZARD of the NILE It is Greater than “The Idol's Eye.” ngs at L Matinee Saturday at & FULGORA STARS, ORPHEUM CELEBRITIES. TON = LLIE NOBL assisted by ~ LLIVA OGRAP: POPULAR PRICES.... Telephone—Bush $. AGAIN AND AT TO-DAY 2:15P. M R THE [ VIL EYE A PARI GREAT VAUDEVILLE SHOW ! SPECIAL TO-NIGHT! . JOINING THE SECRET SOGIETY 'YORK. , Gracef: An re Noveity to San Francisce, “THE LADY SLAVEY. * the rage of London and New York HUR WOOLETY. AR PRICE! Orchestra, Saturday AFTER THE VAUDEVILLE Saturday Night Cakewalk Contest. Phene for Seats Park 23. cket Office—Emporium. BESHEAR i0c—~Admisston- Matinee Sunda QELD JEFFRETS-COR TEST AN- NOUN —EVEF IGHT THIS WEE! MATINEE SATURDAY AND | FORJ@YOU THE GREAT e DIAMOND ROBBERY & iitindsmess SEATS NOW READY FOR NEXT WEEK. E. A. SOTHEEN'S SUCCESS, THE MAISTER OF WOUD BARROW N | | ! l 25 ana 50 Cents — o/ MATINEE PERFORMANCE THIS AFTER- NOOXN. { SIAN ROMANGE, s 2 And THE AMATEURS in Speciaities, | FISCHER'S CONCERT HOUSE, 124 OFARRELL STREET. AN A:\%l GRAND OPERA QUARTET Great _ Double i Scene from “FAUST." Last ETTO.” PP PODIPIPILIEPPIOI D PG T PIIIIE B I GO IrIrDe TWO UNSANITARY SCHOOLS BREED DREAD DISEASE - | Superintendent WebsterSays | They Are a Menace to Lives of Pupils. He Refuses to Sign the Demand of 2 | Teacher With an Illegal Cer- 1 tificate—A. J. Dannen- baum Reinstated. —_— zed sensation was created at i of the Board of Edu- dent Webster de- tary conditions at the | siz primary schools a constant menace to e Humboldt and were such as to b the lives of the s. “Four child have already died from diphtheria,”” said Webster, “‘and the par- are becoming very I blame the Board of Health for careless- | ¥ fumigating the two | other measures to pre- the spread of the disease.” The board authorized Director Casserly to make an immediate investigation and next meeting. [ gbstar was asked by he the demar fme. Giffard, teacher French, whom the Examiners had reported for hav legal certificate. Waebster tersel J a while, if at all. serly wanted to know the reason for Webster's refusal and the latter still more intended to sign | a special Board of | Mrs. Neergard complained to the board | much alarmed. | g tersely replied: | day before United States District Judge “That is my business, elr,” and Cas-|de Haven and pleaded gullty. He was serly sobsided. | New Steamer Santa Ana on Her Trial Trip. D406 +9 0904090000000+ 0305000200080 0090900 0000000000060 089 that her child had been expelled from the Richmond _school because the little one had said I won't” to her teacher. The latter insisted that the pupil make an apology in the presence of her class. The little girl became so hysterical that she could not make the apology. A transfer to another school had been asked for, but as the board and Superintendent had sus- tained t out a school an inquiry A J D or Kincaid will make D t. McGreevy, me reason, was cited e board on Tuesday, pended b to appear be May 1 the 1 which is to be colored pupiis. action to cz time. TEETH KNOCKED OUT WITH BELAYING PIN dent called attention to of Elias Hochstadter, ed to purchase prizes for The board will take some out the bequest in a short A Complaint of Cruelty Preferred Against Second Mate Jirarde of the Iroquois. Henri Escape. a sailor on the American merchantma 10is, made complaint yesterday e United States Dis- st J. Jirarde, second charging him with Ity on h seas. Escape Is a son ¢ La Beile France and so patriotic that e cannot speak a word of English. He tated his case in his own language to Mar- , Who speake French like a restaurateu Escape was on the high seas several weeks ago and the sec- ond mate gave him an order in English. “Jay nay comprong paw,” replied the sailor. The mate grabbed an iron belaying pin and smote Escape on the mouth, knock- ing out all his front teeth. X Sarrant was issued for the arrest of Jirarde. h —r——————— Blair Pleaded Guilty. r Blair, allas John Bars- dictment for using the mails , under ordered to appear for sentence this morn- | ing. For Investment, g ITS PROPERTY, 300 g g : g | % % g REE AND A HAlfF MILES | communication, it lies in YENHAGEN DISTRICTS on the The oil-bearing strata here zontal. control the company’s affairs. WARREN GILLELEN, President JOHN W. A. OFF, Cas geles. Public Wor JOHN MARTIN, President Martin cisco. Address all communications and certified checks payable to the Represented in San Francisco by room 14, fifth floo: In Chicago by Not Speculation! THE OPHI OIL COMPAN For a limited period will offer for sale, for development purposes only, a por tion of its treasury stock (par value $1.00; at 50 CENTS PER SHARE. Organized under the laws of Arizona, the stock is issued fully paid and non-assessable. Private property not liable for corporate debts. ACRES IN THE HEART OF THE RICH COALINGA DISTRICT IS CONCEDED TO BE ONE OF THE BEST TRACTS IN THE STATE CITY on the north to the rich BLACK MOUNTAIN and KRE- Lying midway between the clearly defined outcroppings of ocil sandstone and shale, there are cil seepages and out- croppings of oil sandstone over the major portion of the tract. When QIL is struck it WILL THEREFORE BE FOUND OF CONSIDERABLE DEPTH and extending over a WIDE AREA. The operations of the company will be conducted on the same correct business principles which have brought success and honorable repute to the men who have been selected to BOARD OF DIRECTORS: ier State*Bank and Trust Company, Los An- JOHN MASON-GARDINER, Engineer and General Contractor of s. Los Angeles and Phoenix. Stanley Electric Co., San Francisco. GEORGE KENT HOOPER, Manager Occidental Hotel, San Fran- NATHANIEL J. MANSON, Attorney at Law, San Francisco, Cal. OPHIR OIL COMPANY, San Francisco, Cal. T. G. GIRLING, 269 Dearborn street. LOS ANGELES OFFICE—402 DOUGLAS BUILDING. CALL OR SEND FOR PROSPECTUS. FROM COALINGA and railway a direct line drawn from OIL south. lie but little out of the hori- B-oadway Bank, Los Angeles. Pipe & Foundry Co. and Manager make all drafts, money orders or J. P. MASSIE, Mills building, e teacher the child Is now with- | who was | audulent purposes, appeared yester- | IV S N R o = ST S B S S S S ® s NEWS FROM THE OCEAN AND THE WATER FRONT City of Papeete Quarantined at Tahiti on Her Last | Trip. ‘ Allowed to Dock and Land Cargo | During the Day, but Had to Lie in the Stream at Night. | The barkentine City of Papeete docked | at Lombard-street wharf yesterc and beth captain and crew were glad of the chance to get ashore and stretch their legs. One of the sailors named Thomas Farrell was in such a hurry to g town that he could not wait for the cars of the belt railroad to pass, but attempted | to clamber over the couplings. He fell | and broke his leg in two places and was taken to the Harbor Hospital for treat- ment. The Papeete was 34 days coming to San Francisco, one of the longest ru from Tahitl in years. Capt says nothing but light winds, head winds were encountered throughout | the passage. While the barkentine was | in Pap the news of the Examiner's plague scare reached the city and had it not been for the fact that the merchan-| dise was badly needed not an ounce of it would have been landed. As it was, all| the Chinese goods, such as tea, rice and matting, were taken out of the original packages and reboxed and resacked be- | fore they were allowed to land. The old | | The Papeete was aliowed to go along- side the wharf and discharge during the day, but at night she was ordered the stream and not a soul was allowed ashore. Captain Berude says the Tropic Bird and Galilee will harge their cargoes, as the merchandise is badly needed on the islands. The Papeete wiil g0 back again to Tahitl, but the chances are it will be her last trip. | Harbor Commissioners Meet. The dock on the south side of Howard- | street whart is to be dredged y means extra work Improvement. Company, wh contract for building the whatrf. Yester- | day the City Improvement Company noti- | fied the Harbor Commissioners that an | extra_quantity of cem quired in_filling the cylinder piles, that the State would have to pay £o same. Chief Engineer Holmes reported that work had been done to the value of $4065 09 by the San Francisco Timber Preserving Company, $§786 08 by the City Street Im- provement Company, $339 by Newson & McNeil and $2665 25 by Andeew Wilkie Jr. these sums were ordered paid. Darby Laydon & Co. were allowed $500 for dam- | age done to Main street wharf by vessels | placed there by the chief wharfinger while the structure was undergoing repairs. Attorney eral Ford informed the board that it could go ahead and antici- | pate revenue in order to build wharves and ferry slips. Chief Engineer Holmes bmitted five different methods for build- | ng four new wharves and two new ferry slips, and the consideration of them was laid over for a few days. The wharves are to be built between Union and Lom- bard streets and the ferry slips on the north side of Lombard street. Another Steamer for Nome. The Alaska Commercial Company has chartered the steamer San Jose from the | Pacific Mail Company and will put her in | | the Nome trade. The company has sold | every berth on the Dora, Portland, Ral- | nfer ‘and St. Paul for the season and the | { rush is still growing. In order to accom- modate the public in a measure the com- | | pany_has after much negotiating secured | the San Jose, and she will leave here for the gold fields on June 2. New Steamer Santa Ana. | The fine new steamer Santa Ana is now | receiving her finishing touches at Mission- | street wharf and on Saturday will sail for | | Nome via Seattle. She had her trial trip on Tuesday and proved to be a good| | twelve-knot vessel and an excellent sea | boat. She was built to the order of A. | W. Beadle & Co., but Charles Neison wili | | be’ her managing owner and she will | north as one of his Nome fleet. ‘Water Front Notes. The mall steamer Newport arrived from | Panama and way ports yvesterday. Cap- | tain Saunders has his vessel looking like | a vacht and he received many compli- ments in consequence from the old-timers {on the front. L | The Santa Fe's engine was pulled up | out of the mud of the bay vesterday, but owing to a hitch in the pians it had to be | lowered into its bed again. It will be rafsed and placed on the wharf to-day. | There was a small fire on Washingtou- | street wharf yesterday. Somebody | | aropped a match into some cotton waste | | and quite a biaze followed. The fire was | | put out in a few seconds by the fire tug. | Will Improve Mission Rock. | i seph A. Doaohoe, W. J. Dutton, C. de Ga?gng. E. E. Kentfieid and A. M. Simp- | | son ‘have incorporated the Mission Rock | | Company and the San Francisco Drydock | Company. The former corporation is cap- | italized for $1.500,000, of which has | been subscribed, and the dock company for $300,000. of which $500 has been sub- seribed. The company proposes purchas- ing Mission Reck, establishing ware- houses, bmlmnfi drydeck and to carry | on a general s xplnx business. S‘ On next Sunday, May 13, the Calflornlni Northwestern Ry. (lessee S. F. and N. P. Ry.) will sell tickets to Santa Rosa and rate and at a time when plete ow | capital of Europe. two men are focused all ature of Germany, sences that have | | coverings were burned. I GOLDEN AGE OF GERMAN LITERATURE. Copyright, 1900, by Seymour Eaton, —_— GOLDEN AGES OF LITERATURE. | XX. GOETHE AND THE GOLDEN AGE OF GERMAN LITERTURE. (Concluded.) BY ARTHUR H. PALMER, M. A. the thought and lit from it radiate al determined tne la Deferring for a little our nd his works, le works and ¢ life is simple b . Schill view the life, b inadequate. Hebbel's rankiort- at Weimar. is re Thereaft uninterrupted save b find in these few once uttered to a fri cannc | _Johann Wolfgan 1749 at F the fn ter Mt only at i sidence mc 1871 s of a trav togeth the “man higher or _With this Frenc 1 masterplec of poe e and Matthew ts pra So rich i number and larger works are could 't and end of “Werther ed the's lyrics who it that Ge aise of p ) one of the half- s who in the history of own the most sign: old, n having v the epic poem i hea,"" since wit. Kh‘ rid, e Tennyson is s d Goethe foremost © poet and to hav arers demurred on of Ear he was at development, and by making Germany united in the things of the s to lay the necessary found united political Germany which was not | 12 tully realized until aft - men during the last ten years of Schiller’s | ¢ life (1794-1%6) were bour friendship of most remarkable intim: that These two | er in a and beauty. These years are prefmi-| ., e | nently the period of the beginning In Ger- | pice ido) drama writ man literature of the little city of Wei-| hoth more moderate mar, the Athens of Germany, whic c deed for about half a century prior to his death in 1532 Goethe made the literary | In the union of these | previous &4 and | a prai an stands the noted whose a v s h ful am and mentioned great s by r writers: “Yes. but Goethe is consummate in_so many different Outside the nafrow domain of pure poetry we mus place Goethe among the los' that spirit ¢ ed order and s not only fa th e theme o the pol Germany it we t n romantic tr . presented ations with language feeling. ong the works we ie of Messina inrecognized bject matter ) . is _treated a "3 e writer be: foremost scientific investigators of his age | istic form. T v and in the front rank of eri! of ltera- | when well acted it is of entran: He has the qualitieg of the | and power ture and art. best essay t - :at _perhaps above all else Indeed makes him fruitful and precious to so many is that he is ever a sage and a phil pher, ing forth a practi teaching and exemplifying { the criticism and the conduct of life, be hilosophy, the essence and spirit of which are bea ery lfe ¢ fully epitomized in those oft-quoted lines | ing them w x from “In Memoriam.”’ in which Tennyson | quence, he formed it F 3 himself later declared that he alluded to | against foreign dom w yet rings Goethe alone: throughout the w erever there a erous hearts, wherever there are me pping stones s to higher things. XXI SCHILLER'S FAMOUS DRAMAS. the sympath his broader and higher freedom, his daunt- less domination character and hampionship ai of The life, character and works of Schil- well evoke to a peculiar degree | and admiration of Amerl- | sm, his ardent aspiration, nd achievement of ever difficulty, moral or physical—these are elements of | 'e nowhere better under- stood than in our own land. goes the idea of liberty, and this idea as- | as Schiller ! vanced in his culture and himself became | sumed different different. In his liberty forms youth it was whether ad- physical that occupied him and passed over e the rights of the love of count w - SQech and the love of man drama of ‘William Te . | like the sound of a trum the archer hero, the men of the Rutli, »ns and the leg- This drama is the most pop: hils ler's greater works, and perhaps merits the first place among them all, as display- ing the widest range of poetic genius an dramatic art in the treatment of materia drawn from legend and histos ect of character drawing, dletion. % 3 Schiller’s “Tell” is his (lnz in peace and joy. dramatic form which Sci only drama en The last work hiller _compieted The keynote of Schiller's career is lib- | was the brief lyrical play. “Homage o Goethe' ctive i | the Arts,” an allegory celebrating beaut~ go | erty. Goethe's retrospective Judgment.| and the tunction of the arts in gnnobling - years after the death of his friend, | jife. Could there be more fitting close to | was this: “Through all of Schiller’s works | his lifework! ARTHUR H Yale University. PALMER | Class Reunion at Berkeley: The class of "9 of the University of Cal- into his poetic creations: in his later life b 2o s o b rte. C That physical liberts: did | fornia will hold its second annual reun- indeed so much occupy Schilier in his | lon at Berkeley t The - youth was in part dus to the nature of | his spirit, but chiefly to the constraint he had ad to suffer in the military school. | But then in his maturer life, when he had physical liberty enough, he went on to | the ideal. and I would almost say that this idea hastened his death, for he there- | by made demands upon his beyond Heine { “Schiller wrote for the great ture which w meet.” So, the revolution of the intellect 00, =aid physical na- is power ideal he destroyed the bastile | he aided in building the | temple of freedom.” to of him: of Among the dramas created by Schiller his own life might well be called not the | least—the tragedy of the spirit in life, slain apparently In mid-career. vet living on into immortal triumph. But the NATTOW. Iyric poet, philosopher. limits «f the stage here at | disposal forbid the presentation of | drama, nor can we portray Schiller, the historian. The literary dramatist alone | weakness. the eri our this the the it shall ncrugy us, and we may here nn’lg- note that e was born November 10, 175 return at $1. This is a very low excursion | at Marbach, in Wurtemberg, and died.| or_weak li moma County | March 9, 1805, in Weimar. con- flict with the material elements of earthly | | rangements for the affair have been made by Philip R. Thaver Elizabeth M. Griswold, seeretary, of t class. Hearst Hall has been secured fo the reunion. —_————— Suit to Restrain Mining. | Henry Langdon and Alice M. L: | his wife, have brought suit in the | States Circuit Court against the Mo taineer Mill and Mining Company of Nevada County to restrain the defendant from running Grifts and levels under- ground on the ranch of t tdent., and Miss ° v Few College Students Die. The death rate {n colleges is extremely low. | The strict attentiop to the physique is given | as the cause. People outs well, may have health and stren ter's Stomach Bitters is reco: | highly for preventing as well as curing bod! | It ie for the blood. the nerves | all stomach disorders and its cures o’ co | pation, indigestion, dyspepsia, siuzgish idneys are most remarkabie. ’é 2 s § % g : . —— e She Charges Fraud. ent; | | conveyance to I“.'I.fi i= at its prettiest. Leave Tiburon ferry, foot of Market street, Sunday, at 8 and | 1781; his d 9:20 a. m. On the return, leave Santa | of his “Demetrius.’” Rosa 3:25 and 5:30 p. m. » Hannah Ann Loomis has sued Mary Hawley, trustee for E. H. Loomis, and E. H. Loomis personally to set aside a | decade given malnly to study and writing roperty on Bryant street, | -fifth, on the ground that the tained by fraud. Schiller's earliest play was published in | eath prevented the completion irama; that may be calied great number nine or | | eleven, according as we count “Wallen- | stein"—in form a trilogy-—one or _three. | Now these twenty-five years and nine dramas fall naturally into two distinct periods or groups, separated by about a Good Puis LUVER for the poWELS BEECHAM’S PILLS 10 cents and 25 cenis 3 { v of history and philosophy. The first up comprises the three | prose ‘dramas—rne Robbers'~ (T