The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 1, 1900, Page 7

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1900. For Appetite,Healthand Vigor Anheuser Standard, Palc AMUSEMENTS. ALHAMBRA AL and Mgr. Our Capaci Very Walls o Every Away. t Snle Goes on W Rapidity. THE_ KING OPIUM_RING! Is Being Tested to the i This Big Theater. At Perlormance People Turned ARTH BEST SHOW TOWN. BEST PE 5y PLE IN DOLAN ANDLENHARR, PRELLE'S TALKING DOGS, JOENSON, RIANO AND BENTLEY, HOW- ARD AND BLAND, GEORGE EVANS gnd Sunday. COLUMBIA will con- STUAPT R OLIVER GOLDSMITH HE STOOPS TO CONQ waek, UER.” TO-NIGF FOR THIE WEEK ONLY NEE BATURDAY The Great Russ Meiodrama OR HER SAKE ™ OME. AN OH W HOSE YOU o Morasy, No SIE Wednesdny TTERDAMM e PE $ 'MOROSCO'S GRAND OPERA HOLI=T MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. THE A‘w “ag CoOm- NEWF LE PANY LAST FOUR NIGH' SECRET S IEL FRAWLEY as LEWIS DUMONT | B SATTURDAY NIGHTS, ’y - «TIVOL FRIDAY ANT s SALASSA SCHUSTER. The Sensational Operatic Triumph EN” “CAR Sunday T Night 1 NIGHT rday Matinee, AS CARMEN LAR PRICES . CHUTES » Z0O EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. TO-NIGHT! TO-NIGHT! ALL STAR AMATEUR SHOW LADIES' PRIZE FLOUR DUCKING CONTEST. Telephone for Seats, Park 22 sHERMAN, CLAY & C)'5 HALL. Direct H rnmm,A,\'hm(\)C&Kf‘O. Ni 8:15 O’CL! . TTLE ENID BRANDT. The wonderful child artist, in PIANO RECITALS Fech eoncert to include little Enid’s marvelous fent SICAL TELEGRAPHY. Saturday ALSO afternoon, Nov. 8, 5 Seats on sale at Sher- store. ¥ She. » music Pr man 8y ‘ISCHER’S CONCERT HOUSe. Admissior 10-- Fourth act of “ERNANI'™ Faoccl, Franco, Aliesandroni, Puerari, Ovando and Vargas, vocalists. Joe Hays and Lunette. Reserved Seats, Zc; Matinee Sunday. s, & ADVERTISEMENTS. A FOOD IN LiQUID FORM. Invaluable to Nursing Mothers, Feeble Children, the Aged, Infirm and Convalescent. Equelly Beneficial to the Well and Robust. For Sale by all druggists. Prepared only by ANHEUSER-BUSCH BREWING ASS'N, St. Louis, U. S. A. Brewers of the Famous Original Budweiser, Black and Tan, Faust, Michelob, | | | ERVICE 4040404040404 04040 + 040404040405 and Anheuser-Busch Dark. AMUSEMENTS. AESMEAR NORTHBRN LIGHTS. EVERY NIGHT THIS WEEK. MATINEES SATURDAY aad SUNDAY. s READY FOR NEXT WEEK “LOST PARADISE.” OLYMPIA THE ONLY FRE NOW EDDY ST., Cor. MasSSON VAUDEVILLE SHOW IN THE CITY. PAMPLIN, The Marvelous Australian Juggler. EDDIE J. MACK, The Boy With the Buck-and-Wing Comedy Feet ANNIE GOLDIE, You must not miss her Hebrew Impersonations MATINEE EVERY SUNDAY. AMATEUR NIGHT EVERY FRIDAY SION FREE ADMI 040404040404 040404040408 | VIEHY CELESTINS iS A Natural Mineral Water known fer centuries and imported ONLY IN BOTTLES. For Disordersd Stomach snd Indigestion fied to by thousands. So-called Vichy in Sy- phons IS NOT VICHY. Get the Genuine. vO+0e0e £ A VIGNIER, Distribatiag Agent *0*Qe 00+ 0*0C S+ 0+0+0C +0+ 0+ 0@ sorre CURES MCBURNEY'S Kidney* gt A thorough cure for ~ pains in the back, BRIGHT'S DISEASE, female troubles, incon- ([Gence of urine, brick dnst deposits, bed- wetting of children, gravel, gall stones, dropsy, diabetes, and rheumatism. Thousands endorse it. Write for testimo- nisls. Price §1.50. Al Druggists. W. F. McBurney, Sole Manufacturer, 418 South Spring St., Los Angeles, Cal. | > DR. JORDAN’S arear MUSEUM CF ANATOM 1051 MAREET 57 Bet. £:227%0, 5.0l ext Anatomical Museum in the ction or any contracted ely cured by the oldest Speciaiistcn the Cosst. st 36 yoars OR. SORDAN--PRIVATE DISEASES § The personally or by Fortwe Curein every case undertaken. Write for Book ¥ AAnaing $500 if my Skin Ointment fafis to cure - any case of eczema or tetter, or if one application fails to stop RDAN & CO... 1051 Market St 5. F. s KI the Price 25 cents. All druggist id on receipt of price. I FORD, 175 N. Spring st., Los Angeles, VOTE FOR Senate. Constitutional itching. 8, Or sent post DR. PAUL DE 'AmendmentNo.15 | case we cannot cure. NTH AMENDMENT ON -PROVIDING FOR THE OF TEACHERS SALAR- 1 OBLIGATIONS DUE TO Merchants of San Francisco DR. HALL’S REINVIGORATOR| Five hundred rsward for any This secret remedy stops all losses in 24 hours, wELA | cures Emissions, Impotency, Vari- | ! Fits nd all s of self-abuse. or Sent sealed, $2 bottle; 3 $5; guaranteed to cure any case. Ad- HALL'S MEDICAL INSTITUTE, 8§55 FOR @YOU excesses bettles a | Bre . Oskland, Cal. Also for sale at 1078% | Market st., 8 F. All private diseases quickly cured. Send for free book. Dr. Bennett's Elficiria gelt Makes weak men and women strong and sirong ren and women stronger. Rooms 5 and 6, 4 Post st.. San Francis eekly Call $L.00 ar Ve € 0+0¢0+040+ 00040404040+ | | | ‘ N HE Shenandoah, finest more in command of Captain | “Jim"” Murphy. The jovial and popular master arrived here late Monday night and took command of the | Shenandoah yesterday. The last time he was here Captain Murphy was in com- mand of the new steel four-masted bark Arthur Sewall, but he longed for his old | vessel and is once more in charge of her. When Captain Murphy left the Shenan- doah to take command of the Arthur Se- wall, his son given the command of the former vessel. He made one trip and then took another vessel. A new captain took the Shenandoah and he made two | round trips on her, but failed to make the ventures pay. Now Captain Murphy, who lis a big owner in the craft, has again taken hold and dividends are once more expected. When Cay mand of row night she w the largest and ain Murphy was last in com- the Shenandoah she had a nar- off the Horn. On a foggY s making about ten knots an hcur. Suddenly the fog lifted and under the clear moonlight the lookout gave the alarm, “land ahead In an instant the ship was put in stays and then by back- ing the sails on the maln and mizzen and filling those on the fore, the Shenandoah went on the other tack and escaped de- struction. Sailing of the Alameda. | The Oceanic Steamship Company’s Ala- { meda sailed for the South Seas last night. She carried an unusually large cargo and every passenger she could take. There were 142 travelers in the cabin and many of them had to sleep on sofas in order to | get a at all. Many of the passengers are bound for Honolulu and once the mail | beat reaches that port the crowd will be | materially diminished The cabin passengers on the Alameda re: For Honolulu—A. H. Afong, Miss T. Bouquet, George . Campbell: . H. Ci e ‘and tawe : H. Conlin, M od_and 86 Downing and wife, A J. Dyer Mrs. W. J.'England, W. W. Good- reany, W. J. Greig, Miss P. Hick Hooge, Mrs. W. L. Hopper, Miss Hudson and wife, M. Hyman, W. H. logs, wite and four Thomas K J. 8. Kennedy, F. . and wife, T. R. Lucas, Mrs. W, Mon- and child, Miss M. R. Morss, B. Neff, William Niessen. Mre. P. J. O'Donnell and In- fant, Miss Thelma Parker, Mrs. P child, Mrs. M. F. Poinsett, Mrs. C. | nolds, Miss Reynolds. Mrs. A, Rifenbers, | W. G. Rogers, R. Ryder, A. Schierholtz | wite E . Soper and wife, C. | C. Sta e, L. Turner, Jean Val | Walker and wife, Miss A. Walton P. J. Winser and T. Bagot, R. B. Beals, & Bebar Beer. M. Bradley, R Gerard Coven 3’ wite, W, J Cresswell_and wife, H. E an and. wife, Mrs. E. Emsman, Job John Forsyth iman and A With Alameda_carried. a general cargo 3 at $132.220, manifested as follows sw Zealand, $30.042: Australia, or Samoa, $3 he following the principal shipments 3110 bxs apples; 7 cs” boots 5% 1bs choco- 5 tbs drled fruit, 1 7 pkgs groceries and s, hardware, § rolls were For New Zealand 262 crs_onlons, dry goods. Australia apples, cyls am- 1 o= arms and lon. 4 cs agri- Cultural impl s, 8 c sindries, 2600 free 5281 ce canned | goods, 51 cs dry & 85 Ths dried fruli, cs electrical goods, 15 cs hardware, 25 bdls The hops, 4000 feet lumber, 23 rolla s liquors, 20 pkgs machinery, 11| bbis oil, 4 cs phots goods, i "% bhais paper. 1141 bxs raisins | bbis salmon. 7 sewing machines 7'cs type, A cs typewriters, 4 cs varnish, lead, 10 iruge. amoa: okt SvRte s dry ms bread, 17 cs raisins, 5 o 205 salmon s ‘canned goods, 118 crs potatoe 3 bxs apples, 100 Ibs dried fruit, 6 cs paste, cs hardware, 10 ‘Mk flour, Jkgs groceries and 5 kegs eaucr- Rraut, s bhis beet, 4 o cs hardwars. fibofoes & irotion Australia Sails. | There will be a big crowd down to see ihe Tahiti mail steamer away this after. roon. Quite a number of excursionists go Away on the ocean liner and their rel- atives and is are sure to be down again It is the has left here for friex and see them off. Thel fir: mail steamer that eete, the “Queen City of the Pacific, int and that lends <t o the salling. The Ocean! amship Company has a contract with the French Government to carry the mails between Papeete and San | Francisco and the Australia inaugurates | the ‘service. | SASR VAL ¢ ! Water Front Notes. | The United States transport Meade | dacked yesterday and landed her sick and | wounded. The British ship Carmanian, out sixty | eignt days from Hongkong for San Fran- cisco, posted as overdue and ten per | cent reinsurance is offered on her, | 'The transport Sherman sails to-day for Manila with a number of recruits and a full cargo of commissdry stores. The transport Lawton is due Friday from. Puget Sound. The transport Warren Is carrying troops between the islands of the Philippines. 8he will get here about Christmas. The Harbor Commissioners met vester- | day. The pay rolls for the month were | passed and €ome minor work was done, after which the board adjourned William Worrlel, ‘& painter, was burned aboard the transport Sheridan yesterday. He got his candle too close to the paraf- fine: paint and it exploded. He was treat- ed at the Harbor Hospital by Dr. Baei-. galupi. | Matters of Interest to Mariners and | Shipping Merchants. The “ Port Patrick, -to load wheat for Eu- rope, has beeti Techartered at 4is, prior to.ar- rival Wheat Shipments. | The French bark Touraine cleared yesterday for Queenstown for-orders with 48,959 otle har- ey, valued at $47.500. 12,744 ctle wheat, valued At §13,000, and 23,000 feet lumber dunnage, val- | ued at $345. Total value, - $60,845. —i A Cargo for Sydney. The Nicaraguan bark J. C. PAuger cleared | Tuesday for Sydney with the following cargo, | valued at $134,170: | 18,581 o5 760 half bbls salmon, 708 doors, 8- | buis ofl, 5 kews ‘white lead, 2750 os canned goods, 20 o8- candy, 209,549 feet lumber, 54 os | haraware, 38,254 1bs hope. - Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. Wednesday, October 31 Stmr - Willamette, Hansen, 8 hours . from | Beattie. Stmr Luella, Madsen, 1§ hours from. Caspar.. | Stmr San Pedro. Zaddart. 4 dave trom Se- attle Stmr Del Norte. Allen, 29 hours from Eureka. Stmr Eureka, Jessen, 26 hours from Eurek: Stmr 8amoa, Jacobs, 5 hours from Eureka. U 8 stmr Albatross, Curtis, .from cruise. Bark Olympic, Gibbs, 14 days from Honolulu. Barge Santa Paula, Nielsen, 58 hours from San Pedro, in tow of tug Rescue. Still More Counterfeiting. The Becret Service has unearthed anof | band _of counterfeiters and - secured ‘a. g | quantity of bogus bills, which are sa cleverly | executed that the. average person would never | suspect them of being spurious. Things of great value are always selected for imitation, notably Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. which has many imitators but no equals for disorders like indigestion, dvepepsia, constipation, —nervous- ness and eral debility. Always to rella- ble dru, who have the reputation of giv- ing what you ask for wooden ship afloat, is once | A. Wernit n M. Grapow, Captain Hufnagel. Abbott, James Barclay, Wil- Mrs. C. M. Gary, G. 8. Geddes, J. Jameson, Mrs. G. § George 1. Smith, | sreckley th 5 bdls paper, 1920 Ibs raisins, | pkes wire, 10 bbis whale | CAPTAIN JAMES MURPHY AGAIN' ASSUMES COMMAND OF CLIPPER SHIP SHENANDOAH ‘The Well-Known Vessel, in Great Peril on a Foggy ight Off the Horn, Is Miraculously Saved. VI The Story of the Play. The play is named after Cymbeline, a King of Britain at the period of the Ro- man conquest, in whose court and king- | dom the chief scenes are laid. The action | depends upon the intrigues of Cymbe- | line’s Queen to place herself and Cloten, a son by a former husband, upon the | throne. The King is old and easily eon- trolled by the woman, whose strength of character is greater than his own. At her instigaticn he banishes Posthumus, the accepted suitor of the hand of Imo- | gen, the King's daughter by a former wife lana the heir to his throne, and encourages | the suft of Cloten, which is rejected by | Imogen with scorn and insult. The inter- | |est of the play row centers in Imogen— { will she remain faithful to her banished {lord? Her fidelity is attacked on the cne | hand by the King and Queen, who demand | her acceptance of Cloten, and on the other | hand by Posthumus himself, who lays a | wager respecting her fidelity with a vil- | lainous Italian, JIachimo. Imogen dis- | misses Cloten and repulses Iachimo, but | her trfal Is not yet passed. The villainy of Tachimo provides means of convincing Posthumus of his wife's infidelity, and her i | % + | i | { 4l | | | | | [ | | | i * l | | | | | | 1 | § | | 1 ‘ | & | 11 ! | I | = it Lo 2GS ‘ | - AMERICAN CLIPPER SHIP SHENANDOAH HAVING A CLOSE CALL \ | OFF'THE HORN. THE FOG LIFTED AND IN THE MOONLIGHT. } 11 | THE LOOKOUT SAW THE DANGER. 2 k7 5 g SR G i CLEARED. i 1 North Fork|Humbol ov. 2, Sam/Pler 2| | i . Wednesday, Getober SL. V...[Victorfa.. o 11 am|Pier 9| | | | stmr Afameda, Von Oteren. Sydney and {[Newport .. 9am|Pler 11| | | Honolulu reckels & Bro B Seat 3 v, 8. oy 3 | “stmr 8 Atexand Z|China& Japan|Nov. 3. 1pm|PMSS | | | | i Humboldt.....[Nov. 4, 2pm|Pler 9/ | Wellington, Salmond, Chemainus; R ‘ Dunemuir Sons. Co. Vs ! mr Robert Adamson, Morgan, Nanaimo: . | Hosenfeld's Sons, i T hark Guillon, Queenstown; L | | Kauftman | Point Arena 1% S | “Brig W.G Irwin, Genereaux, Honolutu; Wil- Mexico 10 am/Pler 11 | ¥ h liams, Dimond & 3 1 \ ia.. 11 am|Pler 9 SAILED. | Bonita Newport Nov. 7. 9 amiPler 11| | IMOGEN. i | Vedne = > = | (Miss Ellen Terry.) Wednesday, October 3L | s M 4 Tid | 1 Stmr Newburg, Peterson, Harbor. “n{ oon. an ide. 2 & + | - Greenwood, Fagertind, Unlted States . Coast and Ge Survey— | T | Stmr Noyo, Johnson, Fort -Hragg. Times and Heigh High and Low . Bktn Planter, MeNeil, Honolulu, | at Fort - entrance to San | One defender becomes her most bitter as. Schr_Malcyon, Meliin, Fort Bragg, in tow of'| by official au- | sailant. She is summoned by Posthumus stmr Noxe | | from the court to meet him secretly at [ pcnr T'na, Harkins, - Clipperton Island and | ot he cur at the | Milford.Haven. At the oo Tom | Panama | city front (Mis: twenty- | v A ¢ s e Schr Mary C, Madsen, Bodega. five minutes later than structions are given Pisanio, fi’nsx{‘umua chr Re height of tide is the same gervant, still at court, to murder Imogen Harbor. ; Stmr Ales Per stmr Del Oct 3\', afternoon, 9 miles ESE of Point H bark Olympie, from. Hono- luly, for San Francisco i G " TeELEGRAPHIC. - @ | PoiNT LOBRE + 31, 10 p m—Weather | thick: wind SW, velocity 16 miles. DOMESTIC "PORTS. SEATTLE- Safled Oct - Stmr Ohlo, for San Franclsco; stmr Dolphin, fér Skaguay BOWENS LAN i-Arrived Oct 31~ Stmr { Navarro, hence Oct 30 : BIHLERSE POINT afled Oct 30-Schr Mary Etta, for San Franct KLAWACK-"8aile for San Franclsco. Schr W F Jewett, | "PORT TOWNSEND—Passed_inward Oct 31 Ger ship Parchim, fro ship Palgrave bark Oakiand. from Nome, and proceede squimait > Arrived Oct 31-Ship S D Calton, from Dutch Harbor. | In straite Oct 31—Brig Geneva, hence Oct 23 NEAH BAY—Passed in Oct 31—-Ship ¢ Admiral and schr Annie. M Campbell, Honolul: Passed out Oct 3i—Stmr Signal, land; stmr Czarina, for San. Fra rom for Port- ASTORIA—Arrived Oct 31—Ger s % from Nagasaki EUREKA—Arrived Oct 31—Stmr hence C istmr Homer, hence Oct 30. Sailed Oct 30—Schr Occidental, FORT BRAGG—Arrived Oct 1 trom San Ped) PORT BLAK o San Pedro. mr Sequota, ZLEY—Sailed Oot 31—Bark Prus schr for sta, for San Francisco; Azalea, Diego Arrived Oct 31—Ger ship Parchim, from Port Townsend. PASTERN PORT. NEW YORK—Arrived Oct 30—Stmr Allianca, from Colon. Sailed Oct 30—Stmr Advance, for Colon. FOREIGN PORTS. MANILA--Arrived Oct 30—U Oct 1. Sailed Oct 27—Stmr Victorla, 8 stmr Han- hence Oct 4, RALIAN PORT 30—Bark Haydn Brown, fro DUNKIRK—Arrived Oct 2 from_ Portland. | _FALMOUTH for ¢ Eureka. Ger ship Nesaia, ailed Oct 30~ T ship Mabel rdiff; Br ship rimrose Hill, Rickmers, for Birkenhe HONGKONG—Arrived Ort 30—Br stmr Em- press of India, from Vancouver. Sailed Oct 31—Jap stmr Nippon Maru, for San Francisco. b YAYMAS—Arrived Oct 23—Schr C A Thayer, from Grays Harbor. VALPARAISO—Sailed Oct 30—Ger stmr Neko, for San Francisco. NAGASAKI—Arrived Oct 31-Br ship Queen Victoria, from Cardiff. SALINAS CRUZ—Arrived Oct 30—Schr Win- slow, hence Oct 5. OCEAN BTEAMERS. NEW YORK—Arrived Oct 31—Stmr St Ger- main; from Havre. E E Sailed Oct 31—Stmr Trave, for Bremen: stmr New York, for Southampton; stmr Oceanic, for Liverpool; &tmr Nordland, for-Antwerp. GIBRALTAR—Arrived ‘Oct 3i—Stmr Aller, from New York, for Naples, and Genoa. SOUTHAMPTON- Arrived Oct 31— Stmr 8t Louls, from New York. Bafled Oct 31—Stmr Kaiserin Maria Theresa, trom_Bremen, for New York. BOULOGNB—Arrived Oct 31-Stmr Amster- m, from New York, for Rotterdam. QUEENSTOWN - Sailed Oct 31—Stmr Ivernia, trom Liverpool, for Boston HO! from Seattle. LIVERPOOL -Arrived Oct 3i—Stmr Majestic, from New York, via Queenstown Salied Oct 31—Stmr Cufie, for New York. - Steamer Movements. TO ARRIVE. T From. Steamer. ‘Humbolat Columbia . Coquille RIver. Tellus . |8kaguay Taqua. 5 Crescent City..|Crescent City Point Arena.... Point Arena. Coos Bay ‘[Newport.. Acapulco ... New York Bergenhus China and Jagan Czarina . | Seattle. Alliance . *|Portland Zealandia ... Honolulu. ona- . Cureka. Elone Tillamook Manauense ....|COmOX. - . Ghlo ..... Cape Nome .y Rainfer . !{San pedro. .22 0 1 653 66 6 58 133 10 09 o e o et Umatilla "fetoria San Diego.. Hongk China and Japan Matteawan Tacoma. onita Newport ISureka Humbold 3. W. EN Portland Queen - Honolulu —-TTO SAIL. Steamer. " | Destination."{ | Pler. Pler 11 I Santa Rosa/San Diego. Empire ... Bay 4 Pler 13 Eureka ....,Humboldt. 2 9 H Arrived prior to Oct 30—Br stmr | Arrived prior to Oct | | | | | | | 1 | | | | a | Court | vender, who pleaded guilty to two charges | on the Way to Cambria. A changing tune releases her from death, brings her in.male attire to a cave in the hills, where she meets with two strong-limbed youths —her -brothers, as_it happens, long ' ago stolen from the King by a former re- tainer—and leads her at length to become | attached as a page to the person of Lu- | cius, the Roman general come just then rises Sun sete Moon sets JTim, Howh Ft ald tribute. Cloten, disguised as Posthu- mus, hasening to intercept Imogen's flight from the court. is slain by one of the for- est youth and his headless trunk is laid unwittingly at the feet of Imogen. Think- |ing her lord fallen, Imogen swoons and is | so discovered by Lucius, into whose serv- ... | ice, with sad heart and countenance, she | enters. Meanwhile Plsanio has conveyed to Posthumus a bloody handkerchief as an evidence of his wife's murder. At the close of the battle between the British and Roman forces the personages of the play are assembled for isro\'ori; and rec- Posthumus @nd Iachimo have 1 3 17 PRI wosition of the tides given in the left | ssive tides of the urrence as to time of | the third time column the third tide and | the last or right hand column gives the last In the ab 1y morning t i column and the = day in the order of. oc tide of the day, - except whe 2 s oneiliation. n ) e metines pemn here are but | come with the Romans. 'Cymbeline's sons wiver. a e o the mindi. elEhts | cager for contact with the world, had lef and now distinguish themselves in fighting for the King. Lu- clus, victor in the battle, receives the | promise of tribute and establishes peace. United Coast their wilderness when & minus sign (—) pr then the number glven fs -ubtracted from the depth glven by the charts. The plane of refer- ence 1= the mean of the lower low waters. e S EES |+_ Time Ball. Branch Hydrographic Office, U. S. N., Mer- | chants' . Exchange, San Francisco,” Cal., | Detober 31, 1900 | The time ball on the tower of the new Ferry | building was dropped at exactly noon to-day— i at noon of the 120th meridia o'clock p. 'm., Greenwich time. C. G. Lieutenant Commander, U. S. INCIDENTS IN POLICE COURT. Steuart Harold Is Arraigned on the Charge of Attempt at Murder. Steuart Harold, alias Upshur, was in- structed and arraigned hefore Judge Fritz vesterday on the charge of assault to murder for shooting Spectal Officer B. P. Haughen In Fischer's concert hall on the night of October 9. The case was con- | tinued till November § as the defendant's attorneys were engaged in the Superior | Mrs. Kate O’Connor, 130 Putnam street, was_convicted of a charge of battery by Judge Cabaniss yvesterday and will be sen- | tenced to-morrow. Oectober 20 she got | jealous of the attentions of her husband to Miss Lizzle and Miss Belle Chambers, | 421 Bank street, on a Folsom street car | andystruck them both. | Robert Lange, the bogus lottery ticket | % * The Queen, grieving for Cloten and con- Surve; charts, except des the height, and Group A—(1) Cymbeline, (2) Imo- gen, (3) Posthumus, ) the Queen, (5) Cloten. Group B—(6) Iachiwo (also ITmogen and Posthumus). Group C—(7) Belarius and the two Princes (considered as one ac- tion). of obtaining money by false pretenses 5 from Mrs. Kate Costello_and : Mrs, Mc. | clous of the failure 0f ter Bote. feies Arthur, appeared for sentence before | FREOV. (MEETE S e Tachimo, forced | Judge Fritz yesterday. The Judge sen- |JNCS more by Fosthilaus, (acltmo, joreet | | | answer before ! Judge- Conlan vesterday on a charge of | | as |larceny for stealing a newspaper from the | | Paulist Fathers' TR Arrived ‘Oct 3i—Stmr Tartar, | October 3 during a dispute about a wo- am|Pier %, dammerung” on Friday, November 9, tenced him to five months in the County | Jail on each charge. | Frank Cole allas Curly, was held to the Superior Court by | and 1s forgiven by those he has wronged, The King, freed from the domination of a wicked Queen, with his sons and daugh- ter restored to him, at peace with Rome, reascends his throne to rule henceforth in justice and concord. The Dramatic Movement. The action of the play Is divided into five parts according to the g;nenl dra- matic formula employed by akespeare. The kingdom is first shown in its state of contradiction. A wicked queen usurps the lace of authority for selfish ends. The ribute due to Rome is denied. The mar- riage of Posthumus and Imogen—a ltrong man and a pure woman—is repealed an: the two are forced to separate. Posthu- mus, driven to a hr"?“ land, is himself decelved as to his wife’'s fidelity by an Italian noble and is driven to curse a!l womankind. The ethical equilibrium o the kingdom is thus disturbed and a dra- matic process is necessary for its restora | tion. om the conditions of the play dis of | closed in the first two acts it is seen that in order to effect the harmony of the kingdom the Queen and Cloten must be destroyed and the King regain his fule qA ‘war is necessary to prove the domina- | tion of Caesar and the justice of the ault to murder in $2000 honds. He shot | Thomas F. Fallon at 422 Dupont street on man. Patrick Shannon was convicted by Judge “ritz yesterday on the charge of petty Church and was sen- tenced to five days in the County Jail. e The name of Sloss in this community has beén synonymous with honesty, energy and ability for fifty vears. This guarantees that M. C. Sloss, {f elected, will fill the office of Superior Judge with honor to the community and credit to himself. - —————— ‘Walter Damrosch Recital. At the explanatory lecture recital yesterday -afternoon at the: California | Theater Walter Damrosch repeated his notable success .of last year's series of explanatory Wagner recitals. A large and fashionable audience greeted the lecturer | tribute. Tmogen and Posthumus must be &nd listened to a simple and lnteresung{‘ united, Iachimo ‘Funlshed, Pisanio justi- exposition of the prelude to the Nibelun- | fied. In the third act a new evidence of Cymbeline’s injustice is revealed. Manyv years before Cymbeline had banished 'rom his kingdom, without warrant of ustice, a powerful noble, Belarfus. In is flight to the wilderness this noble had carried with him the King's sons, then mere children. Among the mountains of Wales they live the ' primitive life of hunters, proving by their simplicity, bra- gen trilogy, “Das Rheingold,” with mu- sical illustrations of the leading motives of the magnificent conception. Mr. Dam- rosch is denght(ully at home with his subject, which he treats in clearest and most sympathetic fashion, and the ideals and atmosphere of the great German mas- ter gather a finer dignity and nobler place even to those most familiar with the | very and independence the superiority of | genfus of Wagner after an afternoon | a natural over an artificial culture. Ths with so reverent a disciple as Mr. Dam- | wilderness is a refuge from a discordant rosch. *“Das Rheingold” will, of course. be followed by the remaining numbers of the “Ring,” “Die Walkure'’ to be given to-morrow afternoon. “Siegfried” on Wednesday afternoon next and “Gotter- soclety, but does not itself offer the best conditions for development. The boys are restless in their Isolation and long for contact with the larger world. It is ap- parent that with a return of harmony (o | the kingdom the idyllic society will dis- or- | with an army to Britain to collect the un- | CYMBELINE: A STUDY OF THE PLAY. Copyright, 1900, by Seymour Eaton. e THIRTY SHAKESPEARE EVENINGS, — . solve from its own imperfections. The problem of reconciliation now involves the return of Belarius to his estate and of the boys to their father. But before their de- parture two important events occur. Im- ogen in her fiight from the court finas refuge In their cave and s adopted, stiil in male disguise, inlo the primitive ‘am- ily. And (oten, pursuing iae princess with evil intent, enters the wood and slain by Guiderius. The idyllic stat serves the function of mediation, both here and later, when Lucius comes with in its bounds to find a page in Imogen but it is not a permanent condition. With the de:th of Cloten at the begin- ning of the fourth act the movement to- ward reconciliation is started. The queen, fretting at Cloten’s absence, Mes ill at the pala The battle, which occuples the fifth act, affords the r eans of reconciling all the warring factors. The hunters’ world is at once ibsorbed when artus and the boys join the British forces in the battle. Polson, self administered, de- stroys the queen. Posthumus repents of | his_hasty action in requiring the murder | of Imogen, and is then permitted to At | cover his ‘'wife in the g of Lucius | page. Through the death of the evil mind | ed and the repentance of those who have committed error, the kingdom again established upon ethical g nds and the play conciludes In peace—concludes in the conditionas with the word of “peace.”” The climax and turning point of the action occurs at the begin g of the fourth act. \A diagram will ill rate the movement of the separate c ac S, The king suffers decline, owing to his wife's supremacy, up to the middle of the fourth act, when the | Imogen finds her first s | fus in the third act.. She | as dead In the fourts wct, but r from her swoon rises in company cius. One line (7) may represe t | action of Belarius and the two princes, | for their destinies move together. Cloten | begins to fail when_rejected by Imogen | in “the second act here 1s susy | the action of all during the fifth act | ing the issue of the battle and the out- come of discove The lines of Pisanto, | Luctus and Cornelius are omitted from the diagrameto avoid confusfon; thefr out- come is not important to the play, though the presence of Lucius needed to ex- plain the movement of the fifth act. Comments. 1L “Cymbeline” is classed among the tragedies, but In view of the absence of a gonuine heroic character and from the | fact of the general recondlliation at the end of the play, it {s more properly termed a comedy. The suftering of the characters leads not to death, but to re- pentance and safety. 2. The play is highly composite and its threads of interest are many and intri- cate. The problem of the play was to unite elements so diverse as the Briton the Roman and the Itallan (a Frenchman. a Dutchman and a Spaniard also ha place), to bring together an anclent his- torical event from Holinshed (the conflict between Caesar and Cymbeline) and a modern romantic incident from Boeccassic (the wager between lachimo and Post- humus), then to invent the story of the stolen princes and thelr fiight to a wil. derness (probably an adaptation from folklore), and further to provide for unity | through "the mediation of a single char- | fctergiImogen). It can hardly bs said that Shakespeare was entl success | in economizing his plot or justify ying his characters. The play has manifest tf.n.vm fruities and tmpossible situations, and so ntricate are the weavings of the stories s0 hpav\n- is the burden of reconciliation in the fifth act, that an Impression of and confusion 1is left in the heaviness mind. 3. The most defective part of the play is The the prison scene of the fifth act whole scene is spectacular, and not es: tial to the development of the action ghosts mumble an inferior doggeral ly consonant with the dignity of thefr rev- elation. The intreduction of a prophec that only confuses and retards the m ment is unjustifiable at that stage of tha process. The conversatfon — between osthumus and the faflers is irrelevant The words of Jupiter, however, are strong and have ‘purpose and the function of the vision mayv be to emphasize the ac- ceptance by deity of the act of repeni- ance. The scene seems to be jolned too closely with the other scemes of the act m‘ h’;hexf\lalnad as an Interpolation. 5 e importance of Tmoge o will be more clearly understood T hard- a rec- ord is made of her conflicts and media- tions. A father denies her the g} v'fl‘.e choice in the supreme personal incident | of love. A stepmother antagonizes her at | every point and makes attempt upon her life.” A clowmsh noble pursues hec with sensual intention. An Italian, skillfw love intrigues, tempts her virtue. A } band comes to doubt and curse her an. demand her life in revenge. She certain of the good faith of Pisar is forced to live In disguise with and to become a servant of | dier. Through all these ecor | maintains her Integrity and thus becomes the central figure of the spiritual system of the play. From her a center pro- ceed the lines of repentance and restora- tion to all the members of the kingdom, Tt is true that the play comprehends more than her single heroisms and mediation nevertheless she is practically the sum of its contradictions and the single agent of resolution. 5. Pisanio, as_a mediatorial agent, is second only to Imogen. It is not given to him to have a fate—fates in Shakespeare are reserved for the noble horn—but he is in reallty the only perfect character in the play, always gure in his judgments and just in his actlons. When perplexed he appeals to the “heavens” and his faith is never rendered vain. As a servant ha comes into the service of all the main characters of the play and mediates among them. Yet In ge Shakesperean order he is worthy of neMher rewards nor punishments. It required another age to discover the value of Pisanios. OSCAR L. TRIGGS. University of Chicago. The law in New York allows tenement houses a height of elghty-five feet—seven stories and a baser."nt—when the first two floors are fire-proof, .nd 150 feet—twelve storfes—when fire-proot throughout. P ADVERTISEMENTS. Pears’ What a luxury Pears’ soap is! It is the cheapest and best toilet soap in all the world. All sorts of le use it, all sorts of stores el . Capacinlly Srempiste: | WHITE COTTOLENE makes ~delicious things whole- some and wholesome things deli- cious. 1f you are still using hog fat in your cooking try a pail of WHITE COTTOLENE, and you will be surprised at tife result.

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