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USTICE OF THE PEACE BARRY PUTS POINTED QUESTIONS AT GLASS WORKS TRAGEDY INQUEST Fmployes of the Manufactory Tell of Their Futile Efforts to Keep Trespassers Off the Premises. But Greatly THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1900. Thar beg cond Cole ake being 111 nksgiving day he Hall of Justice of the ueting the in- i Judge Ca- || iet was e ex- in at- glass works San wa of the ker nd that g into the prem- r oye, for the ater when [ essful T sent Mr, e About that the peo- crowd hem with and told on to en- past me.” ved on the em to your as- the break of Attor- the works were being , on duty near “With such ¥ me to e been pres- umbers. Sffcers Harrison and and sald GRAPE-NUTS. DID NOT CURE. Food. until rrisburg i food wher while ot entirely i and taking up Grape-Nuts ¢ she began eating rich and she was young bad | she Helped by Change of o frank been the 4 in set up a first | that he had been stationed at % +HWW%MHM%%+H+%¥MMW‘?+WWWW%. UISUN WRECK DIE IN THE HOSPITAL.;M[]N YMAYN[”' W | qugst to-morrow evening in the case of B. | M Mahoney, the section hand who died lowed trouble, with severe attacks of | sick headache. rheumatism of the joints set in, shing most helpless. as wrecked and the optic nerve af- | Her sme of her joints are dislocated deposits forming about them wem out of place, so that i nervous sys- that she could not read without | last nervous prostration and in- would two or three ecard of and commenced both fc Nuts as a food. »od and medicine to me, ve taken very little medicine since After ten months I find 1e use it improvement in my brain and power, am no longer troubled with v im matism bu tter by ame wil Cereal t 1 ht can 1 suffer very much less with and one day after the other, and read several means entirely cured of I have heen made so the use of Grape-Nuts i that 1 am sincerely thankful for it.” be furnis L., shed by the Battle Creek, it has | | | | | half-hour before the roof gave way. Corden, a clerg and watchman at works, was called. He had been gate on the Harrison- p people off the premises. ed about twelve people to on pleces of paper signed by J lling, asking that bearers be admitted ese persons went into the factory, not roof. Witness had finally left gate to go to the factory to fry to t it against the crowd and when he the opened and gate had been coming in hman at the gate Folsom streets, said men and three men ds of admission, but notice whether or not re on the cards. u see any 1 saw about 200 up there.” time was that?” - J-ADAVIS ‘JJlEl.-sTICE BARRY, o SELLING N [14 | : J!l"l e i Al X \\\ \ ‘1\‘\ RN + ATTORNEY E PHE. JUSTICE OF THE PEAC CROWD OFF THE PREMISES AT OP! b PRESIDING FOR CORON WARNING OF DA F THE INQUEST ON THF R COLE, ASKS POINTED QU GER. E BARRY AND TO GIVE VICTIMS OF THE STIONS CONC FHANKSGIVING DAY CATASTRO- IRNING EFFORTS TO KEEP THE “About 2 o’'clock.” Ignace Joscz, a testified furnace iace ma Steele ard Engineer H. M. Tracy the railroad officiale do not hesitate to de- clare, but whether there other em- who should share some of the ployes blame Most of only by a rigia investigation the railroad hands who were on board the ill fa train and who escaped in- 1y were summoned to attend an inquest | no County, vesterday by Diviston Superintendent J was deferred until to-day or to- There will be three diferent in- sts and the empl Mr examine opportunity vesterday that he would crew as soon as an afforded “] shail take the sworn statements of | and Tracy,’ said the superintend- and these, acy panied by my own will_be submitted to thé general There cems to be no doubt blundered, but he will - opportunity to clear himself.” Conductor Steele says he pulled out from without waiting for the ‘re him, because the agent at Suisu him that the freight was four hours and he thought he had ample 1ime to make the run to mira General Manager Kruttschnitt said yes- teraay afternoon that nothing had devel- | oped In the last twenty-four hours waich would tend to shift the responsibility of accident sts with Conductor Steele,” he o explain his conduct. We shall him a hearing after the inquests are e the ‘It sald sished. Mr. Kruttschnitt said that the company has secured suitable burial grounds at Sujsun, and that the dead which are not clalmed by relatives or friends will be properly interred at railroad In regard to possible claims for dam- sges against the company David R. Ses- sions, claims attorney for the rallroad, eaid yesterday that none of the injured would be abie to recover anything from the company. as the accident was clearly one in which the employes were the re- sponsible parties. Telegrams to the local officials, received yesterday, stated that the tracks had been cleared of the debris and all trains were run over the line according to reg- uiar schedule during the day. KLAND, Dec. 5—There will be an in- from his injuries in the Suisun while being removed to the Southern Pa- cific Hospital of Sar. Francisco. The budy was taken to the Morgue in this city. Br4+44444444 4444444440 Two Men Nearly Asphyxiated. Charles Johnson and Algernon Murphy, employed as walters in the City and County Hospital, were nearly asphyxiat- ed in their room in the employes' head- quarters Tuesday night. The two men had retired for sleep and during the night the gaspipe attached to the stove usai for heating the room became loosened and the room was soon fllled with the deadly fluid. At 5:30 o'clock yesterday morning Frank Johnson, another employe, proceed- ed, as was his custom, to awaken the siceping men and discovered both of them unconscious from the effects of the es- caping gas. Help was summoned and Mumfiy ‘was soon aroused from his stupor and is now fully recovered. Johnson ra- ined consciousness, but is still suffer- ng. ———————— Switgerland complains that the cheese trade is a little dull, and vet, during 1899, that country exported $5,000,000 worth of cheese. s0 the exam- | must attend all | be | the expense of the | wreck | door of the factory to keep the crowd out. | stepped outside and saw that He heard the people on the roof and prob- | was black with people. bly elght minutes before the accident he | W. Bullivan, a contractor who was . SUISUN, Dec. 5.—The inquest over the | at the request of District Attorney Devlin, | remains of five men killed in the railroad | who was unable to attend the inquiry to- wreck has been postponed to Friday morn- | da; None of the bodies in the Morgue ing. Coroner McDonald took this action | have as yet been claimed. is a matter that can be determined | Exquisite Perfumery FOR. Xmas Presents We have all the latest odors in All women appreciate good perfume. Parisian and American perfumes. 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Crown Perfume Co.’s London Extract Crab Apple Blossoms, 16 oz. (pint bottles). . $6.60 each ONLY A LIMITED QUANTITY AT THIS PRICE. TheOwlDragGo. CUT-RATE DRUGGISTS, San Frangisco ana Oakland nayhél‘s Grecian Perfumes, | Grecian Violet Extract, 1 0z.. Grecian Violet Extract, 2 0z.... Grecian Violet Water, small. Grecian Violet Water, large Reynal's Peau_d'Espagne—Violet, White Rose, Lilac Blanc, Helio- trope Blanc—all odors... 1.50 25¢ S5e $1.00 the roof | grading a road around the glass works, was the last witness before the adjourn- ment until this morning. STHEAT TO THE STHTE TREASURY Detective Morse Discovers an Heir of the Late Joseph Sullivan. — Through the efforts of Harry N. Morse, detective, a legitimate heir of Joseph Sul- livan, the taflor, who died at the French Hospitol in May, 18%, has been found. He {s sald to be in England and has given proof positive that he is a relative of the dead man. The small fortune which led three men to commit crimes, which, through the expose in The Call, brought them within the meshes of the law, will not escheat to the State for want of an heir. A letter received yesterday by the Morse Detective Agency in answer to an advertisement published in the London newspapers, Is so conclusive that the At- tornev General has given up all hope of turning the money into the State's treas- ury. This latest development in the now famous case recalls the attempt to loot this estate, the result of which was the conviction of John M. Chretien of forgery, the disgrace of James Taylor Rogers and the trial now pending of Fred Hansted, alias “Young Dutchy,” on a charge of ut- tering a forged instrument. In order that the money left by Sullivan could be turned over to the State it was necessary for the Attorney General to show that there were no heirs at law. He engaged Harry N. the matter and the detective reported that the better plan was to advertise in the English newspapers, the decedent having been a native of England. The advertise- ment was placed in leading London papers andl in the course of time a number of letters were received by Morse, The let- ter writers were unable to prove their re- lationship and it seemed almost certain that the money would go to the State. Yesterday, however, a missive arrived from England, which not only proves the writer's relationship, but shows beyond a doubt that Joseph Sullivan, deceased, had a relative who is entitled to the much talked of estate. e The Epicure’s Delight BLACK & TAN-—‘the American Porter,"—the newest product of the Anheuser-Busch Brew- ing Ass'n, is deliciously plquant in flavor, tempting and pieasing to the palate. — e————— Convicted of Burglary. Harry Altgeld was convicted by a jury in Judge Lawlor's court yesterday on a charge of burglal He broke into_the house of Mrs. te Harvey, 501 Post street, and stole several articles belong- ing to one of the roomers. He will be sen- tenced Saturday. A Viennese seamstress gets only fifteen cents for hemstitching ten dozen hand- kerchiefs,” paying for her own thread and light. MRS 3| Morse to investigate | XV, Heroines of ‘“The Winter's Tale.” (Concluded.) ‘When Leontes first essayed to match himself against the majesty of Hermione's was put quickly to confusion. flarly, he is demoralized and abashed. Heo forgets the dignity of the court, with which he has tried to fortify himself; he Now, sim- domestic scolding. Hermione does not disdain to reply to him, for his sake, upon this plane. e has no recourse but to make new charges and declare that her doom is fixed already. This stifs no re- calcitrant feeling, though something very different springs up in her heart: Bir, spgre your threats Pient me with 1 r, The bug which you would seek. To me can life be no commodity. | 1 do give lost, for I do feel it gone, But know not how it went. That her affection for him is not extin- !'ulshefl in spite of all he hus done to for- eit it, that she misses it and longs for it even at this moment, s sublimely pa- thetic, and shows the measure of her character and devotion. There have been wide departures here from the treatment employed in “Cymbe- line.” In that play Imogen conquers by influences of innocence and meekness that go out from her personality. Hermione conquers by far more and potent forces. Tmogen's wifely spirit was ruffled, for the moment, at the injustice and indirection of her husband’s order. Hermione resists not the intended evil by so much as a frown. Immediately the attack upon her is changed to a defense against her. The assailant seems vanquished, disarmed, hu- miliated. We do not much understand the psychology of such a rout; there have not been examples enough for study. It is evident enough that evil, when unresisted, as here, for the sake of the one attempt- ing to inflict it, recolls upon the adver- | sary’s head. It is interesting to compare the daugh- | ter, so far as she has been developed to ug, with her mother. | stalwart and self-poised; there is less of the true and more of beauty in her na- She stands between Hermione and | Imogen. She has grown up in a shep- herd’s cottage, without kn.wledie of the | world and unsuspecting that she is of gentle birth. Florizel, son of King Polix- | enes, following his faicon across her sup- | posed father's lands, now greatly broad- ened by her treasure, chances to see her | and is attracted by her dignity and beau- He has wooed her im the guise of a ture. ty. | great landholder, under the name of Do- Ticles. So he is presented to us at the opening of scene 4 in the fourth act, in a shepherd's frock put on over his dress, while he has persuaded Perdita to don a gown and finery brought from the | palace. She has arrayed herself in the costly clothing to please her lover, caring nothing for the elegance and sorry to out- shine the neighbor farm girls and swains who are to be her guests. It §s Perdita’s part to be mistress of the her dead mother's place; and has wished us to see a ise to her true plane by niq- n festival in Shakespeare queen’s child ri tive nobleness, and without instruction a shepherd's cottage. fed her wooer capable of the whim of | robing her as queen indeed. Florizel | made in turn to have put on shepherd’s garments for plot reaso soon to appear, Perdita, wholly unprovided with social forms, receives the awkward bucolic com | pany in the great living-room. and for the | moment seems at a Joss. Her lover is standing by unassisting and waiting to See her entertain them sprightly, as he is sure she will. Two men, manifestly of | substance, but strangers, have presented ihemselves as of the company and are | giving her father particular concern. Per- | dita begins by bidding these a somewhat formal welcome. In default of better courtesy she hestows on them flowers that Guit with vears they have not yet reached but have affected in their disguise. an easy victory for men of glib tongues to pretend that pleased, and pretty is the dism: with ehich gPerdita tries to excuse her error. | The king draws her into an argument, | | ing curious to see what wit she has. With this she finds her strength, and from chis moment assumes unconscious mastery the situation. Turning from the grea gentlemen who have monopolized her at- | tention hitherto, she greets her girl friends from the neighboring farms, halt absorbed | with interpretative insight into the world eauty: ey Now, my fairest friend | T would I had some flowers o' the spring that court m! Fernm»‘\nur time of day; and yours, O Pros- erpina, For the flowers now that frighted thou let'st fall From Dis's wagon! Daffodils, T hat come before the swallow dares, and take The winds of March with beanty: violets dim But _sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes, Or Cytherea's breath; pale primroses Crat Ao ummarried, ere they can behold Bright Phoebus in his strength: bold oxlips, ~ and X The crown imperial; lilles of all kinds, The flower-de-luce being one—O these T lack, To vou garlands of, and, my sweet friend. To strew him ofer and oer. With such a mind, such vision, Perdita wins her way with the group about her and with ourselves. Then, in due course comes the moment when the author, using Polixenes’ weak and petulant temper t turn the plot and give the lovers a chanc of escape, makes him accuse her of hav- ing with purpose and knowledge bewitched the prince and threaten to efface her beauty. But t confusion: I was not much ateared. For once or twice 1 was about to speak and tell him plainly The selfsame sun that shines upon his court Hides not his visage from our cottage, but Looks on all alike. She looks pleadingly at Florizel, who says no sustaining word, and begs him for his sake be gone. There is no thought of reproach because e has raised imprac- ticable expectations and sported with her feelin e is the helr apparent. and his rights with her are paramount. She is as- sailed cruelly by her father, but she does not retort angrily or weep hot tears or show one look of indignation at this slan- But his mjustice helps her see the der. will go to Sicily as the friendless maid for whom a crown prince risks the loss of a throne. But she thinks no évil. and goes forward knowing the power there is in her to enact and exact the right. And Florizel's whim of having her arrayed in the robes of a court lady prepares her for a fitting entry into her father’'s capital. We do not see Perdita much again. Her mother is restored to the play, and she must assume a secondary role. 'We could have been sure that Shakespeare would bring the daughter and her mother to- gether in an artistic subordination that should be glorifying to them both. It is a beautiful moment when this country maid, who has never seen paintings or statues or cunning handiwork before, kneels before Hermione in Paulina’s be- wildering gallery. Wiat influences, tel- epathic or other, draw her Shakespeare does not_reveal and maybe does not pre- tend to know, But he has convinced us that she’could not have knelt to a paint- ed image of cold stone, vet eannot but kneel to the real presence of the Queen who bore her in imprisonment. sorrow and desolation. L. U. SHERMAN. University of Nebraska. CRITICAL ESTIMATE OF THE PLAY. It is pleasant to read in “A Few Mem: ries” of Mme. de Navarro (Miss Mary Anderson) how every effort was made to make a successful play of “TLe Winter s Tale.” Miss Anderson says that she fol- lowed the suggestion of Thomas Huil and played the two parts of Hermione ard Perdita, thus keeping alive an unbroken interest in the mother and child, who have been separated for the best part of two acts by the plan of the dramatist. Success crowned her efforts. I never the walls of a theater than during the last week of Miss Anderson's perform ance at the Lyceum. When a Lyceum a. dience shouts “Mary, Mary,” and: de- mands a “speech” one may be sure that the Englishman feels something and must give utterance to it. It was a triumpi mind, In the first scene in the last act, he | abandons his official role and descends to | The crown and comfort of my Ilfe, your favor, | Perdita is not so | court | So he has constitu- | STt is | they are dis- | he- | of | here is no anger and no | heard more enthusiasm expressed within | SHAKESPEARE'S PLAY WITH TWO HEROINES Copyright, 1900, by Seymour Eaton. THIRTY SHAKESPEARE EVENINGS. for Miss Anderson and a greater trjumph for Shakespeare. Would that all thos older critics could have witne: ideal rendering of Shak: The beauty and gra | Anderson as the sh the long dance of the herdesses, the picturesque pearance she presented the scene, leave two pictures upon th ory that can never be effaced and make us believe that rkespeare created two scenes more potentially etical and spectacular Traditionally “The Winter's has not been a successful play. The romantic | story of Greene, probably one of the most I 3 < many novels, is | lovely i drama. And & this pi perhaps more th ail other ada tations the dram ems to fail to sert all the deta provided for the but apparently waight. Greene novels, looked upon giar; He is Shakespeare in some dramatists of being fed wi our feathers.” How Greene would hav enjoyed Shakespeare’'s last pluck out of his plumage. True it is. 8. B writes, “The (Greene) pas not avenged. ~ His story, popularity with the r in many respects a dam a dramatist, and peare as a P have h he accus: as Mr. Frederick unfortunate * . akespeare could not transform i 2 play with unity of motive or of ac Shakes- peare did more than take Greene's | “feathers.” He made a choice of the | same. ot only did he change”the t of the story, which dosto; s kn or Dorastus and F: | ¥ w aunia also materially altered the c the tale. In Greene's story King of Sieily, visits Pandosto Bohemta. Pandesto's love for his royal | guest suddenly becomes metamorphosed into a raging jealousy of both his guest | and his own wife, Bellaria. The innocent wife succumbs to the shock, escapes from the jealous madman satisfied with the murder of tyrant Pandosto now Xp Faunia, the coming heroin. to the mercy of the elements. drifts on the sea: | of the tale, The_child cilia | and is_the: The life of | glides gently on v E s is_ made to cross it by happy chance. This Prince Dorastus falls love with t | her on board trary to the plans who had arranged a Danish Princess for him. ever, seemed to | scheme. On board this sa | ship was the wily shepherd who | his” possession the trinkets need rove the royal lineage of the | Faunia. It was a storm that drove this | shipload of fateful people upon the coast | of Bohemia. for Gr e's Bohemia so | has a seashore, and it was a sionate conclusion that that Y. pas- to his story. ndosto u ingly fa in love with his own daughter and upon discovering this error he becomes melan- | choly and finally commits suicide. | , From this brief and imperfect account | it will be noticed that the dramatist's story differs very greatly and fundament- h names of the t | Bohemia, are iInterchanged. peare adds the characters of Antigonus, Paulina, Autolycus and the clow: | ing the piot of the tale, one will Shakespeare keeps fairly close to the ac- unt of the novelist, drifting awayv only | now and then during the first three acts. | As Mr. Wendell has observed, “The first | three acts make a complete independent gedy. involving the of Mamil- lius and Antigonus, and, so r u ear tell for the moment, the still more t ~ | t, still more tragic end of Hermlone." N One very noticeabl crities in this part c is the slight motiv attacked by normally 1 Greene’s novel infe intimacy between while - fairs of s = seaa to be that th to this vio- lent madness t dealing now with a Posthumus or an s Polixenes t H brings his no- | ble” queen "to i = her own cou |all in vain. The kir blind with | sion. | .The most striking differences between the novel and the drama are to be traced in the fourth and fifth to quote Mr. Wendell make a complete indep which, taking up the | tragic point, leads to of reconciliation and This play, then, fal ot ro lof a ve | understa | and char: | Anderson combine these, two characters mother and daugh | runs, the intere | tainéa by the lo rastus and Faunia are the ers. In the novel the first seems a mere introduct: mance of Faunia h eading play« t of the plot n to this love ro- While with the play | we are deMghted only for a time. in_the fourth act, with the fascinating 'love | scenes between Perdita and ' Florizel. | Charmed with the grace and simplicity of Perdita, the listener is still conscious that she is not merely to be seen and enjoyed | but for her is destined a greater part inm | the plot. She is to be rescued and to soft- en the sadness of her mother's wrongs. Were it not for this fourth act the play | wouid be somber enough. And it is the idyliic beauty, the sweet and simple pas- toralism, the joyous and rustic merry- makings of the sheep-shearing feast, the resence of the dancing and piping shep- erds and shepher@@swes, the surround- ings of Arcadian woodland and flower= Iand, it 1s all these that transport us back to the scenes of “As You Like It,” to the English Faeryland of Shak are. It may be a fancy, but it is a pleasing fan®y, to assoclate these last scenes of the great dramatist's last play with the Arden of his beloved Warwickshire: to think of the poet now Sometime retired to his former country home, delighting again in the presentation of the rural surroundings and characters of his early life. *. F. McCLUMPHA. University of Minnesota. } O i i e S | SPECIAL SALE OF | FURS. | Our large stock of Fur Novel- | ) ties must be reduced within the | { next 20 days. 1 Sealskin Jackets, $128 and up. | Persian Lamb Jackets, $100 | ) and up. | Astrachan Jackets, $50 and up. Mink Capes, $335 and up. | Stone ~Marten Capes, $80 and up. Black Marten Capes, $30 1) and up. " Silver Fox Neck Scarfs, $30. * Fur Capes, $9 uo. Fur Neckties, $2 up. AD. KOCOUR, RELIABLE FURRIER, { 121 POST STREET, (Don't Mistake the Number.) | 1 { ( Rooms 7 to 1L Open Evenings. i