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; THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1901. i [+] » 3 3 = - ——— { In Bienni m He|Will Say Farewell to Her Many Friend Song Recital i ; ' i P n Biennial Statement to Governor He| Will Say Farewell to Her Many Friends at a Song Recital in|Shakespeare’s Witty and Charming Offers S ti d Tells of the First Unitarian Church. “Twelfth Nigh ers Suggestions and lells . Play of welft ight, or . s ’ Institution’s Needs What You Will” ° ; | & XXI. | Flamineo, and 18 soon sent by him to T - woo Isabella in his stead. Isabella falls + * 3 The theater-goer of the nineteenth cen- | {0 love with his messenger, but rejects r v i P to under- n. Late erit! _eiia's brof > % : e e ey called | Whom she has been parted since the sack- 1 e | stand the popularity of the comedy called | yng 6¢ their town, reaches Modena and is : i GI' Ingannati,” over whose situations | several times mistaken for his sister. In ' Library funds te the amount of $500.000. | and {ncidents the theater-goer of old Ven- | adopting this plot Shakespeare puts the A Mbrary butldl itea as and capable of | ice heartily laughed in 1537. The story | sea between .his heroine and hero, an ibrary butlding suited to modern demands ragsrich: | that makes the play of “Twelfth Night, | USes a shipwreck as a means of separat- extension so as to accommodate the library that is certain to be ! o B Mg ing the heroine and her brother. Viola entrusted to the keeping and muse of this university. % | or What You Will,” enjoyed widespread | o0, "} ame of b y as Messaline -~ 7 { fame In its day. Both Bandello and Cin- | which sounds like ho of Messina An sluwmni hall which shall form the center of the daily wo. { b A B . . - - > f “ . s SEoilurs SR | thio selec ts of it for the amuse- [ and Tllyria, Orsino's duchy, is surely cinl life of the students, alumni and teachers: the 4 ment of their Italian readers, and when | Within the E talian speech and the University of Pennsylvania furnishes a zood model; it is a | Thatr maselst aitracted the - sttention. - of | TR O haracters in the fortunate thouzht of our alamni that they have undertaken to ‘ forelgn readers the stories became great | Piay; SIf Andrew and Maivollo, and per- provide this building. 3 favorites with the English novelists and | Tt ig clear that Viola is in love with the An Art Building., which shall furnish shelter for the objects playwrights. It was not many years— | Dyl,kh» beforehand, and comes to Illyria Nustrative o 3 ¥ opology, ete. soon after 1580—before the English story- [ with set purpose (cf. I, if., 41-44, 53.35) to k & .r"l' 1 :'n;:.r:-r‘:ly.enln'_ s tellers, such as Barpabe Riche and | Win him back. As has Just been sald. the E choo ; . uke seems another Romeo, otherwise it A Department of Irrigation. | E‘“:"“" Forde, were “"““‘;‘gh"‘l" Fane | would be out of keeping: that he should A School of Naval Architecture and Fngineering. | incldents for the delectation of thelr Eg- | be wooed. He is in love 'with love, with aisbuliding as Gheh Bk 5 lish readers. It is not surprising, then, that | his own 1deals, as meo was. Romeo - The eminent position which shiphn = il | this very popular and entertaining Italian | worshiped afar off, with no least desire to Sam Francisco Bay makes it incombent upon the university to v of Shakes- | approach, or woo, {n presence, till Jullet is tale should have become one . furnish the best instruection in what has now come to be a char- peare’s most pleasing comedies. The pro- found. Then he leaps the orchard wall 1 [ actertotie OSNSNINIS Set. tean forms, however, through which this | &5, 3%, scaresly be parted f,’,‘;"‘,"}{,’“‘f"',"; p A Department of Music tale passed, from one story-teller to an- | wooes by proxy. K A Department of Archaeology. It will be necessary, in con- " other, baffled the attempts of then 1;0-4 lgn]ny of those who havpdresd “Romeo pes hich will include 1 % searcher to discover the play’s true origin. | and Jullet” think Romeo a degenerate and gl gy St e o L o s i oL Jou_compare this ‘play, with “The | weakiing. o milkaop. moonshine lover ogical co =, to employ g ‘omedy of Errors” and “The Two Gentle- | Just the contrary (s true. er he has should be master in some particular field. The work of these men of Verona” you will find a great sim- | discerned his ideal in Jullet he is as man- various specialists should be united under the general oversight flarity in the situations and incidents, at | Iy as Mercutfo, and in due time beats Ty- T 1Y he chair of archreology. ) times, too, in the characters. Here, for | balt, who is almost a_professional duelist of the incumbent of the o & - 4 example, you will note the confusion of | and swordsman, at his own game. In- 4 A School of Architecture. The work which is to be under- % tdentity in -ae role of Viola and Sebastian, | deed, Romeo needs but a few seconds to taken here within the next few years, in accordance with the 7 ihe story of the shipwreck, the disguise of r‘1:=m ch him. Of course, ;owhere but in e e Viola as a page and her®office as messen- ly could we find a man so chivalrous Hearst mre tura lans, will furnish the best practical op- ger from her own lover to her own rival, | and upright, so p and strong and ten- paetnntly € 4 be desired for the development of snch a and numerous other slight shades of re- | der. Orsino’s is such a nature, or it would school. It eh to be desired that the one who shall be the z\enlxbrla]nce.j Yet there lsdlns u.;w n, have en manifestly unfit that ;"lnla 3 supervising architect of these bulldin houl satisfylng joy to be found in the stage | should come into his power. That he fs 3 per ne e e T s pa— 4 be at the same i production ‘of *“Tweltth Night,” that can | not unmanly, with all his sentiment. is time the head S SR, be found again in very few of Shakes- | indicated to us In the proposal of Curio 4 lmborstors for a Department of Dairy Husbandry, | peare’s comedles. “As You Like It” seems | that he go out to hunt. To an English A Department of Physical Chemistry as part of the general .5 | to bedu.s rtv‘%lhm the !hemr}:cal{!vu ness of | a v!(en\‘?kin smko-rsre's axe‘ or a;v = i 2 it T our day. Vherein lles the fascination? | age, the knowledge that a man Is In the Wiy f Chemistry. This would require at the first an as- | Up to this period in the history of Shakes- | habit of riding to hounds or of hunting sistant professorship only. | pearean development, if we were able to | deer argues the very opposite of effem- instroctor or professor of the art of speaking, to be con- | trace the methods used by the dramatist, | inacy. < with the English department. his choice of scenes, situations, intrigues, There are two strains of comedy run- # ek e T e episodes, his knowledge of the effective. ning through the play. The first Is re- rtructors or pr panish langnage and litera- be it in'language, action or any other | fined and kindly and centers largely in he Russian language and literature, and of general lin- property known as stage business, we | Olivia's rejecting the Duke, apparently be- - might gain some idea of the advancement | cause of his unvirile advances, while fall- of the artist along the lines of his dramat- | ing in love with his page, who is & wom- ic art. It is in the variety, the movement | an, and in later transferring her affec- = and the brilliancy of the wit, the force and | tions to Sebastian, who is no taller and Y clearness of characterization, the har-| hardly more manly than his sister. There monious union of the many dramatic ele- | s humor, too, of an exquisits sort in d "oy s pevecs | ments, named and unnamed, that the de- | Viola's dealings with both Olivia and the ) sident Be i £n e ulated courses to the | | velopment of the dramatist’s work must. Duke. Of coursa Shakespeare has cre- ' s e ot | be_studied. ated Ollvia merely to serve certain artistic { " uniyer By concentrating our attention on some | purposes with his heroins, and she suffers mher of special part of the play we can g a | in consequence as a character not a little. -1l better knowledge of the wonderful work- no aiso is constructed to suit the ex- gy i manship of its author. Let Malvolio be es of bringing out the nature of o pepain-1 | the special part. The old theater-goers a. The author seems to have been at- | of 1640 found thelr greatest pleasure in | tracted to the plot he borrows mainly by me of the university Malvolio, and it was he that drew the |the part of the heroine. Plays in which ctly educational pur crowded houses to “cockpit, galleries and | {he herotne masquerades in man's cloth- m . luct from the gr | | boxes.” The episode of Malvollo, along | ing were not uncommon in Elizabethan e unds_entr: with Sir Toby and Sir Andrew, seems 10 | tymes. Shakespeare so disguises his hero- nthés, 13y be original with Shakespeare. The char- | ines in “Two Gentlemen of Verona,” “The 3 - fpoys w acter of Malvolio Is only Italian in name. | Merchant of Venice “As You Like It- - e » s |1t 1s again one of those examples of | and “Cymbeline.”” But in none of the sit- s r hool ' fund | Shakespeare’s master feat of welding to- | yations thus produced is the Interest so h | gether the romantic tales of Italy and the e in the incident and so much in the & th > v | contemporary life of his own English peo- | cter and experiences of the dis | ple. guised person as In the present case . | " Criticism has debated and stormed | " The second veiln of comedy is less soft- . neuff o ———— i | about the character of Malvolio. Some- |ened and refined. There must evidently . ' | thing ?1 nbcomlro\'@r;y has 'rns:‘:l‘ Bll']lwu'» be action of a more rnlllcklnhg sort to keep s WE CNOWN N 5 r A q him. Lamb writes that up to s time | the negotiations between the Duke and H LL KNOWN AND POPULAR VOCALIST OF OAKLAND WHO I8 GOING TO NEW YORK AND PROBABLY the traditions of the stage made the char- | Gltvis Fem secming to0o tHivial and nane s oo TO EUROPE TO FURTHER CULTIVATE HER VOICE, AND WHO WILL GIVE A FAREWELL CONCERT IN acter of Malvolio decidedly ludicrous. On | Somebody is needed also to stand between - the Be THE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH. the other hand, there is a kind of criti- | OMvia and ourselves, and Maria supplies poro 3 ne B8 | | cism that seeks to bring tears to the | that lack superbly. Sir Andrew is-wanted 1 o three and a ~ - 4 |Teader’s eves when he contemplates the |to complete the comedy of the duel with e funde which | melancholic dumps and the heartless | Vigla and Sebastian. Sir Toby is a chief g ":' act ap- AKLAND, Jan. 6-—~Miss Alma | done most excellent musical work. She is| follows: | ‘NMTNI;WWHA w,rl;“:x I'DJ\M:L‘J::\(«}:”F, | igure, having seen surely m':"-” service in n of Bl to_pay Berglund will say farewell to|a graduate of the State University, and| (a) “Ho Messo Nove Corde al Mandolino” | IS, QVerwhelmed. [ AR presentalion | the wars abroad. He, too, seems an Eng- ~ & year ~ o 3 oh; | Of “Twelfth Night” a few years since sat | lish character, a sort of Captain John 2 s > our Oakland next Thursday eveningin | developed a voice of such great value that :Eflv;flfi-fl;& dsntl_l;f’;‘nl .}‘».Z".Tm.- ‘}j;“’i.’;l‘;‘;\ isfactorily combined the two sides of | Smith, whose contact with folk who till e e - e i A Song goo st the First Uni-|she has continued Der musicsl studies| il Tthe" Berglund; *'To | Malvollo’s character, allowing the spec- | vineyards in the south has been his bane. by any uni tarfan Church. Miss Berglund, advantages of the larger opportunities |the. Evening Star’ cBride; | tators to respect the man in his humors | He {s used principally to effect a physical . or approximate. | who 1s so well and favorably known for | AgValiages of Jthe JATEEr CPD | mad~ scene from ‘‘Hamle (Ambroise | and simultaneously to enjoy the antics | gjsposition of Malvollo. Without Malvo- n . rh lity of her voice, will go to New | °5ered in He O e il o 111 be | Miss Berglund; () ‘‘A Leaf,"” (b) | played upon him by Sir Toby and Maria. | jio's sanctimony and presumption the to ¢ e the quality of A 8 it .flss'l}e‘\'g!!gnd s f;\rvflml“]"’"‘"" ‘:' e | “Night,” () * .""" (d) ““Memories.” (e) | But this is the error of the world. To the | main business of the play would seem too s arger -y Bt - York for a season of study and culture, | a musical event of no llttle importance. | .:Reveries (Neidlinger), Mles Bergiund; (a) | world a man may be either a fool or a |paid. The drinking and maudlin talk and and may even visit the musical centers of | She will be assisted by George B. Mc- | «yy Little Love” (Hawley ’ Bride and Mrs. Margaret Cameron-Smith. | (Schubert) Mr. McErid The programme will be elaborate, includ- " for instance, rea- i () B the Sea” | knave, while to his creator he Is a harm- | ginging, the jests of the clown and the rd's income | the old world. Miss Berglund is already (a) “The Auld Plaid | Jess creature with a few folbles. A cre- | countrified graces of Sir Andrew’'s danc- f $1 8 (Hynes), (b) ‘“‘Missing Boat” (Old | v s ike Shakespea 2 - = rox at - well and favorably known o both Oak- | ing the mad seene from AmbroiseThomas . (© ne® (04 Bowtold, | aeony e es Sl & ChATOEtes 36 Diack | T e v port of pr Jand and San Francisco, where she has| “Hamlet The programme will be 8| Miss Berglund. 4 or so blank that there was not room for | o Jook absurd. The author's taot is seen G % etucation T @ittt el ettt @ | 2 Shade of neutral tint, mot to speak of | the care he takes to introduce the - education. [ B et 0 i * @ | Datches of purple. Those creative geni- | bnatie comedy between Sir Toby, Str An. e Thlias which uses had sympathy with their fellows and | Grew and Maria in scene 8 before Viola is | | meaw DR, HART SAYS ORPHAN ASYLUMS | e oot o Sl Wi el | it o et i B e s 1 1 | | cost per student for The stage has reason to dislike Puritan- | greq in bringing on the other characters rtments of Ha s ism; hence the ludicrous turn given to the | 5¢ that sort in scene 5, just before Olivia r the year * SH l IL 2 A_ID character of Malvollo. The stage has | on s horsel? to her rival. towing sunm made a fool of him. Malvolio has the | “Vigla Wins us effectually at the outsst unique position of belng the only speci- | py her faithful wooing of her rival in We- men of a Puritan satirized by Shake-|ha)f of the man who has her heart. Thete < q 2 7.—*“Child-Saving A | dren in which, he said, conditions of neg- | income from private sources and spedre. Here is an opportunity for us de- | i endless opportunity to be false and yet the Care of Dependent, CIUIArAE ® elal | that the disposition of abandoned babes | fcilow In the line of most Roman Cathollc in- | sympathetically the artist sketched our | Sjc'|s curlous, of course, to see her rival's % general theme of discussion at the spe "*" | was a grave problem, and it was his idea | Stitutions in the matter of service. He hires [ ancestor. Whatever may be the purpose | peauty, and this she manages in a fairly e | sessions this afternoon and evening of the | ey ® SIr R DX ey it nate chilaren | 8il of his help and pays good salaries. Most | of his wit and humok, Rowever offensive | heoororal way 1o bring about.~ Whew California State Conference of Charities ' should be held to a strict accounting of | of them depend upon the treely given assist-{ may haye been the Puritanic attitude | che discovers that Olivia has charms per- and Correction. The sudden and unex- | responsibility for them His plan, and religlous | toward Shakespeare's own ‘profession. af- | haps superior to her own she betrays no X | orders, who receive little more than their | fectin, erhaps his person and pocket actings H. Hart | one that had been adopted by many In- | board and elothing. His hetr | ing p: s D disposition to take issue with a fact, as s stitutions. provided and demanded that | public grant is that people wemld mer pat o5 | Dook, yet the writer did not use his power | hor gex has so often done. She shows no pected call East of Dr. ¥ made necessary his last appearances to- | oy or"or cyuch oftspring should remain | much interested in the insti to destroy the victim with ridicule, to | y, and b 1 v L, 8 o tution If 1t were | o spite, no envy, and we may be sure feels | day before the conference. The eminent | vy, their children at least a year. Con- | subsidized and he could not get private as. | heap upon him all the palpable vices 'and | none. She has no least thought of Indi- | philanthropist devoted the afternoon to an | tinuing, Dr. Hart said: | sistance so readily. With a large number of | Weaknesses of his class. The playwright | rection. She appears to be governed by a address upon general phases of the sub- | This California system 1s regarded quite | People the question arises whether it is wise | CONtinues to be poet, keeping gayety of | faith, not unlike Imogen’s, that the issue . . doubtfully by many people who have given | o put our hands in the public treasury. This | heart himself while treating the specta- | wiil content her. For the year 1598-99 . { ject and during the evening session went GBI b G LC e ation, While these | demands serious Investigation. Our institu. | tors with the harmlessness of pure fun. | T s into much detail, {llustrating his talk with | (upgaized institutions are apt to be well [ tion in Chicago receives $5000 a year and Malvolio is not painted as a repulsive | Disguise, I ses thou art a wickedness [a wide selection’ of stereopticon views of | officered. with warm interest on th part of | Wi Endoubieiy. sinetiue wpci 3| Byvocrite.” Tt would be weil. to compare | Whereln' the pregnant enemy does much . ous the public, the tendency Ia irresistible to_ac- of the dependent. abandoned an: n this respect wit : iow easy it 18 S - taise ¥ ‘""“‘““"'}“* 3"“ "!' ”"L ‘r'“;'m‘l‘;l ’["“'r"’:" Of | Comuiate iarge numbers of chidren. In New reglected child is one vulnerable point of ‘at- | ?'gmp‘;n‘(:lr'q::n o the fizfitl::"n; RRTon. g P g Biarty fo set e Syemat s tient o study. = 4 lo anism ir 8. | Rlan our frailty 18 the -4 i work in the depa n York there are 3,000 children in subsidized in- | tack upon the influences that foster paupertsm, | Seott wrecks his creature on the rock of | 4% JuF frallty 1s the cause mot wel COLLEGE. Dr. Hart declared the system of the gtitutions and I have seen in one of them | Vice and crime. It is a bacred work and there Berkele : State subsidy of private institutions for | 300 adults who have grown up in the place | is a special responsibility upon you, bacause hypoerisy, making of him a villain, while | fow will ¢ ? My master loves her - y o 100 wi 00d. There is & tend- | your methods of public grants to pHv ® | Shakespeare makes vanity, self love, the | early, . e | child care was not in line with the best | o manhbod and wemanhooe, e 18 6 e~ | Stitutions are questioned: o ® 10 Private in- |y lP0f Malvollo's downfall. Do not | And e momnter, fond su Tl on him, | thought and urged a careful investigation | tjon s kept up. There are very grave diffi seems to dote on me. The hospitals will be considered during | imagine for a.moment then, that Shake- | And she, mistaker : |ot the subject. culties {nvolved and the whole trend of the | the morning session. = Father Crowley, | Speare is scourging Puritanism under the 4 when the What will become of this? As I am man, A university | | r and except in 1= =1 Dr. Mary Roberts Smith of Stanford | situation seems to favor getting children into | Dr. Dorothea Moore and others prominent | mask of Malvolio. His satiric mood is | My state is desperate for my master's love. g ¢ the student com- -| 8798.436 | 2602 | 8307 | University presided at the afternoon ses- | family homes early. Here in California you | in soclal settlement and institution work, | that of the artist. more subtle, not that | AS T am woman mnow slas the da r eht. | S - --| g% | 16| 64 | sion. In introducing Dr. Hart Dr. Smith | must seriously consider the trend of opinion will deliver addresses. of the DAURE oppess. tne. of Sesgnon | Ontime! Thou must entangle this, not I - e - R S RIS vo-c. ko .| 276,006 | 1695 | 16: T 3 orta o an ought: upol e the s not as Shakespeare's mouthpiece % ot 8 - g = et A= 162 | referred to the vast importance of child | aud thought tpoh this BEBISCE g 4n | theme for Monday evening will be | It P i T In (50 Rard = Kmot for Me 40 & | “Co-operation Between Pub) - | that Sir Andrew says he desires to “beat A x 3 vate Charities.”” Mrs, Pm:lmlx‘:lfix';udmfi'n Malvollo Iike a dog” for being a Puritan. | Here we have mind, vision, character, Of ihe Stockton Associated Charities and | A Malvollo's character. to view it from S R T el it lation in his own State of Illinols until = (L, G50 children. Last year he handled 8. | Andrew Davis of the Emporium, San | another standpoint. is a somewhat tradi- |is even sorry for her fival's plizht. She vEicist b two years ago upon the care of dependent | Of these 200 went back to thelr parents and MNFrancisco, will be the leaders., Mr. Davls | tional one on the English stage. Vanity, | does not "”“’ ;';“” P+ B . velcist. Director James E. Keeler, | and ‘abandoned children. He condemned more thas 400 were sent out to homes, mostly | Will explain the Denver and Liverpool | Self-love, pomposity, have been human |lot. She is interested lke a philosopher saving worh “"‘:n‘i}l‘\n’ n;;fl)fl‘:d““ intelligent the work of Father Crowley of the Youths' direction concerning methods. @ legls. | Directory of San Francisco, which handles Dr. Hart spoke of the absence of legls- | oniy Catholic children. His house accommo- e greas | Besides President Wheeler's own report, | an account is given of recent dircover and researches at the Lick Observator: on Mount Hamilton, written by the great | astr per cent . just before his death; reports on the work | v or a soclologist in the history that she L | 04 ses for il- | to farm in this State. He had 320,000 ! plan of supportin, vate | weaknesses for many eons. Our hero of a b of the art. law, medical. post-sradiask | the professional boarding houses for chil- | to farm homes D] g piivate charities. | Hrat English comedy had a large share of |18 helping to make. : 2 - medical, dental. ‘Pharmaccutical and vet. | g 4o oo el bbbt el fefefofods @ | these foibies—Ralph Rolster Dolster-and | After showing how things go with Olivia Solentis o erinary ‘departments ‘n San Francisco these foibles caused him to miscalculate | the author lets us see a chapter out of the stat i a o a & . . - Fagg - ol gr—g Bl ‘ment of recent faculty changes & | his power over the hearts of womankind | new life in Orsino’s palace. We have di- B ta ot "even | bibliography for the members of the fac. CAPE I OWN ( AI I S FOR and elin trom the pinnacle of his seif- | vined how the hours are speeding. There . e e ulty covering the past two vears. invaiu. 5 15 no home more elegant in all the south, sufficiency. Lyly's Sir Tophas, in “Endym- able statistical tables compfled by Recerd- oS has many of the symptoms of Mal- | yet we know that Viola has made herself abie, Natintiay tables compiad By slocord. Y REI..FORCEMENTS The percentage of On reporis from the officers of faculty and N volio—in _their first stage, however. Lovn | more Indispensable than all its sts has “milked his thoughts,”” and though ha | and manuscripts and furnishments. The *lightly higher among the under- | student organizations and a list of recent than among the graduate etudents, | gifts to the university. does not don yellow stockings and cross | Duke has found the subtle Influences of a 3 und ! i garters, yet he lays aside the implements | her sex enveloping him. though he does imited undergraduate in This list of gifts is surprising in its va- of warfare and struggles with the cut of | not guess whence the fascination comes his beard. Sir Tophas is not troubled | The strange comfort of Viola's presence AR i A o3 ent year 190001, 341 were about the cakes and the ale. Thus thers | makes him seek her company and conver- T e Snirg | Aot vt ace st on suinenvie ware: | BoeT Commandos Increasing in Number and » for the past four years is ; 7 judgment of the United States C - 3 . Th v stnes | k out a study of what V: MEE oE B0 tor andow o g ynificent | the colontsts, and Cape Town calls loudly | each ma, receiving £50 dowm on starting. | sioner on the part of the Uniited Biates | Bhelgencare's day has evolved eslf Into | as charms may win. “Fvents ot Oltvia f air in some | for strong reinforcements from England, the Barl of Dunraven, emphasizing thg Government, as well as on the part of | several distinct types, but In none of these | home shape an outcome speedily. Orsino 00 and $25,000 worth of propert: on the ground that the greater part of. (il ave: sitoation IniBouth . el Chinese persons. should we expect to find much pathos or | is.at length forced to resort to Olivia in | erary fomd. of baarty to endow | O S B ener's available force 18 em- | nymy S1e’ Gontint 8 Mationth Africa,” | The first six sections are devoted to the | sublime. Poetry now. —Shakespeare. had | person that he may understand why she | the Jane K. Sather library fund and o | ployed In protecting the lines of com- |fons of experts on (he &pot and to be | ial of Chinese persons accused of being | the knack of keeping the gemeral tenden- | regards his messenger more than hifmselt. 89.94; 1897-908, 42.2; 1898-59, 4433 15991900, 4. The proportion of Women among the in- . ment of the countless benef hole line of potential Malvolios of | sation. He wishes to have soft strains of 8 the university up to and nt neficences of s a whole po! s of h t 1895, B Mrs. Phebe A. Hearst, the H H lier English stuge, as we all_know, | music played while he speaks to her. %95, 508 were born in Call- . the woman Ry the earlier Eng z n [ formie. #54 mutsie of the State. and in the cass | The statement 18 unavoldably —Iosens Solne of Them Contam DUtCh COlonlStS. CALL HEADQUARTERS, 1406 G| on every nationalstage. Itisasif Shakes | _ How dost thou like this tune? o o The ottine > mesord comcern: | Plote. Tox Mra. Hearst's 1s the gentmcoity STREET, N. W., WASHINGTON, Jan. | peare” again compieted the embryonic | Viola—It gives s very echo to the seat Ing birthplace. which hides from the right hand what 6.—Representative Kahn will to-morrow | gharacter sketches of his predecessors. | Where Love i3 khm,d ,Tuking il the figures into aecount, it is evi- | the left is doing, but_detailed figures gre introduce a bill regulating and prohibit §What {s distinctly true In Malvolio can | D e e T e et ey emiage of California born | given whose sum Is $271,566 6. This total| LONDON, Jan. 7.—This morning's news | The necessity was never more acute for | 15g the coming of Chin. bit- | only be understood by a historfcal study |* iz A R e b o etudents close proximates 60 per cent in | includes the expense of the He: 15 g ain unsatistactory. | dispatching reinforcements. Already there & eseé persons into'the | 5¢ much that has been achieved by thas | 4 =il the aifferent wipe. it the afmissions nl‘ national architectural competition. mafe | (O™ Cape Town ia again Hoen o d at |is proof that coloniws are leading one | United States. Qramatists of eariter times. It is the in- | bl " Pt e o cnb e e en "yt ® Jower peroentag® | Tublic for the first time in this epory aq | Martial law has been Db commando.” The first section continues in force all | fusion of new life and meaning into the Hath 1t not, boy? rentage of Californis o stodente o emalers | $125,029, but does not embrace the $30.00 | Malmesbury, and would have.been pro-|“The military movements reported ars | the existing Chinese exclusion T | 4 forms that makes Shakespeare's mas. | - b “rom those who entered between the years 194 | OF_MOTe Which Mrs. Hearst s spending | claimed in other dlstricts but that tho | quite unimportant, tiiough Portugal 1s | twenty years after May 5, 1905 tercraft. R gl e B B S . CYSEY vear in purchases and excavations | Cabinet meating called Saturday was un- | sending remforcemens to Lourenzo Mar- | “Sectlon (wo commits the administration Y e CCLUMPTA, Diota—0F your complenion The proportion of women among the under- | of BEVptian, Greclan, Roman, early Chris- | aple to agree as to its advisability. auez. Dr. Leyds, according to The Haguo | of the Chinese exclucion laws to the B Xniversity of Minpesofa. Duke_She 18 mot worth thes, them. sradustes has steadily inoressed. In 6.7, | lan, Byzantine, Philippine, Peruvian, | *o ¢ the information con- | COTTéspondent of the Daily Mail, 18 re- | requ of Immigration - g ed fid il , $21 wers men, ; | Mexican and Amer.can antiqulties for thg| The vagueness of t! cruiting in Holland, Belgium, France gnd | ' Section th a Shakespeare's comedies are strangely | Strange confidences will grow up be- 1900, out of a total of 178, |university museum T he | (erning the movements and Dosition Of | Garmany. and his Fecrults will be sant to | (e gt Hece L Ghides fOF 8n appeal to | jacking in burlesauie and farcical el | tween these twain, we may be surs, as tha " women. The por "ot | _The fist contains also a statement of | the invaders has sent a fresh cold fit over | Namaqugland, ostensibly as emigrants, | jng ates District Court from the | ments, such as abound In the light drama | days wear on. But Shakespeare is not I i eld of classical literature, of between $15 - the present year, 1800-01, will approx # per cent. It 18 noticeable that the rtion of women is considerably greater e "‘,o,:“';"",,;';',,,‘;‘,"_“ patura; | Ber execution of a trust iced. whose con- [ munication and the Rand mines, the lat- | ready for the unexpected, He complains unlawfuily in this cuunu?;,rwhfle the sub- | cy and meaning of a piay comedial whils | He finds Olivia alr e o . " sequent sections provide the procedure king it mainly in details noble and up- | the other mysteries clear themselves. sciences end commerce, than in the university | teNt8 are m"tlw‘l":{l“""-r“h\. which the uni- | ter extending for a distance of fifty ":f ‘;" n""""" "l""' ?“}h""““l- F and | iy the matter of Chinese exclusion. m‘tlng.g Of all the dramas thus con L. A. SHERMAN. #s & whole. The proportion of women in thess | VETSILY Wi mefit greatly s ":‘Ktfl e necessity of large reinforce- | "gection 7 Fves the Commissioner of Im- | structed ‘“Twelfth Night™ may be heil| University of Nebraska. e e e e R S % por camt: | It 1a asserted by one Cape Town corre- | ™Tha Cape Town correspondent of tho | MifFation Jurisdiction ' to determine the | easily the chief. ~ ° ° = | BOXER A n:::rh " v'xr:- v’i‘l‘u’»fi. m.{n; the | SUCCESS OF spondent tlfi.t unleu:, the fm;l'efl “ifl "‘:"l‘b‘;“ ;‘5’1‘&;‘“51; °3§' m;%‘: ‘%%e’;amgo(:y; & d' he 'hgat r‘l‘ght is bu‘l;lp:n :lr;iz:ns.;:llg. (?;nma;' InSh:Il;e:E;::; (r:cl':lly th:m!h ;’:l::sl:(y): \ b nom_Ann b’ oo 8 ry - of udents Colony are increased 2 most undes e mandos, = o eges of lettors, soclal sclences, na e of aftairs may result, as the suc.|8ays: “Nearly fivesixths of the Britier; | 5°0 birth in this country of the Chinese where el e ter e Teea] Jfallan | gy ANGHAL Jan. 6Tt is reported from ral sclences and commerce were women. In SUBSIDY BILL state ¢ e invdders, however | troops are employed to guard the lines | PS m broved by the cestimony | herogine an AR was 10| gnganfu that the Empress Dowager has et T e ey Sulem S Wty woon- :fi:"m'nm'{;:‘(' be & !(gnnl for a Dutch ris- | of communication and to garrison towns. ?.fi.:t;‘c’:‘téé‘gfisy'%?‘%fio’?xé’& ;?1!1:"!71:!“7: -3 ..-tgn‘xllr“:dt\?;xrfx‘;hr: {'r?:w:.n&o'rggvn:ullfw&i‘ ciigred Cendral Pt Tos | Toal? siues T and for women teachers s in IS ASSURED |ine; As it is, many British residents have | 1080 o e o e snemy. Tasse b | of the applicant, which said record must | play is to have a Viola there must 'he ‘an | mander In the province of Yunkan, o pro- 1 Iatively strong seems to be ind- had to leave the Dutc villages near Cape | TIOURICS, 10 PUTRLE 00 faable, and Shics | have been actually made and recorded | Orsino, Who 18 in reality but another | ceed with his army to the Yangtse Valls i B B F R ——l D s e s Mabart & huindred | Would be cheaper in the end. The dam. | ¥ithin one year of ‘the birth of ths appli | Romeo. Tha principal features of the piot | and from that section to move northward. A are borrowed from the Italian drama of | His force is said to consist of 15,000 men, Biats OaorMie e e | - CALL HEADQUARTRRS, 1 men, aither Boers or local farmers, have | 2fe Wwhich the Boers did to the Kleinfon- | *I5po it turther provides that i Chinese | “GI' 'Ingannati” (“The Cheated™). = Lela, | armed with modern weapons. A Bt i | STRERT, N WABHINGTON. san | (et oot Stmenture | LISRON. Jaf§Aaiions Tenfores: | 20 bave GO Cois e VA |t IO Lttt S W csrmed | i Vol Wt T 1o s is exceeded by five or elx-other States. | 6.— In the opinion of Senator Frye the| The Cape Town coirespondent of ~the | ments have been ordered to Lourenszo | States shall do So clandestinely, they shall (" 2o Sy y oy e con- | has arranged with Prince Ching . Rk Ao- - g mnfoen g .3 1 1 be deported in like manner as if thay haa | stable of in sz to Modena, | Hung Chang that the allied troops are not s of wtuens &% the aalversiey. 15 15 E:.'f.‘.’.,f;"m‘,gg ship rubsidy bill in the | Daily Mafl, who cails for 4,000 fresa | Maraues. no such lawful right. It also provides for | Which chances to be the city In which i’ to operate in the prefectures of Shunte. 3 e Senatorial | troops, says: ish t of persons issul: Flamineo, the hero, lives. Lelfa has bee; i d Tami in the B g R BT TIE A T to continue | joyalists ‘declare that the rebellious col- the punishment of per issulng falgs ved by Flamineo in fo ~ ARy~ gl AR Tariion, ot the Sinte; there exists here 10 | the measure in the legislative programme | oniats will construe. the colonial call to Bpron Leonlsld, oF Tradniant ornl Ao A L R DSOAILY 1 | TTeYE Dova weu: | of Chil- for some time the lovers have sep- iretyiiiponrss until it has been voted upon, even if it LONDON, Jan. 6—Henry Wyndham, | fixed for the false or fraudulent use of N d tro ol . o ) arms as a challenge, and that the omin- 4 3 . ted, and she is now forgot i T e e e et 40BROT. | becomes necessary to hold night sessions. | ous. silence of the pro-rebels, combined | Baron Leeonfleld, formerly captain of the | €enuine certificates. TN, N0 Soe tu Sow Joepas fiml“.& 7 _Jmuw-n Mury& fbury. no clase which ropscieusly sccepts the dpom | Senator Frye will not foreshadow the | with the fact that tne members of the | First Life Guards and member of Parlia- ST e hero, to whom she has rematnei| AUGUSTA. Me., Jan. §—] 5 merioerity for 1teelt and ite ehildren. The | Tesuit in the Heuse, but he no concern | pro-Boer junta in Cace Town have been | ment for West Sussex In the Conservative | BEngland has no journal of forestry.| faithful, is ng court to Isabella, a | States Senator James Ware Bradbury died special reason, however, for the rapid th | whatever as to the fate the measure | touring In the disaffected districts, em- |interest from 1854 to 1869, is dead, aged 7) | Germany has several, one of which is in | yich lady of that cify. Lelfa disgulses , at his home in this city to-day ef bron- of the Jast few years is to be found in the | in the Senate. phasizes the necessity for martial law. years its seventy-sixth year. as a page, enters the service of | chitls, aged nearly 9 years.