The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 29, 1901, Page 13

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THE SUNDAY CALL 13 LUji Wk () N L w n-shouldered, sy Pose and Repose. learned how to balance the fow 1o 1 to acq Cultivate the Attractive Kind of firace Revealed by Li he and Shapely Limbs ~ L e knees and rise on the et rapidly half-dozen . an art and or more. Do not stran or pu Acqmre who unde e body it must be e main- . ves no evi- °d erect and free from tension. Do work the arms. These exercises c: be practiced too often If reduction of Physical the hips is desired. Too large is also another lion in the path, Blmval‘lcv v too large a waist than one too rath the generous inches of e vision. If it is de- by Correct ize of the walst swinging back and far as possible without losing the POISe 0f Head nce; the body must he erect, with the t of her does she when in a etu- mprove forth as bal goc 2 ccful disposition of th »rms extended verti the head, Ae o et > the hands touching fation, rarse afd Shoulders, al nately the right he left foot, 4 holding knee bent at a small angle. e _— 1 and INCE the opening of the Bohemian is a very strong piece of work and one among them the late James A. Phelan, | tr L, = el les Club exhibition on the 19th many ©f the most admired in his collection. Mr. Governor Stanford and Professor Le i > e tis 2t < Peters, whose display was one of the Conte. After the completion of the M mus r G t m f the artist members are being play , T 1 . Pooin heartily congratulated, not only Sénsations of the club this year, has made Kinley monument Mr. Schmid will g0 to ~ S 5 X hearti ngratulated, ¥ arrangements for g hibtion of his St. Louis, are as by selected to . et %r (AINE Rttt wi IS r an exhibtion « St. Louis, where he has been selected to | 2 tal | cessful exhibition ever held in this city, Richards gal in Jar Ryl = . = Ber Beiy thramiton t for the number of thelr canvases will exhibi Goupll's in New York, , : i ebe sl and 1 10 s to Show Enzland whai pngls . rv Breuer was especially lucky, ir merican artists can do by exhibiting in v Toler Was eapaclally loky, I by 0 B ouawell galiaries: Novw Hong strcet . > A he broke the record In the number |he, DOU w Y n W ales made. for out of nine canvases 3. A Stanton sold two. “At Low Tide" an, who remained. The large Cali- and ns of her | forn ape which held the place of Raid” from the brush of earns to| honor on the north wall was one of the One of “Cathedral Focks t first to change ownership, Of his others ‘velch completes the iist Strs 1| sold du s indolenze. | P the two weeks’ exhibition and Dune Near uit Californta,”” | Monterey Landscape,” “A Gray Day,’ To Reduce the Girth of the Hips. | “N lameda” and “The Oaks." S i < raceful if | Who have secured lan No figure can ceful 17! brush of Mr. Breuer m a ler them- he a general breaking up of win w ere is an ex ce below ves Jucky. for the opportur will not . atudios. for most of the artists sre de. This which | be presented agaln for eevera ars. He sjrous of making a special study of spring ; shapely | has stored his studio furnishings and Will Jandscapes In the cotntey Wi Inordinately | on January 1 leave San Francisco for an 3 bt o ah: indphate dme, Siog DEEaADe t R sed this year in the club exhibi- . Sfor n rent. thence to Varlons paris of . has been scoring quite a success on of overmuch 1. To reduc o xirth of | Breiier dges. not 'm"nfi)gthln exhibit here Iecent exhibition given by the Kilohana he hips one exercige. s suggested which | again for a period of three years. Art League of Honolulu I" received = i can be taken v pliances. It is [ J. H. Ga sold a canvas entitled A muc ition from both public and met T devel to stand erect on a slight clevation from | Showery Day,” one of his largest and nt work 188 posirait it on_one leg. | best the ground with the we X : st. ¢ % ssion being issued from the Pa Relax the other leg, and with the power C.” Chapell Judson sold his much ad. com ) = e high first swing the relaxed leg | mired picture, “The Wind-Swept Pines,” Club of that place. ] e il Ra ket Thin: awing it | “Two by J. Frank McComas, “The La Rupert Schmid, a familiar figure in the an Franciseo, ha ongratu acceptance by the goon Sketch” and ““An Oak Tree Study,” art circles of both Monterey scenes, were sold. ceiving man Also the large c ““The House of the strong leg. movement from irc atory notes upon an Jose McKinle: : the ward must be quite motion] John Howard Payne.’ [ move s jnter tatement is made that a wom- | one of his characteristic moonlights. 1t the monument to the late President. Mr. e fl . gy juced the size of her hips no | represents a house half shrouded by trees, Schmid’s work is well known on the coast. ir inches by th 1d similar | through the branches of which the glim- for he has executed sculpture portraits of sther way may be men-| mer of a lamp's light shines dimly. It many of California’s best-known people, work o be held in Boston at the Doll & tary. Later he ‘A Village on the Cliff.” ‘A Juvenile iss and from Thaddeus Now that the holidays are over affairs the world of art are righting them- ear Golden Gate selves. The artists are beginning to think of the annual spring exhibition to ;" be held in the Mark Hopkins Institute of Those Art, commencing March 13 and to be con- apes from (he tinued one month. After that there will Theodore Wores, whose work was the ‘islands, for his contribution to the te Paul Neumann of Honolulu. the been re- “by Rollo Peters, monument committee of his design foy execute some important scuipture for the | coming exhibition to be held at that place in_the year 1903, Douglas Tilden has removed his studio to Oakland, where he is at present occ pled with 'several impertant pleces work. Mr. Tilden. who has had charge the modeling class at the Mark Hapki t since its foundation, ha his professorship. feeling th his work at present in the studio dem more than a divided attention. ; "he annual Bohemian Christmas jinks was held in the Mark Hopkins Instituta December 20 by the students of that Instt tution. The only evidence of work played was the poster exhibition, wh attracted much favorable comment and no little amount of fun for the grotesque | designs and ori ality shown. The larrzrl artroom w ded with the students and their friend n entertainment was | given in the evening and the affair was | thoroughly enjoyed by all present. | Some good work. both in water colo: nd black and white. shown in the udio exhibition at 131 Post street by Ho- ren and Haig Pa n. These two young | artists, whose work in illustration is weil known in this city, surprised their friends | £ | | | by the di of ny cleverly painted water colors.” A _Monterey Scene, A Rocky C at Baker each” and a “Chinatown” by Halg Patigan were ail good, both in tone and feeling. One side of the wall w covered by a precession of dancing nymphs and daintily costumed | ballet girle, drawn with a grace and | abandon which ¥8 great promise and | a bit of originality upon which the broth er Horen {s to be congratulated. A snatch of landscape, also with his sign ture, demonstrates the fact that a clever hand -3 b E\oéflgcf fdosse e O @Br - Eear BNp @rsssic Sose" N, SrourLpErs and a poetical mind guide his brush studio was charmingly decorated for th h proved a financial as tistic success. involves her right to coeducation, where there is a nearer approach than there s elsewhere to an equality of & ; % clal, civil and political rights, = — S - 3 P: o!;es;nr Joseph Le Conte, about a i P year before his death, publicly confessed | “The Best Known Club Wo- . iy Liis conversion to the principle of cocdu men on the Pacific CoastP” Do you know who they are? Or, in knowing who they are, have you ever studied their personalities to know why they should he considered the “best known’'? This sketch of Mrs. William Xeith is the eighth in an interesting series on just those lines to coeduca men serving on school board and hold- ing diffcrent public pesitions who ““do not believe in woman suffrage.” They are only too willing to accept and benefit by the rights and privileges conceded through long and persistent agitation on the part of other women. and yet they would withhold further opportunitics in the same direction from their women. The national president of the Ame: Womarn Suffrage Association closes woman's century calendar with planation of the glow progress in political rights, which she says {s because ‘“‘the same types of ignorance, bigotry, conserv- atism, prejudice and fear which posed every other step in the proz women’s rights, but which were powerles to say yea or nay. are endowed with full power {0 grant or refuse politieal liberty. , The selfsame types of men romas s who epposed ‘higher ~edu vut spealking. self-support, prop owner- € ship. the privilege of working in ihe re = forms and in the professions. now oppose e politieal rights for women: and the self- same fvpes of men who hate contested each step of the onward mareh now hold | absolute authority over further advanc Political rights for women cannot > gained, therefore. tili popular opinion ready to grant them.” Tn ‘the case of educational iiberties ana opportunities. as well as in that of other v *ights. there was at first quite as bitte condemnation and opposition as there ¢ now Is in the case of political liberty, bu r it was not necessary fo wait for a m fority vote on any of these questions it had been, we should have how . college caurriculums for women have equal suffrage States e That the dutfes of citizenship and the | value of the franchise are not sufficiently | taught in the universities is shown by the of rigl of privilege. Un- question so often asked both by the mala that remedied, pediency” of and the female graduate. “What good ke on will continue to be brought would the vote do women? If it is re ten the following for into question Plied, "It will do women the same good her views on the pr You m ve should have that it has done men.” they ask agaln. . » - 1ssion: to chan nstitution before 0 you ni 0es men any good i e 3 b e als out,” but Keeping up a suffrage club in any local- . g . 2 bt A < 4 . ity serves mainly the purposes of agita- shows e gank By Mrs. Oilliam Keith, e e A ey s Loy Sn’tho ‘ar. 1ion and_advertieement of the subject, r members. g heve powerless, and have Senator Watson has just offered a. bili 5 is significant that as a rule 1o rights in the case. Srovitine T yn Mimendment o the han '. : persons who do not believe No doubt improvement awaits upon the ZHICH BLthe fInited States which shat G Jey. But her suffrage education do not believe in « stem of education and of coeducation gngy righteous measure will probably mot me so_absorbing she dr, suffrage, and vice versa. In at present administered, as well as pe effected until a_majority of the States - Human wniths vosilourion WAt b aubikido on our political system. but whatever have adopted It in theif own constitutions, i "tta PR, rters arrangement of details. the human president Roosevelt Is a firm believer in evening re sper her h DOMEENL. Attheks -Teol) VAL ia must have perfect liberty of self womar suffrage and boasts that he rec- A the charming that their =o long as women have no politic 1t ng legitimate lines. This ommended it in_his message when Gov- t have furni They de- We hear it said that the family is s botih coeducation and po- ernor of New York State. That he did - evenings to music; unit of the state. This is, politicaily h latter is merely a not see fit to do so in his Presidential Ke no. cello or zither. lega speakine nc he uy. of g out of the same princi- message has caused universal regret . accompanies her on the state is the male whether he among the friends of eaual suffrage g - ust now adding an- be married or unmarried. Women are ~\foman's duty to share equally In the {hroughout the country. Tet s hope - g isL.ment to the list by study- “not in it.” In tk way (-0 government mnof oniy of her own family (hat it will be otherwise in the next| inz Epanish. not hold their f the State Uni- but of all the families of her community Presidential message. Best Known Club Women on the Pacific Coast ks ) catlon, Others agree with him. But | some Eastern professors who are opposed | on _accept positions in our | State University. This is like finding wo- | ellow- | — The Secrets of the Stars Made Clear to You yHE week beginning on Sunday, De- cember 29, will usher in the new vear of 1902 Neptune will rule the week's affairs, and the old year will give place to the new under the most auspicious conditions. Progress will mark the many changes that will be in- stituted. Advanced policies will be intro- | duced, and the new methods in education, religion and social reforms 1 be broad and liberal. All large busin enterprises, commerce and trades will be largely in- creased. and great activity wiil be mani- fested during the coming tweve month Speculation for this week will be quite | lively, with a wide range of prices. Conditions render health signs fairly good, but some may uffer from seyere colds, headache and gout. The weather will be quite stormy, with winds, snow and sleet. Marriage. There will be many marriages during the next seven days. and those celebrated during this period will be propitious for most happy results. Influences that gov- ern § Wednesday and Thursday render those the best for matri- monial ventures. Business. December 29 (Sunday)—There should be some important happening in church cir- cles upon this day. Influences should in- duce spiritual inspiration, and some stir- ring sermons should be delivered by the clerg December 30 (Monday)—This day will be full of surprising events in the commer- cial world. This date is a favorable one upon which to make financial investments | and to start new enterprises. Speculation should be best in foodstuffs and grain. A December 31 (Tuesday)—This Is a pro- | pitious day for the promotion of all busi- ness schemes and for preparations for the new year. Speculation should be heaviest in grain and cereals. Grain will be very changeable until 12 m.. then should rise above the opening point. January 1 (Wednesday)—This is the first day of the new year, and an excellent time for the making of mew resolutions and for the renewal of ambition and en- ergy. Although this day should be ob- served as a holiday, it is an advantageous time for public business. . January 2 (Thursday)—General business will be good upon this day, and much money should change hands. Great activity will mark the speculation markets and there should be some heavy deals in mining. stocks, metals and | wheat. Wheat should be at its highest point at noon. Januvary 3 (Friday)—This day will prove | a lucrative one for the retall dealers. Speculation. Speculation certain aspect. but sugar may gain the a Wheat should 1 January 4 (Saturday)—Commission mer- ants dealing in provisio should realize large profits upon th The financial also grocers increase over sponding ones of last year & stocks should lead t Birthdays. Those who cele- during the next ger of heavy busine: and ecaution women should beware of false friends and insincere lovers. December 30 (Monday)—The year a fortunate one for those celebrating the anniversary of thel Young men in the receive increases in will experience an advantageo should reeeive offers marriage within the next twelve months. Young women v year for all celebrating their birth- should meet men engaged be honored al success and w professional with public applause All should be un prevention of illness and accidents. January 1 (Wednesday)—This the lucky days of the year and all who celebrate their success in all of their undertakings. will be lucky in love and happy in their domestic careers. January 2 (Thursday)—This fortunate day and those ceiebrating their birthdays to-day should accomplish much during the next women shoulc early in thelr careers lucky year for so fortunate for their birthdays upon this day. January 3 (Friday)—This will prove to be an uneventful whose birthdays fail upon this day. men will not be ver ness and may suffer from sudden illnesses. (Saturday)—The that dominate this day do not render i very lucky one, and those who celeb: their birthdays to-day should curb well their reckless inclinations. is another attain influential positions women to marry, but not n who celebrate for the women successful in busi- from accidents and Young men | Predictions for the week by a professional astrologer showing lucky and unlucky | days for business, love and | marriage, giving birthday ad- | vice and life forecasts of im- | fants born during the next seven days. & 4 use great discretion in choosing companions, and young women ative in bestowing their Births. There will be a great diversity of talents L & the children born during this week. > will become successful professional The gir ill be physically at- and all children should be blessed llent health. (Sunday)—The children day will be very quick to i 1 diplomatic. They will bs gifted art and musicians, but will have little idea of accumulating money. Some become teachers, writers and mber 30 (Monday)—The children of will be of roving dispositions and will continually seek change. The boys should become excellent explorers, trans- portation officials and foreign representa- tiv The girls will possess great psyehie 31 (Tuesday)—Good luck at- hildren born upon this day, those born early In the morn- ing and at noon time. The boys should become fine actors, Judges and statesmen, The gir will be of independent natures and some will possess phenomenal voices. January 1 (Wednesday)—Children that are born to-day wiil be dominated by the propitious conditions. The boys should be fortunate in business and should rise to desirable positions the world. The girls will be beautiful in person and will marry while quite ng. anuary 2 (Thursday)—Mercury. Satur and the moon rule these children, an they be of res active temperae will rilliant mentall sically. Both boys an quire high positions in life. (Friday)—The boys born on is day will not be as lucky as the girls. he boys will be Hable to accidents whils young and will be reckless when older. The girls be lucky in love and mar- riage. girs I January will need judicious guidance They should become ' sue- 1d women. The bovs will middle age, and the girlg will become recognized social leaders:

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