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THE SFAN }IRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1902. e WARFIELD SAYS SUCCESS b CHARACTER. éy Guisard. f ' BEGAN IN | 1 THINKING a~ Rl OOD morning, Mr. Warfield; very sorry to encroach on your Christmas in this way, —it was Christmas morning and I had just met the accomplished sctcr for a long desired chat. “I'm glad to see you,” Warfield said simply, shaking hands, and I pleasantly | gpersuaded myself that he meant it. Later I krew he did. He had set 12 o'clock at the Columbia Theater, Christmas morn- ing, for my little talk with him. Exactly &t 12 T was there—Mr. Warfield was there | before me and there is just as little *siGe,” just as much engaging honesty iu the actor’s make-up as the above simple, significant, little straw banners to &n observant world. We went upstairs to the eloquent press egent’s office. There I got my first good look at David | <= FAMOUS HEBREW COMEDIAN WHO 18 NOW APPEARING AT THE CO- LUMBIA IN “THE AUCTIONEER.” I 6o it then and there.” ‘How did you first come to put that kind of Jew on the stage? You are not a Jew, Mr. Warfield?” “My mother is a Jewe said, “but it was not at h came to me. It was years ago when I | was on the road with Russell's com- edisns. They gave me a ‘thinking’ role, where I had to take part in a melee in a barber shep. I had found Levi then came on in my new make-up. A tre- | 1aendous laugh greeted me and the week | witk a star Jewish disguise. Then Led- erer, on the strength.of my engaged me for New York. I told wouldn't stand for it. Weber & Fields | at last tried it, eight years ago, and a run.ber of others have since approved my werk to the extent of imitating it. | Belasco gave me my most coveted op- portunity of serious work. I think Levi is serious stuff—and it is not easy to ; how grateful I am.” THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL. JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Address Communicafions to W. S. LEAKE, Managei‘ SUNDAY If anything new ocecurs to me | .’ Warfield | e that Levi | and | after that they featured me as a detective | small suc- | n I had a character that would make, New York happy for a moment, but he | But | ..DECEMBER 28, 1902 .Third and Market Streets, S. F. HE happiness of the holidays is - subject - to many wunpleasant modifications, due to the growing extravagance, and the results of its example to those who are led to imitate it. The season itself has been dedicated to some form of observance from the most an- cient times. The winter solstice, the time when thé vertical sun touches the tropic of Capricorn, and begins its return journey to the equator and the tropic of Cancer, the end of t_he long winter nights in the north temperate zone, has been recognized as the time of retuming. life in the vegetable kingdom. The Greeks called these the halcyon days, because of the quiet winds and waters, which permitted the halcyon to lay and hatch its eggs on the water. Naturally the great Christian festival was adjusted to this season of rejoicing over the re- turning sun, and it was kept in purity and sincerity, meaning all that the period meant to the an- cient world in the promises of nature, and also all that the greater promise of eternal life means to Christendom. But throughout Christendom the festival has gradually come to be a season of os- stentation, of extravagance and display. These characteristics adumbrate its religious as well as its social observance. -On Christmas day the Christian churches are crowded by worshipers. The high and the humble, rich and poor, have equal privilege in the temple. But even that presence is invaded by the ostentation which impresses and accents the inequalities of fortune, in a place where all souls are equal and the spiritual democracy should be outwardly reflected by exterior equality. The poor man drops his dollar or his nickel in the plate. It goes unidentified and un- signed, noted only by the eye ineffable and all-seeing. The rich man puts in his signed check that he may get for the size of his donation the credit and recognition of men. That whic" reminds the poor man of his poverty is not Christian, nor is display a proper part of the spirit ~i the sea- son, for it is written: “And he looked up and saw the rich men casting their gifts into the treas- ury. And he saw also a certain poor widow casting in thither two mites. And he said, Of a truth I say unto you, that this poor widow hath cast in more than they all. For all these have of their abundance cast in offerings unto God, but she of her penury hath cast in all the living that she had.” In its other and worldly sense the growing extravagance is the cause of much debt, diffi- culty and unhappiness. The open display of costly gifts excites the desire of the less able to imi- tate those who can afford them, and this desire is gratified by incurring debts which abridge the comforts and happiness of many a household during all the rest of the year. It is especially the children’s day, and childhood knows little about the inequalities of fortune. Seeing others pos- sessed of luxurious giits, they mourn over the small and simple store in their Christmas stockings, and their vain questioning extinguishes whatever happiness may be in the hearts of their parents. It is true that we are all, in some sense, the keepers of each other, the trustees of our mutual happiness. Great credit must be ascribed to the use of riches in relieving the sorrows and the wants of those who are disinherited of fortune. The homes and hospitals, the schools and libraries, founded to house the unfortunate or to bring the means of intelligence and improvement within more general reach, are all most creditable and Christian uses of wealth, and it is a matter of pride that those uses are lavish in this rich land. < ; But wealth has not done its full duty in such endowments. Let it take the credit for what it has done, but let it take the blame for what it has not omitted. It is a stewardship of fortune that is best discharged by the least display in the temples of God and in sumptuous exhibition of pride or personal affection on the day of all others when men should realize the spiritual equality of the race and the common value of the inner elements, whether they be outwardly clad in plain clothes or in purple. P Another feature of the season that is a grievous violation of its proper spirit is the tendency to dissipation. What can show forth more at odds with the sacred anniversary than prevalent drunken- ness and an increase in crime? MacDOWELL’S COMING VISIT MAKES MUSICIANS - EXPECTANT. By Blanche Partington. N event of distinguished interest to all musicians is the forthcoming visit here of Edward MacDowell, our foremost American composer. Although this is primarily a holi- day visit, Mr. MacDowell will yet be heard here in concert, a privilege very rarely vouchsafed to his admirers nearer Fome. Mr. Steindorff, for the first of his geries of novelty popular concerts, will have the honor and good fortune to intro- duce the composer-pianist to a local au- ajence. Mr. MacDowell *will be heard there in his second *Piano Concerto” (D mimer), with the full orchestral accom- paniment. The concert is to be held on Thrrsday afternoon, January 8, at the Tivcli. ‘Will L. Greenbaum, to whom we owe so much good music, will then present Mr. MacDowell in two beautiful recital pro- grammes at Steinway Hall on the after- neon of January 10 and the evening of January 12. They follow and it will be noted that besides the MacDowell num- bers the rest of the programme is culled from the older classics, with Grieg and Templeton Strong as the modern excep- tions. Mrs. M. E. Blanchard, than whom no n:ore fortunate choice could have been raade, will assist. FOREMOST AMERICAN COM- POSER TO APPEAR HERE IN CONCERT SOON. —_ lover to come forward with his strongest support. Mr. Steindorff's complete programme for the MacDowell afternoon is as follows: Overture, *“Die Verkaufte Braut!’ (Smetana); plano concerto No. 2 (MacDowell): orchestral suite No. 2, “Indian” (MacDowell); ‘Kaiser March” (Wagner). Here, appropriately is a criticism by Fhilip Hale of these two MacDowell num= bers: I have discussed the “Indian” suite twice at least in the Journal at considerable length, and I do not think it necessary to go over the S L. e How often do we read of human life taken in drunken quarrels 0 v at 7. ground again. v You don’t want anything more serious, . <oy . . SATURDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 10. | S008 Srount Sefin. & O Teorls BT hue oty 50 xks B scantly a fig- | nc Ibsen and the like?’ and frenzy at a time that is intended to impress upon the world peace on earth and good will |sarabande ... 4 onstien tu 1 Aee mrca e e cers DA Les Trois Mains Tempo di Menue Fantaisie in D. Minuet ... Impromptu . § Schubert Fourth Sonata (Keitic) Op. 49......MacDoweil Who minds now Keltic tales of yore ure not short nor tall, with a broad, suf- | I want no problem plays, nor ro- ficient pair of shouiders; a quiet, unactory | mantic dramas; but just the homely, suit of gray; a broad-browed, earnest | kindly -characters that appeal to every | face—before the Warfield eyes got me, got | onc alike—something like Levi. me and held me until the close of the in-| “What do you think should strike one is strong, for the imaginative strength and the superb workmanship are net to be fully appre- ciated after one hearing. It is not a work that will be popular at once; I doubt If it will ever be popular in the common meaning of ti , for it is free from everything, that toward men? This grewsome feature is the result of evil example and an_ utter perversion of the holida: g : P i ] 5 y spirit. When men come to see Christianity in its simplicity and to appreciate it as a life to be 2 ¥ k. i 2 tricigus; it is without any taint of senti- g y set well 4 nder the | Farticularly about Levi? You make him ¢ s el : p S 3 Dark Druid rhymes that thrall, b : B et ton and fnets first fiomn | & very shrewd, mot to say crooked,| lived, rather .than a dogma fruitful of constructions at war with each other, its great spirifual anni- Deldre's song and wizard lore e s e e 5 e 5 : g s W 5 £ Lt ] the superficial. But I know of few more re- s e et e | ™0h, there has been mo attempt to| Versary will cgase to be the cause of unhappiness by accentuating the inequalities of fortune, and it Hothnos opeen e Gries | markable pages of mustc thanthe unutterably e L im.” Warfield rej “H . < . 5 o 2 b o | sinister_interruption in the movement en- cemedy—if T read the eyes aright—by the | whilewash him,” Warfleld rejolned. “His | ]| b& no longer tarnished by the excesses which bring care and sorrow, when only happiness and | pies Saess Templeton Strong | titled, “In War Time,” and the dirge that way of life's little tragedies, with the | tricks are his own; there are some in| oA i # s 4 B0 e rom Sonata Tragica. T acDowell | might well serve for the final in memortam of sure feet of choice; for they are the eyes | every trade. His virtues are equally his| trustfulness should be in the hearts and homes of all men. Wila Rose . iy | 3 once mighty race. In many respects. as in ©f one who has lved at the very heart of [ cwn. The lesson of the play to me is the Water Lily | - MacBowals | B T e I Tl things and felt their dearest, sternest | sweet and )n»rr?iv léealr!r-: of DO\'PE\E\', the = %E,?.'é:,"‘;‘ifi:.y g:zggxm | work among the noblest compositions of mod- _ghrill; the eyes of one at once a mystic, | finc courage that begins anew a life ap- . : Macl i times. s & I s acotus. Wor the rast. | pavently rained, Thers aré hunqreds of A WONDERFUL BOTITLLE. e s The concerto in D minor fs also mors oF they brilliantly through and beyond one all at once. “We weren't glad at all to see you last Monday night!” I began. Warfield smiled and said: “I never ex- pected to come home that way. I dreamed ©f it sometimes, hoped for it always; but B less familiar here, but I have never heard it played with so much dash and splendor as at the performance last night. I do not hesitate to say that this concerto must be given a very high place in the literature of the piano; its construction Is logical and admirable from beginning to end. The granitic solidity of the introduction combined with the rare beauty of following passages in the same movement: the srace, the charm, the elegance of the scherzo, with its refreshing and impressive contrasts; Prelude sincere, and seem to see over, | York Ghetto. They starve themselves | with a smile for their children and lie like a trooper to sell a damaged coat!” nd what follows Levi?’ “Mr. Belasco has another s so-called | “character’ part building for me.” | May we all be there to see! | | | be gray, are clear, large and | people like Levi and his wife in the New | 3 HEN Congress is not in session Washington City holds public attention by telling | stories other than political. There are many wonderful things going on in the city at all times, for the Patent Office attracts the presence of every man of genius or of crank- iness who has a new invention, whether it be designed to enable man to fly like an -MacDoweil (a) Deserted. (b) Long Ago. (¢) A Mald Sings Light. (d) The Robin Sings in the Apple Tree. Mrs. M. E. Blanchard. w ¥ 2 g 2 3 8 hat 1 had - 4 Prelude—Presto, Intermezzo . .Fugue . - B R L e e ; eagle or to make hair:grow on a bald head. From First Suite—0p. 10 JiacDowsl b Rt Pl SO DT g . h 4 4 . . i ongs 2 2 ";}.:ey newxl:imm Y Warh ‘l’;mrizd still PERSONAL MENTION. The holiday news from Washington this season announces the invention of a wonderful bot- (@) Thy Beaming ‘Eyes. g ok T e e - “They couldn't, varfield said, —_— = 5 3 =4 Slumber Song. ived ey eiikie soberly. “I left home . ftweive] - = tle, the work of Professor Elmer W. Gates, known to the capital as “The Wizard of Chevy (<) Mignonette. b A L R e LT Frank Rehorn, a fruit grower of Fres- b years ago and had then only earned—I 35 at the 1K 5% % 5 RIS Ors- M. E. Iil-nch-rd suite stamps him as a genius. The perform- Bope— a reputation for good ushering— |7 1% at the Lick. Chase.” It is stated that the bottle discloses the fact that every mood and every thought of the | Zhe Basle—op. B aace of these works was dazaling and memor- - H. 8. Kirk,%a druggish of Sa t ) A 3 ; X ! ; e—0p.39, 2 e. Mr. Paur led with the warmest a JEERNN & Wifls more thaw that. Caiitocatar s L ooeramento. | human mind has a corresponding color in the chromatic scale, and by exhibiting that color it re- | mBrovisation—Op. 46, No. 4. ciation and the bapplest results. The oréhes Calif s 3 o your wshering dnys you fHrst | I8 et the a. 1 g t 1 1 Crardas (Friska)—Op. 24, No. . | MacDowell | tra in ensemble and solo was worthy of ita hed to act?” J. C. Cantwell of the revenue cutter ser-| veals whatever mood or thought may be in the mind of the man who'breathes into it. Sonaise—Op. 40, g highest reputation. Mr. MacDowell played “Long before then. T've always loved | vice at the California. SR ; 5 p L e na rrestatible aon A miane Ty 1o e the theater. You don't remember the ol | B 1, yatch, a well known merchant of The report says: “The apparatus consists of a tall glass jar half filled with a colorless solu- Pcssibly the largest debt American i ournal membered '—Philip Hale, Boston Jo b Adelphi—on California street, I think. My | oo o= S 200 & Ve play-going began there, when I was ehbout 11 or 12 years old. They used 1o H. A. Rott, a capitalist of Butte, Mont., give & variety entertainment that lasted | Is @ guest at the Palace. until 10:3 o’clock, and then put on a siz- | Sure Harper, a well known resident of ®ling, roaring melodrama. That was a | Auburn, is at the Russ. soft thing for we boye. I used to sneak el i away R Mias: aad nang about the ,‘Erl“’:"'t‘i“}"[a"‘:““;x“g_ man of Redding, thegter door until some one, tired of the | '~ UBistered at the Russ. show, would come out and give me his| W. Schow, a banker of Sacramento, is check. I saw the tail end of most of the | among the arrivals at the Grand. Frank H. Buck, the well known fruit bad shows that way.’ grower of Vacaville, is at the Palace. | “Were you never held up?”’ “'Jusi once, and I remember even to-day | J. Craig, a banker of Woodland and music owes to Edward MacDowell—al- ways after his noble compositions—is the fact that his distinguished gifts were the reeans of forcing from the-American seats of learning the first recognition of the | dignity of the musical art. Columbia Uni- vergity, New York, had the honer to be the first American university to found a chair of music and the good fortune to persuade Mr. MacDowell to occupy it. iarvard and Yale both followed suit and there are now many American univer- sities numbering musicians among their tion, and to which are attached two glass tubes which pass through an opening in the top. One of the tubes has an apparatus which fits over the mouth and the other runs to a glass receptacle con- taining purified air. When the apparatus is fitted over the mouth of a person and the breath passes through the liquid and thence to the glass receptacle the varying thoughts within his mind aré re- flected in the changing colors of the liquid in the jar, this action being due to the effect of the chem- ical properties of the breath upon the solution.” . It is added that at present the bottle does no more than differentiate the colors correspond- FORESTER'S COURT TO GIVE ITS FIFTH ANNUAL BALL Columbia Lodge to Enjoy Programme of Dances on Last Day of ' Year. Court Columbia No. 35 of the Foresters cf America will give its fifth annual ball in Union Square Hall on the last day of the year. From the number of requests the dread joy of getting past that door- keeper's eagle eye. But he always sus- pected me, or at least I thought so. At @ny rate, he stopped me one night and #sked me where I got my check. It hap- pened, amazingly, that that night I bad @ctually bought my seat, paid a big # cents for it and gone out magnificentiy between scts to indulge in coffee and @oughnuts. 1 told him so, but he wouldn’t believe me, but I had luckily left my overcoat in my seat. He never stopped me afterward.” “¥ou must have learned much at those shows that must have come in very use- owner of Highland Springs, is registered at the Grand. A. B. Adams, a young New York capi- , who owns mining properties in Mexico, is at the Palace. Californians in New York. W YORK, Dec. 27.—From San Fran- cisco—E. L. Farmer, at the Herald Square; W. Fahey, J. F. Hall, at the Grand Union; Miss Hush, E. T. Crockett, at the Manhattan: R. L. Dunn, at the Astor; F. A. Walters, at the Navarre, From Los Angeles—J. P. Hamilton, at ing to melancholia from those of happiness, but it is expected that it will soon be so improved as to represent various shades of those contrasted mdods. Thus it is hoped it will show the “suicide shade” as distinct from the general melancholia, and differentiate various kinds of joy. It is even expected that by shading and blending the various colors it will be possible by the bottle to deter- mine whether a person is telling the truth or not. The possibilities of such a bottle are enormous. The young woman who wishes to test the vows of her adorers has enly to try them on the bottle and true love'will be differentiated from flir- tation in an instant. At a horse trade the invention will be invaluable. It will have its uses in so- ciety, in politics and even in the church. Perhaps, too, it may make brisk business in the courts by faculties. The composer-pianist is a New Yorker and was born on December 13, 1861. As with most great men, his particular bent ‘was early discovered and he was one of Teresa Carreno’s pupils at a very tender age. The year 1876 found him in Paris and in 1877 he was admitted to the Conserva- toire, there studying piano with Mar- mentel and harmony with Savard. Wies- baden and Louis Ehlert got him in 1879 and a little later he was studying compo- siticn with Joachim Raff and piano with Carl Heymann at Frankfort-on-the-Main. ‘At 20 the young A $ricsin was 0ccUDY- | it 1o 20 The followinm named have Hees for invitations that have been made it is safe to say that the affair will be a suc- cess in every way. The committee, con* sisting of John F. Hayes, chairman; John G. Chase Jr., secretary: Thomas F. Tul- ly, George F. Callaghan and Dr. A. ) Drucker, has made arrangements to have this function excel any previously given by this court. During the last term of the court, under the leadership of Chief Ranger John T. Hayes, a most enthusias- fic Forester, nearly sixty strangers were initiated and at the next meeting a class of forty-eight more will be added to the roll of membership, which will increasa e e TR the frequency with which suits will be brought to enjoin the use of the wizard bottle in certain cases |3 the position of fifst plano teacher at fully since?” Durmstadt Conservatory at -the distin- | to sorss ne fde court for the ensuing ti Imperial; L. A. Parker, at the Broad- “They were, truly, a whole encyclope- Central, where a citizen has a right to keep a knowledge of his moods and thoughts to himself. guitked recommendation of Raff. Lizst| i, s 0 i: Hayes, past chie ranger: &3 of what not to Go. From Sanfa Barbara—A. H. Brown, at 4 e —— became Interested in'MacDowell a year | promeas &: Tully, cale: ranger: !dwin ow did the other schooling come on?” | the Glisey. laier and was the means of him appear- | ool Sub-chief ranger; F. L. Coek, A grammar school on Post street—I tregstrer; J. Goodman, financial seer TO THE HAGUE. in ir Zurich at the Allgemeiner Deutscher ‘wonder If it's there yet—and one on Van o Ness avenue gave me all of that kind of schooling that I possess.” “¥ou went early to work, then?’ “I——" and Warfiel® hesitated, “I sup- wrted my mother when I was 10 years old, ‘ent to school, too”—the simplest, quiet- st statement of fact. “You look like that, Mr. Warfield,” I ventured, wondering no longer where the decp, wise kindness of the eyes came from. “¥es.” he smiled. “We have all our share of that side of life. Perhaps, luck- fiy, 1 had a little more and earlier than common. It taught me the best things 1 know, though it was not all easy learn- ing. 1 didn’t know it then, but I. was absorbing character at every pore.” *“Did you find Simon Levi then?” “In part, yes, of course. But Levi ‘just 1 don't know if I can explain myself, but 1 never study a character; T feel it, and it shapes itself outwardly. I @on’t think you can ‘study’ a character— coldly dissect the hang of its morals, the fit of its virtues, the color of its vices.” *“¥ou mean you don’t start with Levi’s Bat, but his heart?” “Precisely. Do you know that I am the proud inventor of that Levi hat coming over the ears—little Columbus and the egg?” Warfield comically inquired. “And how much more of Levi did you Invent?” “Most. of the dialogue, perhaps about 9 per cent,” Levi's distinguished inter- Church—I see anthracite parties are to be popular this winter, Gotham—What on earth is an anthracite party? “Why, each qne contributes a quarter, and the amount goes to buy a piece of coal, and all who contribute sit around and watch it burn.”—Yonkers Statesman. “That is Ajax defying the lightning.” “Well,” answered the man with the timorous manner, ‘“‘there’s always a strong chance that ligntning. won't hit anybody. If the same amount of elec- tricity had been after him in the battery of an automobile I don't believe Ajax would have been so courageous.”—Wash- ington Star. —————— Prunes stuffed witt¥apricots. Townsend’s.* —_———— Townsend’s California glace fruit and candies, 50c a pound, in artistic fire-etched boxes, A nice present for Eastern friends, 689 Market st., Palace Hotel bullding. * —_———— Special information supplied daily to business houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s). 230 Cali~ fornia street. Telephone Main 1042. . —_—————— In most cases it isn't what man earns that makes him what the old man saved. the young rich; it’s Gulllett’s New Year extra mince vies, lce ‘cream and cake. 905 Larkin st.; tel, Kast 108% FTER all, the Venezuelan controversy seems destined to go to The Hague. The jurors of Austria, Russia, the United States, Holland and Denmark will be qualified to act. The Monroe doctrine will be excluded from the arbitral issues and will stand upon its interpre- tation by the United States. Germany justifiably fixes some conditions precedent to arbj- tration. Her subjects have suffered great outrages at the hands of Castro’s Government. There is but little misunderstanding in this country as to the issue. What there is has been fortified by a letter written by Professor Goldwin Smith, who seems to have a very dense miscon- ception of the controversy. He assumes that it has the same features as the issue made in Egypt by England, which involved defaulted interest on public bonds held by the subjects of Great Brit- ain. This is an error. The subjects of Germany, England and other countries have been despoiled of their property in Venezuela. They have been denied justice and have had no protection to per- sonal and property rights, which every civilized nation is bound to protect in its nationals every- where. ' Venezuela has assumed that it can violate these rights, have that violation sustained in its own corrupt courts and then prevent any diplomatic recourse. This claim is insufferable, and neither the United States nor Europe can concede it, with safety to their people nor consistently with their national honor and self-respect. ¢ In the outcome the United States will take proper place as the disciplinarian in this hemi- sphere, leading the Latin-American nations toward civilization and inducing them to respect the personal and property rights of their own citizens, through compelling them to safeguard those rights in the nationals of other countries. Musik Verein Conventlon, with his own ' firsl piano suite as medium. He met there with a highly encouraging reception and afterward concertized in various FEurcpean cities with much success. Aftdby ‘Wiesbaden and teaching from 1884 Mac- Dewell returned to New York in 1888 ang since then has remained in his native I A Mr. Steindorff, who has been largely in- sirumental in persuading the composer to appear in’concert here, will give besides the MacDowell plano concerto, the “In. dian Suite,” by the same author. A ljt- tle, word about these Steindorff novelty concerts. As there is already a series of symphony concerts—such as they are— existent here, symphonies will seldom be g\c':ae:l vl)n tht: lStelnflorfl Pprogrammes. rchestral novelties, such a: }one poem, ;‘Helaemebe Foae + L, gl ered and at each concert it i to have a soloist of high standl’n: ri‘r’npz::: certos and other numbers. MacDowell Will be the first to appear and mention lm(sl bel;n mtde of Gabrilowitsch, Koeian and others to appear duri: the comi e ng the ng As works of the kind that can be heard under these illustrious circumstances have been a dead letter on local pre- grammes for many years, the opportunity t0_hear them wiil doubtless be lavishly. eppreciated. How often the opportunity will recur will depend, too, on the appre- clation and it is “up to” the music- -will be of- tary; J. G. Chase Jr., recording secretar: Jobn C. Nolan, semior, and Edward C. Blood Jr., junior woodward; Walter Ken- | yon, senior, and M. Novas, junior beadle; J. G. Chase Sr., Thompson, trustee. ———— The Rev. Dr. J. 8. B. Hodges, rector of St. Paul's, Baltimore,_ for thirty-one years, officiated at over 25,000 services, celebrat~ ed the holy eucharist 7500 times, baptized 1500 persons, confirmed over 1200 and per- formed 3% marriage ceremonies. lecturer, and John NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. HAIR NATURALLY ABUNDANT. 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