The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 13, 1900, Page 7

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T HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1900 ADVERTISEMENTS. HOWLING SUCCESS “A HOT OLD TIME” Jess as Larry Mooney. | VEXT UNDAT ALl OSTON LYRIC OPERA COMPANY. Presenting “SAID PASHA » ENBA '}»Eg C0: <!M 222-224 SUTTER ST. L OFEN EVENINGS. A SUGGESTION—We want to serve you during this busy season as promptly as possible, and respectfully ask your assistance in placing your or- ders with us as early as convenient. Eight telephones ready to receive vour commands. One phone FREE to »nds, e your selections of tree decora- arly—our stock is complete. C1GARS—Smok: feel ested r fr Matinee, ; SOW READY. 600D 6OODS in 600D VAUDEVILLE DAVIS AND MACAULEY, HAR- MONY FOUR, SPENSER KELLY, AHERN AND PATRICK, PA- TRICE AND COMPANY, ROB- ERTUS AND WILFREDO, MAY DE SOUSA, PANTZER TRIO, our v ns in m $1 to SPECIAL REDUCTIONS THURSDAY—FRIDAY—SATURDAY, GREAT AMERICAN BIOGRAPH. = 50c teas, "?"i.‘-”f e KEY, W - COLUMBIA ALICE NIELSE SAN FRANCISCO'S LEADING THEATRE AY N ¥ Fra FIBS el Tnporiasion. 25¢ ih F‘VURITA uE ClLlF GLAHH e *EAS SALT BIXES, Reg. 50 decomation. vichi CELESTINE, doz. s ed at last. BAKING POWDER, ib can ew Era.”” Reg. 4oc. “THE DUKE" $2.90 30c Pure and whole- APRIcuTS I]rled ree, M 12! Ib ’*R NDAY A JAPANESE TPA(}FD\ DAVID BELASCO MADAME ‘%LTTERFLY MOROSCO’S GRAND OPERA HOUSE ALL THE TIME. DAY A THE ()l l\ ER- LFR! iE CO. ELODRAMA MAN S ENEMY ® SANTA CLAUS WILL ARRIVE IN DUE TIME ) ‘our patrons seautiful laundered collar or cuff. We ara sure 11 will be happy when they see the stal Yuletide polish that we will lay on linen, and at the same time extend wishes for their health, so that n sofl enough linen for the next | vou order it No saw edges. 7 LA AL (/1 UNITED STATES LAUNDRY Office 1004 Market Street Telephone—South 420, { Oakland Office—62 San Pablo Ave. Any Broken Eyeglass ) bVER LAUGH NOW WELCH IN 4 A BELL BOY! NOON, | 4 Famous, OL E OLSON 1| Lenses replagea tor 50 conts. T tigmatfc lenses duplicated for $1.00gna £ = | g1.50. LARER . L0 Guaranteed correct and best quality. | Oculfsts’ prescriptions filled. Factory on prem- * T I v o l * ises. Quick repairing. Phone, Main l | HE TIME AWAY. { 4 LAST WEEK OF OPTICIANS TAPHICAPPARAT g 1 PuarocF SCIENTIFIC THE JOLLY MUSKETEER! T COMIC OPERA IN YEARS \h' nes Saturday at 2. , NEXT MONDAY NIGHT | ‘ . CINDERELLA” _BRINGING YULE- 642 MARKET ST. INsTRUMENTS unpER cHmomCLE BuiLoine, GATALOGUE FREE These hotels pos- sess the attributes that tourists and travelers appreciate —central location, Palace! and D FROLIC. 'A-n'~:nd 50 cents. | liberal manage- 2 | Grand ment, modern ap | pointments and EDDY ST, OL YMPIA Com. mAzon i{E ONLY FREE VAUDEVILLE SHOW IN THE CITY ENGAGEMENT EXTRAORDINARY, Hunt’s Dog Circus, Ome of the Best Animal Acts Bver Seen in San ancisco. perfect cuisine American and Eu- ropean plans. Hotels San Francisco | MI GHOSSIAI'S SPECIFIC MIXTURE cure of GONORRHOEA, GLEETS, ITRILTLREB and analogous complaints of the ns of Generation. ios 81 bottle For sale by druggists AMUSEMENTS. 'CHUTES s Z0OO EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. MABEL HUDSON, In Some Entirely New Songs. MISS MAE LEONDOR, Vaudeville AND OUR C T U | TO-NIGHT! TO-NIGHT! LEC R E .THE AMATEURS. T ‘ —IN— SPECIALTIES AND A LADIES’ ROPE-CLIMBING CONTEST Telephone for Seats—Park %, MRS. JENNESS MILLER, I'nder the Ausplees of THE WOMEN'S PRESS ASSOCIATION. SXNOWLEDAE WHICH 18 POWER, R THE ART OF LIVING.” SIIERMAN & CLAY HALL, SATURDAY, December 15, SOCIAL R'F;EE?'TIB:;A\' 4P M can be secursd at Sherman & Clay's ber & Co.’s, 39 Geary street. | Eubject RACING! RACING! 1900 WINTER MEETING—1%01. CALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUB. DEC. 2d to DEC. ifth, INCLUSIVE. OAKLAND RACETRACK. Racing Mondey. Tuesday. Wednesdaz, Thurs- i ‘{1 Friday and Saturday. Rain or shine. co ve or more races each day. FISCHER S Admission 10c. Races start at 2:15 p. m, -n.r A A\T\ COOPER’'S COMEDIANS IN r.rry-bmll lelve s.n l"f:ncllco at 12 m. and Al 3 m., connecting AL LL e S e aTIi SuD NI | ol ol i o e ACTE! track. Last two cars on train reserved for lndl- and their escorts; no smoking. Buy your tickets to Shell Mound. All trains via Oakland mole connect with San Pablo avenue cars at Seventh and Broadway. Oak- fand. Alsc all trains via Alameda moje oo nect with £an Pablo avenue cars at Fourteenth and Broadway, Oakland. These electric cars 80 direct to the track In fifteen migutes. M NCERT HOUSE. Matinees Sunday. Reserved seats, WEEKLY CALL & | Returning—Trains leave the track at 4:] ' “ffic‘v‘ifldnm l.uAl IM the last m $1 per Ycar. | &5 . R Prtey, RACING ! | | that the | pletely | vided 2 { ing_into Market —CENTRAL THEATER WILL BE ONE TELEPHONE GRANT 33, OF PRETTIEST OF CITY BUILDINGS Board of Public Works Excites Unfavorable Comment in Official Circles by Its Protest to the Building Which Is Now Nearing Completion E'aborate Safeguards Are Provided for the Benefit of the Public| —_— ction of the Board of Pubilc ks in refusing the Central ater a certificate has excited a great deal of comment in official circles. This unexpected attitude of the board is taken as an attack upon the Board of Supervisors, which has al- ady granted the theater a permit. rerything which It is possible to do and he law requires has been done by a.and Thall in the construction of The action of the Board of is viewed therefore with no reasonable explanation has been given except on the basts Board of Public Works is striv- ing to discredit its associate, the Board of Supervisors. The Central Theater as it has been anned and as it nears completion is f the handsomest and “rancisco. Nearly i upon its construction and it is interesting fact that more ent under the direction rities before suggested. Luilding is made com- of iron and the inside of corru- fest theaters ™ has been an and supervisi a compl The outsid d iron, brick and steel girders so placed as to afford the greatest security compatib h beauty of design. E mode nce known to the truction of great interiors has been On neither of the floors is there a le stair, the auditorfum being on a Lenlh slope, which remove: even the small danger which stairs ht involve. Automatic rinkl are posed in va- rious parts of the house and added curi by an estos curtain. > new theater is amply pro- in all, three open- street, two into Central fevenson street. difficulty and un- house could be emptied ed Park and othe Without the der any stre: of its a very few minutes. round hoth floors there is a hroad prom- enade, which in itself is a protection not afforded by any other theater in town. It is there a profound surprise that the Board Public Works has made a pro- test, Not only will the theater be p { fectly will be one of the hand- somest y. It will be finished in cream nd will be most artisti- cally decorated. The front will be made entirely of brick and stone and will be one of th ost and artistic | popul o | to present the compliments of the season | THEODORE VOGEL LEAVES r full-dress ghirts if | of | was | | | | | | | | | gust_for | similar | germs, the mucous surfaces of ‘the nos STRONG ATTI{ACTIONS AT ALL THE THEATERS Alice Nielsen to Close Engagement at the Columbia With “Tha Singing Girl.” three evenings and matinee wces of the Alice Nielson cn- gagement at the Columbia Theater will be given over to “The Singing Girl.” The company has been playing to crowded houses all through the season' and the r little prima donna has added much to her ornia reputation by her good work in a stellar capacity . . Musketeer” will end a four ay evening next at the night “Cinderella ¥ done Into burlesque will be put on. Sev- enty-fiv 1 appear on the staze and costumes, scenery. songs and spe- cialties of the best are promised. “Madame Butterfly,” David Bel, act tragedy, is drawing incre “The Jolly weeks’ run on Tivoll and on a Christm: by Ferris ng FINANCIAL SHORTAGE Says He Is Going Away. but Fails to Turn Over the Union Money. the financlal secretary much He Theodore Vogel, the Bakers' Union, is a very ought after man just at present. t seen in the afternoon of ber 24. At that time he was empl a bakery at Sixteenth and V streets He left the place and told his employer that he had received a telegram | from his folks and that he was going back to Germany At the next meeting of the Bakers' Tnion Vogel was conspicuous by his ab- | | sence. 'An investigation into his books | was made and it was found that he had left with $41 50 belonging to the associa- tion. A warrant is out for his arrest. A.DVERTISEMENTS. THE LITTLE SICKNESSES Which Grow Into Big Ones. A little cold in the head is a trifle, but if neglected and it hangs on from week to | week and gets into the thrbat and lungs it | | 18 no longer a trifie. It is then no longer & slight cold but the beginning of chronic catarrh. Do not make the mistake ot thinking you have no catarrh because the head and nose appear 1o be clear. If there is cough, tickling in the throat, hoarseness or a sense of oppression in the (hPEl you have | throat and bronchial catarrh. the ap- | petite is poor, nausea, gaggmg and dis- | ood, especially in the morning, You have catarrh of the stomach. The surest and safest treatment for every form of catarrh is an internal rem- | edy which acts especially on the blood | and mucous membranes. Such a remedy s the new catarrh cure, | sold everywhere by druggists under name of Stuart's Catarrh Tablets, a medicine in | pleasant, convenient tablet form and con- | tairing all the best and latest specifics for catarrh, whether located in nose, bronchial tubes or stomach. Stuart's Catarrh Tablets are composed of Sanguinaria, gualacol, Red gum and antiseptics which destroy the germe of catarrh in the blood, and no one who suffers from any form of catarrh and has seen the uselessness of sprays, douches, and powders will ever go back to them’ after once trying so convenicnt, leasant and harmiess a_ remedy as gnmrls Catarrh tablets and one which gives relief in so short a time. Even in cases where catarrh has af- fected the senses of smell and hearing, | these tablets accomplish a cure becausa the blood being cleansed of catarrhal and throat no ionger clog up the respira- tory passages with catarrhal secretions. All drusgists scll full sized treatments of Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets for the nominal | price of 50 cents, and the regular daily use | of them will effectually cure this trouble- some and dangerous disease. Ura, ARMY & NAY s;nC-cz» WiLLAM WOLFF § Co. = San flMKG, Hoffmanettes G Cigar, 5“ THE HILSON CO., Makers, N. Y. MAU, BADLER & 00., Distributers, Ban Franciseo, throat | | | HANDSOME STONE AND BRICK WHICH ARING COMPL THE BEAUTI Photo by R 102 L PUBLIC BUILDINGS OF THE CITY. Bushnell ONT OF THE CENTRAL THEATER, AND WILL ADD ANOTHER TO crowds nightly to the Alcazar Theater. It is one of the quaintest, strongest, most daintily pathetic litti> pl; ever staged and is well put on and well acted at the popular little theater. “Pygmalion and Galate Gilbert's charming comedy. precedes it. “A Hot Old Time'' will end its success- ful engagement on Saturday evening next at the Alhambra Theater and the Boston Lyric with Collamarina and The bill of fare for be: Sunday after- unday evenin Tuesday, Trova- John M. Welc h, in "\ Bell Boy,” is MMM sEAsuNs FIRST CHURCH WEDDIKG Miss Isab:lle H. Preston | Eecomes the Bride of Len D. Owens, | The first swell church wedding of the | season took place yesterday when Miss }l.\ulv-l H. Preston and Len Douglas Ow- | ens were m rried at the st Unitarian | Church. Rev. Bradford Leavitt performed ceremony, which was witnessed by a | large and ~'fashionabie gathering of | friends, | the detai terized by s of the \\eu‘ld g were ch‘u“- Beauty S nm!dml their pretty he.ulk The artistic details of the affair were, however, most conspicuous in the delignt- | ful taste displayed in the gowning of the | bridal party. Prettiest of all were the bou- uets of violets fashioned as muffs, 2 through which the maids thrust their dainty hands. At exactly 3 o'clock, the bour set for the ceremony, the bridesmaids advanced from the chancel door and marching down | the center aisle met the bride and escorted her to the altar. In the bridal procession first came the | ushers, Wiilard Drown, George Cadwal- | lader, Alblon Whitney, liugene Unger, Dr. | Morton Gibbons and Herbert Mee, They were followed by the bridesmaids, Miss Norma Preston, Miss Grace Spreciels, Miss Lillie Spreckels, Miss Florence Jos- selyn, Miss lda Gibbons and Miss Grace Bertz. Following the bridesmaids came the maid of honor, Miss Edith Preston, who in turn was followed by the bride, 1g on_the arm of her father. L l%e chancel rail the groom, assisted the best man, Dr. John C. Spencer, At by waited the coming oI the bride. The bride wore an exquisite gown of white satin. The skirt was made en train and trimmed with a flounce of white crepe de chine. The corsage was made high and claborately trimmed with costly lace. The veil, which was an elegant piece of old ;u-lnt applique. wag fastened to the coif- | fure with a wreath of orange blossoms. | The bridal bouquet was composed of lilies | of the valley and orchids. | Miss Edith Preston, the maid of honor, wore a_dainty gown of white mousseline over white silk. The yoke of the corsage | was laid in tiny tucks, stitched in gold, nd the girdle was madé of point applique. hat onmrPnsed entirely’ of white violets, ‘and a muff_of the same blossoms, com- pleted the exquisite costume. The brides- maids were attired alike. Their gowns lace. Their flower muffs were composed of Marle Louise violets and their hats were fashioned to represefit pink roses. After the ceremony there was a recep- tion at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Preston, 2104 Van Ness avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Owens will &pend their | honeymoon in_the East. They leave to- morrow and will be gone three months, —_———— MARRIED UNDER BELL OF CHRYSANTHEMUMS Miss Ida Wise and Charles P. Phil- lips Wedded at the California Hotel. A pretty wedding ceremony was per- formed at the California Hotel at 5:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon, the contract- | ing parties being Miss Ida Wise, daughter | of Mrs. Sarah,Wise of 728 Sutter street, and Charles Phillips, a commission | merchant. The ceremony, which took place beneath a bell of white carnations and chrysanthemums, was witnessed by seventy-five relatives and friends. Rabbi Nieto officiated. ‘The bride wore a beautiful gown of white satin trimmed with duchesse lace, and carried bride’s roses. The mald of honor was Miss Pauline Goldstone, and the best man was M. Savanah. The ush- ers were David Bentley, Dr. E. A. Clay, ‘Willlam Hook and Henry Wolf. After the weddi tour, which will lnclude I. trip throug] the southern Stite, Mr. ana ‘Mrs. Phillips will Teside at 2774 Geary street. £ | were of pink crepe, trimmed with white | {Benoit Pasquale the Unfor- < | still the bill at the California_Theater. | Next Sunday afternoon Ben Hendri(‘k!“ in the famous Swedish character play ““Ole Olson,” will be put on. P e | is doing good business this week with Davis and Macauley; the Harmony Four—Spenser, “Kelly, Ahern | and Patrick; Patrice, Robertus and Wil- | fredo, Mary de Sousa and the Pantzer | trio as entertainers. . . The Chutes and Zoo offer for this even- 1 The Orpheum | | | ing's special entertainment a ‘ladies rope-clynbing contest,” with the usual “amateurs’ night'’ programme. * e e | Coglll & Cooper's Comedians are draw- | ing good houses at Fischer's in thelr fun- ny farce, “All Mixed. | | L e S e e S SR S S S Y HOBBER FELLS A MERCHANT tunate Vietim of a Daring Thug. g SR I Benoit Pasquale, of the firm of B. Pas- | quale & Sons, military and soclety goods, Sutter street, is lying in a critical con- ion at his residence, 971 Howard street, | as the result of an encounter with a bur- | glar or robber early vesterday morning. Although seventy-nine years of age, he | was in the habit of going to business every morning hetween 6 and 7 o’clock. He went as usual yesterday morning, and while walking upstairs to his office with his keys in his hand a man made a grab for the keys and struck him on the hea with some instrument, probably a ham mer, inflicting an ugly wound. The old | gentleman fell backward and rolled the bottom of the stai: still holding the keys in his grasp. He yelled for help, and | his assailant got scared and ran away. About half an hour later the old gentle- man was found at the bottom of the stairs by the janitor of the building in a semi- conscious condition. He was able to tell the janitor what happened him before he lapsed into unconsciousness, The janitor nctified Mr. Pasquale’s two sons, and he was taken home and the family physician summoned. Owing to the old gentleman’s age the effect of the blow, fall and shock may result serfously. The police were notified, and Detective Ryan was detailed on the case, but he was un- ahble to get any description of the man. Monday the old gentleman lost or had stolen from him three keys, one being for the door leading to the store. The lock on the door was changed, and the suppo- sition is that the man who found or stole the keys had attempted to enter the store, and being baffled had waited for the old gentleman intending to render him uncon- scious, and by gettihg possession of the keys rob the store. The man who com- mitted the crime probably calculated on his victim falling unconscious on _ the | stairs, where he would be unobserved, in- | stead 'of rolling to the bottom into view, | The Popularity Of the name BUDWEISER is such as to tempt many brewers to attempt its use on inferfor brands. The U. S. courts have accorded that l‘x‘amo exclusively to the Anheuser-Busch BUD- ISER brand. E. G. Lyons Co., San Fran. cisco, Wholesale Dealer. —_————— Unknown Drowned Man Found. The bhody of a drowned man was found floating in the bay yesterday morning near the Tiburon ferry slip on the city front. The corpse had been in the watcr about nine or ten davs, It was that of a man about 40 vears old, with brown hair and brown mustache, dressed in a | dark blue sack sult of diagonal. There | was no vest and over the undershirt was a sweater with green and black stripes. The underclothing was of blue cotton oods. Nothing was found in the pockers v _which the drowned man could be identified. ——— Be Sure and Attend The greatest assignee sale of clothing. I will sell to-morrow men’s genuine worsted sults that cost $15 for $ 85; also 450 covert cloth men's suits, worth e for 33 90. Come one, come all, to t Boston, 'ITS Market st B. .. Relty, assigres Judge Kerrigan’s Stenographer. Superior Judge-elect Frank H. Kerri- gan announced the appointment Tuesday of George S. McComb to be his official stenographer. McComb is at present em- loyed as a deputy under Justices' Clerk Gaward Williams. ——— e , Inquest on Amelia Bahrs. Coroner Cole held an inquest vesterday on the body of Miss Amelia Bahrs, who was found asphyxiated in hur room at 7 last Monday. r”e;‘n verdict of sul ld hfl t mpo-“. urn IC1 icide while tes rarily insane. | of “Pericl | tered (with no authc | was_publish { on the title page, | year the proprietorship of the play b | expect to find in a first | worth mentioning that the advocat | in the | upstairs and I'll read it to you. | vesterday that William D. Farren, execu- PLAYS OF DOUBTFUL AUTHORSHIP. Copyright, 1900, by Seymour Eaton. THIRTY SHAKESPEARE EVENINGS, —_—— XVI (Concluded.) Another theory, and the most plausible, \ of is that Shakespeare wrote the story Marina as it stands In the last three a and the stead of & it o of a fiv play Later it somehow got inte the hands of | George Wilkins, who wrote the first two acts; but the non-Shakespearean of the rest of the play appear to be the work of another writer, perhaps W. Row ley, who was a partner of Wilkins in an- v rts other dramatic venture of the same poor thus completed was en- name bt sort. The play 1 the § its imme- and in the out a prose tioners’ Registers in I‘ 8, diate publicatjon was “sta year Wilkins broug! fon of the story, the title page of which seems to claim a share at least in the authorship of the play, being in part as follows: “The Painful Adve tures of Pericles, Prince of Tyre: b the True History of the Play of Peri: | as it was Lately Presented by the Worthy | and Ancient Poet John Gower."” year (1609) a quarto edition of i with Shake: but The the the l\Ine {u“w\ not included in the though in the latter was of the publishers of third B was in the hands of one the olio. The o y thinki | they coniiice less ‘with' the one I have here favored than wi others that have been advanced, r Herford, the of the e ts to this the- Shakes- W e backbon matic N fH le akes- peare’s ‘romantic’ plot. I may say in reply that tions in “Marina” are such as v ketch as brief this—much briefer than that in ““Timo; As arranged by Mr. Fleay it contains but 719 lines out of the 2291 lines in_ the play as printed in the Globe edition. This may explain why the publication of the p 'stayed’’ in 1608. Shakespeare may have been disgusted at the manner in which his fragment of a play had been padded out to more than thrice its orie- nal bulk; and this may also have led his friends who edited the first folio te omit “Pericles,” _the they included ‘“Ti- mon” and “Henry VIIL" in which he has & larger share, and also the early pl (“Titus Andronicus” and “Henry VI7), which he was known io have revised. The theory jch Professor Herford adopts, “‘that Shakespeare rather elab- orated another man les,’ scene by scene, here more, here less, according to the fluctuating aitractions of the scene.” seems to me extremely improbable. I can- not conceive of his leaving the wretched opening acts with no revision (or none of this theory can plausibly make out), and then béginning the third act with what Professor Herford himeelf aptly describes as “one of the most amazing transitions in literature, suddenly steeping us in the atmosphere of high poetry,” and in the rest of the scenes which are ascribed to him seldom falling below this elevated style characteristic of his latest work it is an interesting and significant fact on's poetic instinet led him to recognize Shakespeare's share in ““Pericles™ long_before the discussion of the question New \kespeare society in 1847 Dr. Furnivall, when talking with the poet about Shakespeare, remarked that he had never read *Pericles” through, for he di not believe that Shakespeare wrote it. “Oh,” sald Tennyson, ‘“that won't do. He wrote all the part relating to the birth and discovery of Marina and the recovery of Thaisa. I settled that long ago. Come " Upstairs to the smoking room they went, and Ten- nyson read the genuine part of “Pericles” with an occasional triumphant interjec- tlon of ‘Tsn’t that Shakespeare? What do | you think of that?” Furnivall, in telling ihe story to the New Shakespeare so- clety, adds: “T need not tell you how I enjoyed the reading, or how quick and sincere my conviction of the genuineness of the part read wa: He afterward found, when Mr. Fleay printed what he regarded as Shakespeare’s part of the play, that it was identical with what Ten- nyson had read. Fleay had come te his Conclusions by the application of metri- cal tests and a minute examination of the | construction and style of the play. Hc\ BRI . - 1 FXECUTOR FARRE | LEAVES THE CITY e, Judge Coffey Says He Stands in the Light of an Absconder. —_—— Judge Coffey announced in open court tor of the will of the late D. D. Fowler, stood in the light of a defaulter and ab- sconder, and after a heated debate with M. C. Hassett, Fowler's counsel, the court suspended Farren's powers as executor and ordered an immediate :nvestigation to definitely determine his whereabouts. On November 12 last Farren came into possession of $4000 belonging to decedent’s estate, through a compromise with Mrs. Fowler, which he held for the other de- visees, Frank D., D. D. Jr.,, and Lizzie Fowler, Nelile Bennett and Kate Farren. He was ordered to give a vond by the court, but the next time word was re- ceived from him he was in Seattle. Yes- terday an order directing him to explain his action was called for hearing, but he was absent, and in his place Attorney Hassett appeared. Hassett explained that his client was in Seattle and admitted that his conduct in failing to give a bond was reprehensible. fifl!s"ll disclaimed all responsibility for the absence of the executor and Judge Coffey answered that it was one of the | happy conditions of the lawyer's tempera- | ment to be able to cast off responsibility. Hassett started to reply, but Judge Cof- fey stntod that he had talked too much already. Judge Coffey then suspended Farren's powers and appointed Frank D. Fowler special administrator of decedent’s estate. “T think a bond of $1000 in your case will be sufficient,” said Judfie Coffey, address- ‘because all that remains of the estate is in the hands of Farren, and 1 am of the opinion that $1000 ‘s more than you will ever get from him.” Farren was connected with the insur- ance business in this city for some time and later went into politics, having been connected Wi the Sheriff's office re- cently. Overland Trains Very Late. All the overland trains due yesterday afternoon and last evening were from fifteen to eighteen hours behind time, No. 1, which was due here at 6:45 p. s is now due - :45 this morning: No. 3, due at 2: il be T Bt Eorcloc thio orning: and No. 5, due at 415 yester: day afternoon, is scheduled to arrive at) a. m. to-day. had looked at the pla the outside, we ma; Dnet from the inside. as a critie—from Tennyson as a VIII” is another play which is e’s only He wrote about half of it & the other half. Tw dependently, it was pub of two ¥ after refe ‘In the cropp! which _his supe ear. their ¢ the where peare. constructs probat H tcher completec a_ Fletcher and M speare_had nothing essor Herfor e pression that B e and Massinger the aut hakespeare certainly Fle “The T“» Noble Kinsmen,” according t the title page of the earliest known edl ‘written by :he venerahl Mr. Willlam was not adm a to any other collected editl speare until about y what earler in th thorship. and Lamb and ¢ others, decided that the old titl correct in assigning a to Shakespeare. published an el ' v, allotting to Shakespeare and Fletch respective portions, and Halla and other critics and commentat« me converts to his views. Dyce he pla his edition, as Huds. on, and as I did in 1840 “weaken opinions and later declared the prob of its authorship insoluble. her ¢ Who at first agreed with him have ha similar experience. For myself at pre I think it_very doubtful whether Shak speare had anything whatever to do wi e play. Sidney Lee, however, in “Tife of Shakespeare" (138) decides “frequent signs of Shakespeare's work- manship are unmistakable.” Some eritic< are of the opinion that Massinger wrote the parts that have been assigned to Shakespeare I cannot take space to refer to disputes concerning _the authorship of certain cenes or passages, longer or shorter. ays included in the ordinary editions hakespeare. These would furnish suf ficlent material for another paper as long as this, but they are of minor importancs in comparison with the questions invol ing large portions of pla ‘\ as have analysis_of n Sp g ably in his h . SY been discussed briefly in _the present paper. W. J. ROLFE. Cambridge, Mass. ADVEETISEMENTS is Cape $25. Regular value $33.00 Of the finest electric seal (a vecy stylish fur resembling sealskin) with a yoke of fine black marten. An exceptionally handsome garment, extremely fashion- able and in an entirely new “Eiegantly lined with heavy brocaded siik This is a special offer made for this week only. $25.00 each. NEUTRA FUR COLLAR- ETTES. Neutra fur is a rich brown fur resembling beaver. The voke is of electric seal. It is finished with four tails and beautifully lined—10 inches deep, $12.50 each. Alfo in tab effects with eight tails for......... $15.00 Open evenings. Mall orders filled. H.Liebes &Co INCORBORATED 133-137 Post/¢ SF

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