The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 10, 1903, Page 9

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, IER VICTIM 1IGHBINDERS ver of the Sen Suey g Tong Fatally Wounded. PRI ew Chung Yet Lured From | Room to an Alley and Shot, Rt § ew Quong e Ho, g shooting { the Sen g £ s between & was his room at 721 K whe H O a < him ar 3 in the way HIGHTINT an N Ch 8 Num. All ¢ that & ma his ' s W t of the i by the m red A s s eing g de w g on cktor Gow w inding up “ [ . Two other men Sing inders we ey | Anvzn'rxssnm PEOPLE = COMPARYS EXTRACT' F BEEF GENUINE EVERY ‘WOMAN AN about the wonderful "\, MARVEL 355~ | \ Se new Vaginal Syriege. Iwectior and Suction Safest— Most (on t‘é~ enien is 3 Marvel. Nothing like it. Best Retainer on earth wnd & gyemicine ¢ orld renowned Boosver No. 1 AETIC E. fRUSS CO., 33 West 24t Street, Nuew *. 5. Y. or 208 Post Street, San Fravcisco, Oul, | Call or write ior ted and sbould know | BROTHERS DIE - ON THE MARSH | Arthur and Harold Bar- | —onidas Meet With Tragic Death. ‘“Little Duchess”’ 1903. DAINTY ANNA HELD AND HER BEVY OF PRETTY GIRLS MAKE BIG HIT @Wes a Display of Stunning Gowns and Hand- some Women---Nance O’Neil Offers a Week of Exceptionally Interesting Plays---Alcazar’s Leading Lady Scores Success | Escape From Furious Waves | | of Bay to Plunge Into ! Fatal Trap. ‘; PR IR I )7:'51/5)?/7'}1 BERKELEY, Feb. 9.—With the lights "THELI7'7ZE f Stege shinihg in their eyes as DV(//EJS ” .( beacons of refuge, Arthur and Har- | S old Baronidas fought for life over | o (046‘/”5/4 A% the k and storm-swept -marshes | % e north of that town—fought and | | died within a few hundred yards of help. | | ey had reached safety from the periis of the but chill and exhaustion were too strong for them and they were over- come, but not without'a terrible struggle | of which the mute marsh still bears plain ce Brotherly love was strong in stryggle, for the elder, Arthur, might ave saved his own life had he not,turned | back help his fallen, weaker brother. | | H never reached him, and they died the tidewater that lapped the | the sodden marsh. In a narrow, twelve-foot skiff the-two | boys were caught out on n the storm that swept over it | | afternoon and night. They were | | 3 ark battling in the waves off 1 heep Islan with their boat already full { f water. Their bodies were found to-day | | at noon by Clifford Fallon, a boy from Stege, who was hunting on the marsh DEATH IN HOWLING STORM. From the boys were landed place where the Baronidas last seen to the place they n the Contra Costa County shore bout two miles. They made this dis- tance, driven by the southwest wind and carried along by the strong incoming tide Wind and tide carried the water up on the marshes hjgher than it has ever been be- re this winter, and this accounts for the that the boys were able to get their 1p off the beach and on the higher t marsh, which the water then Exhausted as they must have boys drove a stake into the ground, put the chain from the bow the boat around this and snapped llock through the chain links the borrowed craft might o at vered n order at not go adr mmenced® the struggle over the sh with the tidewater swirling up ind their knees and the wind and rain ing jinto their faces. Five hundred from where their boat was moored ame to a single-line barb wire ning from the high land out across the marsh to the bay front. Along felt their way. Weak they ern or their muddy hand with its sharp, rusty more than a few inches are often one upon the other how they clutched and clutch tdently they their strength, for oars and rowlocks found where in resting upright by f the brothers gave great they carpied their g th them, and died, the where on truggle. overes! were TRIES TO SAVE BROTHER. T of the wire fénce are about fit part. The hand marks begin on the wire forty-five feet from where the ounger brother, Harold, fell be a | post. Arthur had gone on five posts far- ther, wh turned back, without doubt the his younger brother. The ddy handprints made themselves over the of three p 1d, some th sther struggled muddy handprints streaking the osts from top to_bottom tell a tale = terrible The brothe m uggied m minutes, perhaps re they died cries mingling with and being that shrieked over This afternoor « inty removed where an inquest death was due falling into the marsh and 1g unable from exhaustion will not be termined until after the autopsy Both the Baronidas boys were well and favorably known here. Arthur was 19 ars of age and Harold was two years vounger. Although both* knew how handle a boat nefther could swim. They | were unusually strong and large for their ages. Dr. George Baronidas, their father, died about four years ago. He was a prominent physician and had a large prac- tice In S8an Francisco. Their mother, Mrs. Georglana Baronidae, resides at 1806 San Pablo avenue Saturday for Sheep Isiand. Fred Atcheson and-A. Lopesz, also from West Berkeley, were in { a boat ahead of them and were the last | to see them alive. Both Atcheson and Lopez had narrow escape Their boat | was swamped just before they reached the island, but they managed to get to the Jand in safety. Although realizing the dangerous position In which the Baronidas boys were, the other lads were | unable-to help them. Arthur doubled for a dis- e his body from where. his The fen st have hours, for help lost in the wind arsh er Cu of. Con e hrvdlp« to will be hel2 o drowning by shallow water osta Martinez Whether the b or be to tully rise a to Well Known Newspaper Man Dies. | Walter Brooks Cooke, a well-known | newspaper man of this city, passed away on Saturday evening at his residence, 3320 Thirteenth street. The. deceased had been under a physician’s care for some time and his death was the result of hemor- rhage of the lungs. | Waiter Cooke was for many years con- | nected with the Argonaut and about two years ago went ‘to Nome. He returncd | later to tuis city and for scveral months | worked on various daily papers. The funeral will take place to-day from un- | i dertaking parlors at 946 Mission street at |1 o'clock. —_———— | Juror Gould Misses Train. When the case of nest Alexander; for- | mer policeman, charged with accepting bribe from Mamie Lin, alias Lulu Wil- soh, was called in Judge Lawlor's ‘court yesterday morning the Judge announced that *he had received a dispatéh from C. | W. Gould, one of the jurors, | missed the train at Eidridge and could not be present. The case was accordingly continued till this morning, and Lulu Wil- son, the recaleitrant witness, was admon- ished to return at that time. The case against the woman in Police Judge Mo- gan's court for refusing to answer a question wage continued till this morning. the soap for fair, white hands, bright clear complexion, soft, healthful skin. the boys left on a hunting trip | that he had | / DAVIS AS “PAT/ENCE. LT ITARGARET ATHE[RTON AT THE ORAIEUIT - i = | % & g = M EBat PR . = 4 | SOME OF THE STELLAR ATTRACTIONS NOW HOLDING FORTH AT LOCAL PLAYHOUS AND ‘CONTRIBUT- | ING TO THE ENTERTAINMENT AND AMUSEMENT OF THOUSANDS OF THEATER PATRONS EVERY | NIGHT. | - ot AR T s & : T E would indeed be a brave churl | the first to be produced, scored a succe | worn on the border. The stage settings who could get past Anna Held's [ and the second, “Patience,” which was | were unusually fine. The lumber camp fervid “orbs ‘and Norto presented last night, made an instanta- | scene was particularly pleasing. Alice 4 olenite e sl xound L0V | neous hit. It has so many tuneful melo- | Treat Hunt, who played the part of the s B e e . | les and its satire on the esthetfc craze | strange mountain girl, Chispa, had her au- t a plot in e Little Duche | is so sharp and caustic ‘that it will al- | dience at her feet from the very moment Neither would he find one, the authors of | ways prove an att on. There was no | of her first appearance. The careless the piece religiously disclaiming any such | hitch, everything going off with snap and | abandon with which she handled the diffi- old hioned addition to their mu and | vim. Ferris Hartman in his Irvingesque | cult role was remarkable. That the beau- millinery. But, dear Mr. de Koven, dear | characterization of Bunthorne was very | tiful young actress has a brilliant future Mr. Smith, it really would not have hurt | SU¢C ful, and Edward Webb did clever | could not fail to be evident to the least That e ey e M oatbn ] WOTk as Aschitalf i« nor. He had to | appreciative of her hearers. Ernest Has- smile again, the dimples ARE worth the | Fepeat the catchy son; he Magnet and | tings, as Zeke Stevens, the typical .uncut .. | the Churn.” ~Arthur Cunningham as Col- | diamond of California’s early days, was Nobody seemed to mind the plot famine, | 0n¢l Calverly was encored for his two 'also the reciplent of frequent and pro- anyway, last night at the Columbia, but | humbers The Heavy Dragoon” and |longed applause. In the last two acts his took it out in applauding the thrilling | when I First Put This Uniform On.” | work was particularly fine. George Os- Setwéiry ' and - dramatic - gown not to | @nd his fine voice was heard to advan- | bourne in the character of Injun Jack Speak, Miss Norton, of the dimples. As | tage in the concerted pieces. Oscar Lee | secured several recalls as well and con- A Bicture setting for the piquant little |5 the Duke of Dunstable and Joseph Fo- | tributed generously to the general suc- person the head of the bill nothing as Major Murgatroyd were accepta- | cess of the production. Frank Bacon. Al- more fetching could have been devised Bertha Davis in the title gole sang | bert Morrison and Eleanor Gordon created and as a production there hasn't been numbers with rare expreselon, par-|.all manner of fun in every act. Clifford anything “so much New York” here for | tcularly “He Was a Little Boy.” Caro | Dempsey made an admirable villain, The months. 1f we have sold our plot for a | ROMa Wa& “;" L ]' and she ’l““"lf‘mhfrs of the cast ably supported the mess of pottage, it is mishty Kood pot- | & Bt with mher solo. is the Lot | ieaders. Jatk' dmtertainment i ine Litiie Duch, | Hannan Devis the Lady ir and Ma- | “Gentral. “Pat h o | rle Welch the Lady The choruses | wppt - €8s Patience” will be preferable it he | 1 Vel CF Oy Through the Breakers,” a melodrama is tender of his ears b . o S which has its locality on the coast of As carefully sinuous and magically Grand Opera-House. | Kent, England, was presented at the | rounded ‘as ever is the bewitching Mam- { selle, with a glittering repertoire of gowns | that is a show in themselves. Her first | number is a scherzo in white, a trim | bathing gown: her second a symphony in | glittering vellow; her third an eel-like arrangement In jeweled gray: herfourth | beyond description. Then she cohmes on as a Pagisian gamin, and conc lu&e! with | | another wonderful creation. Possibly | Migs Held is sinmging better than last | | tinle when she came here in “A Gay | | Deceiver” five vears ago. Certainly her | accent now permits frequent - glints of | her meaning to filter through, and her | little speech of response last night, in | which she thanked the audience for the ovation she received. *I ‘ave tried very ‘ard with my English since I was ’ere | last, and thank you so mooch, you ‘ave | made me very ‘appy,” was a triumpl All the rest of the duties of the part were carried off with vietorious eclat, and Miss Held came into very kind favor witle her audience. | "3t was a piquant and audacipus thing | for the little lady to do, to surround her- self with such a be of beautiez—as the | | press sgent puts it—as undertake the fem- inine duties of the chorus. (Th | male che {1us drops here into its pre-“‘Florodora obscurity.) They are as handsome as | they make ’em, and gowned to distrac- | tion. Each separate girl of the “Sadie chorus—heralded by slow music—got her | special welcome as she came on, and throughout they vied with lho star. They might sing_worse, too. Joseph W. Herbert as (.\hla\r‘ and Knox Wilson furnished most of the com- | edy and could have furnisihed much more if the authors had given them larger chanc Knox Wilson has an immensel fun; specialty, in which he gives a o certina solo and does some oxcellently comical dancing. Ceorge Marion has a | dago specialty that looms -up and Frank Rushworth uses a remarKably pleasing | tenor as th young American { the Duchess. | Then the settings are stunnip | | handsome, elaborate,and alto: Litile Duchess" is well n to be seen, GussARD, Tivoli. revival of Gilbért ivan's . at the Tivell O W= hull\n Sold all over the world, with popular approval. | plays | splendid production of | yet to be announced. | success. | from the opening death scene in the des- | happiness. Nance O'Neil will appear this week at the Grand Opera-house In a repertoire of of umusual interest. The week | at the Grand last evening with 2 The Jewess.” This play affords Miss O'Neil great opportun- ity to display , her emotional talents, though she is hardly the success in this play that she is in “Judith.” But in favor | of “The Je ss'" it can be said that the efforis at realism are truer and attain their purpose with a production of less mirth than greeted similar efforts in | Miss O'Nefl will appear again The Jewess,” Wednesday evenings in Dumas’ power- ‘amile 'riday evening In turday matinee and evening and will conclude her suc- | son Sunday evening with a play | | opened “Judith." this evening in and Thursda ful drama, “‘Magda, “Judith cessful sea Alcazar. The opening night of “Chispa” at the Alcazar was a tremendous and unqualified The little theater was crowded to the doors and the curtain calis after every act were numerous and emphatic. The drama is a wonderfully clever repre- sentation of the romance of frontier life in the old days when shootings, corduroy and fandangoes were’ the fashion. The play is' tull of love and bullets. There is nothing but the sharpest kind of action ert to .the closing spectacle of universal And with_ all the tragedy there is a load of fun crowded into the piece. The costumes are just what used to be @ iivsimivlefeimime el il @ Late Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. 2 Monday, February 9. Schr. James Rolph, Olses 11 days from 2 ia Neah Bay S days. Perry, 7 daye from Willapa SAILED. nday, \ February 9. . Olsen, srickson, , Lee, — DOMESTIC PORT. SEATTLE— Arrived Feb #—Stmr City of Puebla, from clsco; stmr Robert Dal- | tar, fiom San Franc Safled Feb el 0, . Senator, for San Fran- | Central last nilght to a crowded house and achieved an immense success. The pla is undoubtedly one of the best that has been presented at this popular theater, and the audiénce, by frequent and enthu- slastic applause, testified the great plea- sure it afforded them. The scenery is very beautiful, the story human and in- teresting and the comedy genuine and ori- ginal. The play.is rich in sensational cli- maxes and the thrilling basket rescue of the heroine worked the audience up to the highest pitch of excitement and re- sulted In several curtain calls. The agt- ing of the company was excellent and Landers Stevens, George P. Webster, Ed- win Kmery, Walter Whipple, Henry Shu- mer., Ernest Howell, George Nicholls, John World, Eugenie Thals Lawto: Georgie Cooper, Margaret Marshall and Mindell Dreyfus were very successful in thelr respective roles. Monday evening next “Not Guilty,” a melodrama entirely new here, but which is now In .the third vear of its run in England, will be elabo- rately produced. Orpheum. The show at the Orpheum this week leaves littie to be expected. From the time the curtain rises on Hill and Silvainy, bicyelists, until the pictures of the bio- graph are shown all sorts of turns are given and each one is good enough to be a show in itself. The Nelson comiques are clever acrobats, who win much ap- plause not only for their agility, but for the fun they make during their turn. The skits presented by John T. Sulltvan and company and Joe Maxwell and company are both clever things. Les Dumonds. singers and Instrumentalists, and Cole and Johnson. colored entertainers, re- ceived numerous encores. The Martinett! ircupe of acrobats, four in number, do some wonderful feats of strength with a degree of grace and agility seldom if ever equaled here, Fischer’s. Although the sixth week of Fidgety™ “Barbara was commenced at Fischer's last night, the house was crowded and the au- | diece seemed to appreciate the good things of the burlesaue as much as they did_during the opening week. Winfleld Plake and Maude Amber, with their catchy songs; Dill and Kolb, in their ex- | for the | | | | of the substan | play, de | ical comed: | comedienne, and Deas and Deas, d& clever (o] DROPS BANDIT IN THE DUEL Constable Uses Shotgun Nicely in El Dorado County. Fugitive Dangerously Wound- / ed After an Exciting the recent insurance that have the glamour of corporation common al ba schemes—schem the possibilities stocks, but none of the underlying bonds. It is the basic sordity the. pru- dent man looks for. He finds that in mutual insurance, as Colonel Greene points out in_his ual address to the members of the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company. Why the assured does not in modern insurance schemes he sho S0 lainly 1t even the most unlettered in‘finance can see it. Conservatism is sometimes sneered at: that it begets security, the stateme of the company shows beyond the shadow of a doubt. It is a statement that so well bears close analysis that it cannot fail to bring joy to the breasts of those who hold a policy in this company with both foun- dation and superstructure built on tk rock of absolute security. ~Ms record of twenty-two consecytive vears of uniXorm dividends to fully protected policy holders without an equal in the history of In- surance. —_—————— Lectures on ‘‘Cadmus and Abraham.” Af a meeting of the Congregational | ministers yesterday morning Professor W | F. Bade Berkeley, Abraham.’ of the Theological Seminar: read a paper on “Cadmus an The translation of the Han- nurodi papers, which were discovered about two years ago, was said by Pro- fessor Bade to have added greatly to the knowedge obtained from Hebraic learn- ing. In the afternoon Professor Bade delivered a lecture on “Birds” at the Sorosis Club, —_———————— To Benefit St. James’ Mission. A popular concert is to be given at By- | to-mor- 11 Hall, 208 Post day) enefit of the fion, Clement & The Knickerbocker Mrs. L kridge, Mrs. ron 'Mauzy row (Wed street, February d of Sixth Quar- ng M James' avenue. tet, assisted by Miss Miriam and Roscoe V nent on the programme uel James Lee is pastor of St. James' M Male will e i o Young Corbett Is Delayed. Young Corbett, the feather-weight cham- pion, who was to arrive here early last | evening, was delayed en route, the train on which the pugilist is speeding to this city met with an accident, and it will not arrive here until 5 o'clock this-morn- ing. Corbett is matched to meet Hanlon here |lll.‘3 month. He training near thé ocean beach as soon as he arrives —_—————————— Work of the Drug Clerks. as CALL HEADQUARTERS., SACRAMENTO At the request of the Retail Drug Assoefation, Senator Wolfe this morn ing introduced a bill to regulate the work and hours of selling by retail, drugs and medic d compounding physic - preseriptios The bill provides that no one engaged in such business ‘shall labor more than ten hours a day. This bill is aimed to prevent drug clerks being overworked. Wolfe states that there is danger of an overworked clerk filling a pre scription mproperly. and that the lives of citi- Zens actually depended upon the passage of th resolution ORRR IR parts, and the pretty chorus girls, in their lively dances, were all liberally applauded for their work. The vite the length of time that it has been on, bids fair to draw crowded housés during the whole week. Thener Republic. “Prince Otto”” at the Theater tremely laughable Republic Eddie | will go into | JUIGIDE END EVENTFUL LIFE JohnPratt,OnceaNoted Newspaper Man, Kills Himself. | ‘ While Temporarily Insane He Fires Shot Into His / Pursuit. Heart | SACRAMENTO, Feb. 8.—About § o’clock | SATTLE, Wash., Feb. 9—John W. last evening a young man entered John | Pratt, city grade tax attorney, and for Heath's general store at Michigan Bar, 'n | Years a well-known lawyer and former [ the eastern part of this county, battered | NeWspaper man in this c took his own { the clerk, Moses Patterson, Into nsi- | life about 9 o'clock s morning. The bility, rifled the cash boxes of $5l and | cause assigned the deed was tempo- then decamped. | rqry insanity. This morning Constable Lee M. Parker | The suicide oc at Pratt's home, took up the trail of the robber and after | 145 Thirty-fifth av Madrona Park. A passing through a corner of Amador | ouble-ba "‘""' shotg County crossed the Cosmus River and N‘ o g ions : s g 57 | met his man half a mile South of Latrobe, | found the dead body ner husband net El Dorado County. | more than ten minutes after the was | Parker, who was armed with a pump | fired. He was lying prostrate the | shotgun, ordered the robber to throw up | floor of the bathroom in the se: his hands. He replied by opening fire | of his residence with a revolver. Parker blazed away| John W. Pratt was bo England in with his shotgun, but the second shell | 1%0. After obtaining legal education stuck and he had to throw it out. While | he received an herit e and was en- | he was doing so the robber fired two more | abled to travel shots. Parker again got his shotgun | Visiting all of the out-of-the-way places going and the robber dropped at his first | in Europe. around (he world | shot. | and finally a. where The man i8 desperately wounded and | he spent some in the diamond fields will die. His face and chest are riddled | of Grigualand and the gold fields of the with buckshot. On his person was found | Transvaal. He engaged In the publishing the money and letter taken from the|of a newspaper and’ later purchased a store. He gives the name of Clifford | ostrich farm. but his birds were killed Read, says he has been in California tw during the last Kaffir uprisi He e years and that his mother, Delia Read, | tered the British army and was given 1 lives at 303 Woodburn avenue, Walnut | rank of lieutenant-colonel before hi Hill, Cincinnati tirement and was presented with a medal | for bravery by Queen Vic ria. Later he Reliable Life Insurance. ““i“}‘ o R Mozambique by a commer- | When the bisiness of surance was | Clal syndicate ’ }fimh.’, R “h",’lf': Insurance was | “pratt came to the United States about | regun L BED WaNE 18 e 5. For several vears he was managing | fessed to be. In these latter days it has | .gitor and editor-in-chief of the’ New | ome most anything but mainly | York World when it was owned by Man- and unfortunately a spe tion on the | yon Marble. He was later conniected with lite of the insured him: i the stay- 1th and with the St. Louis Globe-Demo- ing powers of the fellows who have in- and then he purchased the Dallas ! sured themselves with him on all sorts of | (Tex.) Times. He was city editor of the tontine and bond plans. The results for | San Franicsco Call, then an editorial the beneficiaries of the assured man have | writer on Seattle Pos seemingly been forgotten in the gamble i Tala S ation in Seatt he was practicing | ELOPEMENT A HABIT WITH PRINCESS LOUISE German Official Says the Giron Af ftlu Was Her Fourth Es- capade. Feb Con Cr EL PASO r{ Manheim, Vice Texas, of the Mexico z Prince Henry ting sidelights on ter al elopeme: French of Princes: M. Giron. Consul at the time of t¥ that the sympatk that country are all whom he desecribes a man of exemplary character and great populari Leoni that this is the fourth time the Princess has eloped, one of her flights having been with an Amer- satio ae pe« with Prince ple t as says d Leoni, “now vows e Prince: eternal constane ts extremely pen tent, but.the people understand her weak- ness and cannot belleve that she will ever reform. King of Saxony is in very poor I 2, so that his recovery is ubtful nd the people view with aversion the possibility of Princess Louise A petition to the Kaiser in such an event may be resorted to.” LONDON. Feb. 10.—A news agency dis atch - from Brussels |asserts that M 3iron is returning to Geneva in response irgent from the former »ny. The Princess »btain permission to see siders f ac- as thelr Quee t an appeal wn aving her sick cording t dispatch further concessions to t et <o KANSAS CITY. Mo Journal, is dead. Patr ner, having made the first r Saxc Princess [ te & o Lautsville Cour- was a forty- to Californ n ADVEBTISE“NTS. lWlII Cure You of Rheymatism | Eise No Money Is Waated. | _Any honest person who Rheumatism is welcome to this I am a specialist in suffers from ofter. Rheumatism, and have treated more cases than any other | physician, I think. For 16 years I made 0 experiments with different drugs, testing all known remedies while search- ing the world for something better. Nine years ago I found a costly chemical in Germany which, with my previous discov- eries, gives me a certain cure, I don’'t mean that it cam turn beny joints into flesh again: but it can cure the djsease at any stage, compietely and forever. 1 have done it fully 109.000 times. I know this so well that [ will furnish my remedy on trial. Simply write me a postal for my book on Rheumatism, and I will mail you an order on your drug- gist for six botties Dr. Shoop's Rheu- matic Cure. Take it for « month at my risk. If it succeeds, the cost is only $.50. If it fails, 1 will pay the druggist myself —and your mere word shall decide it I' méean that exactly. If you say the | results are not what I claim, I don't ez~ pect a penny from you. 1 have no samples. Any mers sampla that can affect chronic Rheumatism must drew a not very large house last night. { be drugged to the verge of danger. I use but as the week progresses the size of | be drugged to the verge of fanger. I use the andiences should grow. for Raiph Stu-{ {0, pUTy SIME, BP0, Hne disease out ot art and the very excellent company sup- porting him are presenting a piece worth hearing in & manner very much worth chile. Ralph Stuart plays the Prince the last inch, and as Princess Seraphin Miss Helen MacGregor Is making quite to i a hit. The other parts are well sustained. | The piece ¢is handsomely costumed and quite elaborately staged. Prince Otto™ was ‘dramatized by Otis Skinner from Robert Louis Stevenson's novel, it is as well wortR hearing as is the book worth reading. California. “The Devil's Auctionl) drew a big audi- ence to the California Theater again last night. The play has not beeu seen in this city for a long time. It has been changed rome, and the scenery is certainly some- thing very unique and original. The cast As a play| the blood. My remedy does that even in the most difficult, obstinate cases. It has cured the oldest cases that I ever met. And In all my experience—in all my 2000 tests—I never found another remedy that would cure one chronic case in ten. Write me, #and I will send you the order. Try my remedy for a monthe as it can't harm v. If it fails, it is free. Dr. Shoop. box 630, Racine, Wis: not chronic, ‘are often cured by one or two bott] At 2ll druggists’ | | i is a good one, and the leading characters | do some clever acting in their line. The best part of the whole show. however, is the specialties. These are the best seen here for a long time, and created quite a stir last night. The Chutes. St. Elmo F. Pompeji, a soon and trombone soloist, aild Daisy Faye, a man- doUn and violin virtuoso. made a great kit at the Chutes last night in their mus- May Kennedy, a singing colored couple, were well Yeceived. De- renda and Breen, club jugglers, the Wil- sons, song illustrators, and Stellita Gar- barden, Spanish dancer, repeated their successes of last week. “Down the Flume,” the wonderful scenic waterway. proved as great an attraction as ever. The amateurs will present a new series of live !ing pictures Thursday night, ‘Teeth Without Plates | ¢ for the cost of the material. All werk guaranteed. Open Sundays and sven- ings. Extraction Free. | POST-GRADUATE DENTAL COLLEGE, 8 Taylor cor. Golden Gate avei, 8. ¥. 073 Washington st.. cor. Tenth, Oakland. ROWNS = et

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