The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 14, 1903, Page 5

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I'HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1903. CH THEIR DEPDSITS IN “THE SE [HHESE FORET MRS, CAMPBELL'S GREATNESS SHOWS HIRER CIVERS COND MRS. TAN et | | Fail to Call for Money in National Bank in Honolulu. ; Four Hundred rs Who Cannot Be Found. - Awalt 1 | THER BIG LANDSLIDE JRS AT ASPEN TUNNEL ks of e Union Pacific Are Buried Under Fifty Feet Eart vears have given us, stands Mrs Patr Mrs. Tanque- he actress did t olumbia ra as she pleased wit art > breathe; choked, lered ghed with her. with the horror of it all 1 The ma Pinero's and in company ter — her $4.50 and $5 Irish Point Curtains, $2.50---to-day only selling will probably be their finish. To- , between 8:30 a. m. and 6 p. m. Irish point curtains taken from our new pring stock. Perfectly made and in carefully selected terns. Measure 3 yards long and 45 inches wide. At regular sale they are marked $4.50 and $5.00 the | pair. For to-day only, $2.50 the pair. No more than four pairs will be sold to any one pur- chaser and no phone or mail orders will be honored. "Tis time to think of Spring replenishing in earnest | now—let this money-saving opportunity be a starter. Come morning you can—always better to first ¢ , you know. (Successors to California Furniture Co.) 057 to 977 Market Street, Opp. Golden Gate Avenue. One oic He (orvAEIA= a i too—it became last night naked reality, the history of one’s nelgh- | | bor, a slice of life cut quivering from the | social heart. All sense of its brilliant | mechanism is lost, its perfect theatrical values ding spell of its ines- capabl It appears absolutely loglc ory of the woman who tried fate t of the moral morass into of the man who tried | e sunk the sinning | woman. s Mrs. Campbell who made its logic absolute, M Campbell with Pinero’s suggestion behind her, who made it that electric thing that burned its ay Into consclousness, | nqueray for Paul chivalry solid basis of | easily explainable se of the actress, wholly char in her gown of cream |and roses her first caress | Tanqueray's position becomes inevitable, and thereafter one can only follow the deepening traged: with hopeless sympa- thy all round. There is not a note of it struck falsely by ‘Mrs. Campbell. Her first scene suggests with an art that ut- terly conceals itself the subtle corrosion | of the life that the woman has led, her seared soul, the ashes, the weariness, the | middle of Ao ) “ QUERAY” 5 — ~ WOMAN'S SHAME | 2 d in and Clifford Dempsey was eflerqve as Ba- [ BOdy Of Baby Foun o the avameen Captan Tee | Unoccupied Flat on Polk Street. clever piece of character work. Albert Morrison as Goldarnheim looked handsome | and played the part with his usual care- | fulness and tact. George Osbourne made a splendid Papa Schmidt, the leader of the mob. Miss Jullet Crosb pla d her versatility as Lisa and the ot parts | Autopsy Shows Infant Lived Two Days and Skull Was d were well sustained by the rest of the €ompany. The piece is splendidly mounted. Fractured. — Tivoli. . The Daughter of the Regiment” met | The body of an unfortunate baby bey, with & cordial reception at the Ti¥oll last | evidently born erring woman and night. There is plenty of good music in | murdered tk sin mfght not be ex the opera and the company knows how to | posed, was found yesterday in a vacant render it in the most satisfactory manner. All of the old favorites have prominent parts. Edward Webb as Tony sang in splendid voice and received much deserved applause. Bertha Davis in the title role body was was also particularly pleasing. ris | drawer in & str Hartman Indulges in his customary horse | two weeks before being discovered. play and sings a topical song to the huge | The police taken charge of the :a:;i’;’m ot t‘:” h“"t"' Afv‘“““d‘—'“l“' case and Detective Balley is endeavoring sings three or four solos admir- 3 i g - ably. The rest of the cast furnishes ex- | .0, #5Certain the identity of the par cellent support. The costumes and stage | 1h¢ flat in which the body was found settings are unusually fine. . The members | one of a recently constructed of the chorus dance a minuet, which is | the Bothin Real Estate Company quite pleasing. There is some fun in the | which have been ready for occupanc pi;ce and the players introduce consider- | g short time. The discovery was made ably more. S N ot § b Y th ants who went to To-night and Thursday night Zelle de | > ' "0 Prospective tem iy Lussan will sing “Carmen.” . gree e e How the body came to be placed in the It was wyapped first - of brown pa- ws- P lived but t ded b k street. The child had vo days when its es- 1 the head. a pantry lay house at probabiy tence was ¢ have by and ou Gnmmiouse. In - Shakespeare's historical tragedy “King John,” Mr. MacLean is afforded opportunity of doing some exoellent work, an opportunity which he does not a to slip ‘by. He portrays the .selfish 1, then a whole being cov of March 22. T its disposition how they d and 1 king with a master hand and ar- | come bu leads his -audience up to the | joe are called upon t climax—the repulsive death scene in the | Rijley says he alone last act. His most masterly bit of acting | ang he romembers nee where 1s In ‘the second scene of ‘the second act : it G e wherein he coaxes Hubert to the murder He admits, of Prin Arthur. Thi was appreciated | 1hough e been work- by ths audience last nfkht with a voctf-| oo 5 Tolt. - Oy erous curtain call. Pretty Ode door oper Riley further plays the part of the gentle p natural feeling and in the scene with e remembers » sent by the Humbert in the tower is most effective. . puzait- Butler as Hubert and Herschel Mayall as nd at that | time he saw two women The flat is a second stor; 1lt side of a hil ground epuld h the rea its rear is b | ‘Any one sta nto t Bacigalupi the boc last pert v evening and found ar the right side of the the right pdrieta ougn the right tem- poral bene anc ling in the mastoid tissue. The autopsy surgeon is unable how was produced, owing to t decomposition of the tissues. It may have been caused by of instruments at the time of birth of length of time the after it came into the worl is may be discarded. All the circumstances tend to convince Morgue authorities t the on extensiv skull, | bone, fracture on ing in say view the ch was of illegitimate parenta; and that its heartless destruction was pre- meditated. | EXPRESS OFFICIALS { ARE CONFERRING HERE | President Evans Denies There Is Any Significance Attending Meeting | of Company’s Managers. The fact that the president and man- agers of Wel Fargo & Co.'s express ar | at present holding a conference in | eity has given rise many | around the company’s offices and cause: small amount of uneasiness amor f the employes, who invariabl these meetings prospects o th: will materfally affect their th to In | changes | own interests. E. A. Stedman, acting manager of the | company’s Atlantic system, arrived here from New York three days ago in re- | sponse to a telegram from President Ev- | FAMOUS ENGLISH ACTRESS WHO S8CORED A GREAT HIT LAST NIGHT AS PAULA IN “THE SECOND MRS. TRAY,” AND A SCENE FROM THE NEW PASTORAL PLAY WHICH HAS WON UNQUALIFIED AP- PROVAL AT THE CALIFORNIA. | TANQU: ans and since then the two, with R. A. | Wells of Kansas City, manager of the | central system, who was also summon | ana Manager Christenson of the Paeific | department, have been holding dally agement put on Tolstoi's “‘Resurrection,” with lavishness and strict attention to all the detalls. There were all the accessories necessary to give reality to the strange scene in court, the prison scene and the realistic representation of Sberia in (he winter. The audience, which little spark of hope that Tanqueray’s offer | fijled all the available space in the the- of marriage has kindled. Married, then, she finds the loneliness | her new life tn the country, with only | her husband and his daughter, whom the father is secretly fearful of her contami- nat g, and who instinctly dislikes her mother—a very madness of boredom. his is suggested with keenest apprecia- tion by the actress, with the love for her stepdaughter, the jealousy band’s affection for his daughter—the in- ired uglin of that jealous sneer, Saint Ellean!” The scens where the un- accepted Mrs. Tanquerary “turns down'’ the first of her neighbors to call is dell- ciously handled in its comedy phase, its later pathos and passion, compelling in highest degree turally Pinero’s great third act shows Campbell at her utmost. Here is a and depth of emotional power, a fon, an abandon of the greatest that to be had. The character's develop- | ment is indicated with a superb balance, the whole a fearful anatomy of a char- acter absolutely commanding in its sig- nificance. The supporting company shows up to much better advantage this week, with an excellent Cayle Drummle in Wright | Kramer, Charles Bryant as Captain Ar- dale, Emmet C. King as Tanqueray and Miss Amy Lamborn as Ellean. t should be said that Mrs. Campbell's superb gowning adds much to the picture. BLA PARTINGTON. Centrn’li The Central Theater was the scene of great enthusiasm last evening. The man- e s o e e | POLICEMEN OF ERIE ORGANIZE A UNION Demand Increased Wages and Hint at a Strike if the Raise Is Not Forthcoming. Pa.. ERIE, to enforce an increase in wages. Their demand went before the Council to-night and is for an increase from $60 to $75. The policemen hint at a strike if the raise is not forthcoming. They petitioned for an increase some time ago, but the matter was ignored by the Council when mak- ing up the appropriations for the current vear. The policemen are organized un- der the Central Labor Union and have received their charter. Actress Dies From Injuries. INDIANAPOLIS, April 13.—Florence Gladstone of San Francisco, a member of the Louls James and Fredatick Warde theatrical company, who fell and injured her spine at Logansport, dled this evening at South Bend, Ind. —_— ANACONDA, Mont., April 13.—David Gor- don, & miner and a wealthy bachelor. aged 55, is missing, and is supposed to have been mur- dered for his money, | | of her hus- | | April 13.—The members of | the police force have organized a union | ater, rose to the occasion and there were curtain calls almost without number compliment to those who performed t leading roles. It was a great night for George Webster, under whose personal supervision the drama was staged, and | who did fine work on the stage as the | soclalist. 1t was equally a great night for the management of the house. A large amount of mopey was expended in the production and the spontaneous applause [ that followed the various acts Indicated that the efforts of the management were appreciated. It took nearly two score of thespians to | fill all the roles. Eugenie Thals Lawton was the herolne, Katusha Maslova. \ Her work was judicious and clever. She had the sympathy of the house upon the real merit of her performance. Landers Ste- vens was the Prince Dimitri. His work was also smooth and even. It entitled him justly to all the applause he received, which was much. Henry Shumer had the part of the peasant lover. Edwin Emery was the Prince Korchagin, Never, it s safe to say, has the Central Theater had 80 good a performance be- fore. The play should fill the theater as long as the management chooses to keep it on the stage and is seemingly In for a long run. The scenes were the work of H. P. Duckett. The mechanical effects were originated by Steve Simmons. “Resurrection” is the story of a young nobleman who betrayed an innocent girl and then deserted her. Ten years later, having entirely forgotten her, he finds himself one of & jury which, through an error, convicts her of a crime of which B B e i M BB S DENTH N FLYIN MISSILE'S PTH Employes in French Laundry Struck Down. The sudden parting of a portion of a heavy brass band attached to a wheel on one of the drying machines In Mme. Ferran’s French laundry at 175%. Polk street shortly after 6 o’clock last even- ing resulted in the injury of three men who were employed in the establishment. ‘While ILouis Tayracq, Leon Sahuc, Charles Layracq and a number of other employes were busy at their ironing boards the brass piece suddenly snapped and was thrown with great velocity she is entirely innocent and for which she is sentenced to Biberla. He realizes that her life has been ruined by his thoughtless crueity and tries to reclaim | her by bringing himself down to her level. | He gives all of his land to the peasants | and follows his victim to the penal colony and so convincing that it has been pro- nounced the greatest novel of the century and has interested the entire world. In aramatization it loses none of its strength. In fact, with action and the addition of | many quaint characters and natural in- | cidents 1t becomes and is one of the b plays the stage has seen in many year: The cast is a long one and contains thirty-eight speaking parts. Alcazar. The revival of the romantic play, “Her Majesty,” drew a crowded house to the Alcazar Theater last night. This play was presented shortly after the opening of the season, n Charles Milward was leading man an@ Miss Santje leading lady. Comparisons are, as® a rule, odious, and it would hardly be fair to compare the Count Waldeck of Wilfrid Roger last | night with that of Milward, owing to the | riper experience of Milward and his ad- vartage In stage presence. Roger stru; gled bravely through the part, but it was apparently too heavy for him. Miss Ber- tha Creighton scored a success as Queen Honoria and was sweet and graclous in all her actions. Ernest Hastings, who played Prince Casimir, the crazy scion of | royalty, in the original production in New York, preferred to play the same part last night, and it was a rare treat. Nothing could be more perfect than his conception of the part. His insane laugh is some- thing to be remembered. Frank Bacon was in his element as Count Engelbert fofoffolotooloiefefelefelopeieinie ik @ across the room, spreading destruction in its path. The heavy leather belt which propels | the dryer was severed as if cut by a knife. Louis Tayracq was struck on the left arm, which member was badly crushed, four ribs were broken and he suffered internal Injuries. Charles Layracq and Leon Sahuc were also struck and seyerely injured. Tay- | racq and Layracq were removed to the French Hospital, where their injurles were attended to. Tayracq's left arm was amputated by the doctors, who stated that he probably will die from his inju- ries. ——e———— Printing Shops May Close. LOS ANGELES, April 13,—TIt is expected that members of the Typographical, Pressmen and Feeders' unions will tie up the forty-six union printing shops of the city to-morrow. To-day many pressmen and feeders went out and the typos are considering the matter of a general strike. The trouble arose over a demand from the pressmen and feeders for advance in ‘wages amounting to from 16 to 20 per cent, b il B Wil Jordan, a nephew of Red Cloud, meetings in the diredtors’ rooms in the | company’s building. | Regarding the stories that the meeting | corcerned many changes and proposed | consolidations with other express com- panies, the officials stated yesterday that | there is absolutely no foundation for these President Evans said he be leved the Interests of the company could Faulconbridge give good support to the star. Blanche Stoddard is fairly good as tance and elicited a round of ap- plause for the mad scene. The play take: well and will have a successful run ‘or the remainder of the week. It is well | staged and costumed and drew a large of Stberla, even offering to marry her. | houss last night. | be best served by holding a conference “Resurrection” awakens many ideas on| —_— $ | here, instead of in the , and he had the social problem and its argument, plot, Helter Skelter” continues at Lschers| erefore telegraphed the reign man- characters and surroundings are so vivid | Theater. | agers to report here. The conference is Wallace Irwin's satire, “The Siegs of | simply for the purpose of discussing or- Goat Island,” and the minstrels are flll- | dinary bu s matters. No changes ara ing the Theater Revublic | contemplated, nor has the company Excellent vaudeville numbers fll the | thought of a unfon of interests with any programme at the Chutes Theater. similar concer: The Orpheum patrons are pleased with BTG o o TN TS . the vaudeville attractions offered thie! TORO Ont., April 13.—Str Oliver week, fowat, Licutenant Governor of Ontario, siipped Denman Thompson’s “Our New Minjs- | in his bedroom and broke his thigh. He has | be eeble health for some ti the ter,” at the California, is a popular at ‘Sx-:‘"umm( his system will, ' \-mr’m?—':? be traction. | ses i k 3 | serious. FINAL DECREEY $100 REWARD! On December 10, 1902, a final decree was entered by the Circuit Court of the United States, for the Northern District of California, in suit of Benjamin Levy, Boston, ve. J. M. Wright & Co., San Francisco, establishing the plaintiff's rights and perpetually enjoining and restraining the defendants from manufacturing, selling or offering for sale, directly or indirectly, spurious face powder which had been put up in imitation of Lablache Face Powder in counterfeit boxes, bearing counterfeit labels, enclosed in a counterfeit circular, and sold to retailers and the public, or in the use of the words * B. Levy,” or any of the words, labels, designs or circulars or stickers used by complalnant printed, written, stamped, painted, attached or posted thereon, or having any label, printing or device thereon in imitation of complainant’s label, printing or device or any thereof. s‘oo REWARD will be paid for the arrest and conviction of any persén ——— Ia0Ufacturing, selling or offering for sale any spurious article as Lablache Powder. s ¢ Lablache Face Powder. . is the best and purest toilet preparation in the market. It will delight you to observe the wonderful benefits your complexion will receive from its use. Iis peculiar perfume is extracted from flowers and plants which possess soothing and healing properties and are also powerfully antiseptic in their nature. Lablache Face Powder is invisible, it makes the skin soft, smooth and beautiful. Preserves a fine complexion; restores one that has faded. Beware of dangerous counterfeits or substitutes. The genuine bears the signature of * Ben. Levy™ in red ink across the label of the box. Flesh, White, Pink, Cream, 50 cents per box, of reliable Druggists or by mail. BEN. LEVY & CO., FRENCH PERFUMERS. 1256 KINCSTON ST., BOSTON, MASS. the famous Indian chlef, has just arrived in Omaha to study shorthand.

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