The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 26, 1903, Page 41

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! ! Pages D S SR A T X ] LS R i Efifi‘.‘_ - Shadst iR | | | | = e ———— SAN FRANCISCO, SYYNDAY, APRIL 26, 1903. NEWS FROM THE COURTS AND CAPITALS OF EUROP MRS. RUTHERFURD THE BRIDE OF WILLIAM K. VANDERBILT Millionaire Personally Attends to Securing the License and to All the Details of the Wedding Arrangements. remarriage had béen me Court at New staying at Mrs. Mrs. White anied Mrs. Rutherfurd n present at the Rutherfurd asked her t the couple are not Am for time, ri) some ram from I nderbilt cro a boat-bound f 2 pathetic incident in con- e wedding. Almost imme- ceremony the Rev. Mr. at the funeral service ung children. recipient of many m "Mr. Vanderbiit lais. AMERICAN CONVENIENCES IN KAISER'S NEW PALACE & Elevators, Electric Lights and Steam- ;s Heating Apparatus Being In- ¢ stalled. %.—The Kaiser has de- ofd palace at Berlin at Potsdam up to to modern conveni- lighting. Hitherto wat P r € the and k of elevators and electric light " been the cause of much rt. When the work now in prog- ished er's palace will improvements on Tower’'s new a revela of splendor resi in and BRI a Thousands of Jews Homeless. T. PI *SBURG, April %.—The without giving the that the Jews at Kishi- Jessarabla, during the April 20 suffered an admitted official- scores of Jews were ath and several hun- Their houses were shops sacked. the district are thejr Jews in destitute. were - GLAND'S MOST CELI LONDON 7 SAID OF S( JRATED AMATEURS, WHO WILL HAVH LEADING ME OF THE CHATSWORTH HOUSE IVEREST WOMAN OF HER RANK IN GREAT BRIT = PARTS IN THE PRODUC- ATRICALS, AND TALENTED AIN. TH Grand Duke Reconciled to Louise. BERI ders to bring the child ¢o Dresden three weeks after its birth. It is authoritative- stated that the Grand Duke of Tus- cany, father of Princess Louise, recently became reconciled to her, but decided it best that she should not live at izburg out of consideration for her younger sisters. was Javing royal or- Signal Honor for Damrosch. BERLIN, April 2.—Walter Damrosch has received invitations to conduct sym- phony concerts in Berlin, Paris, St. Pe- tersburg and Warsagw during the spring of 1904. He will also conduct a number of Wagner operas in German cities. Dam.- *osch sails for New York May 8. fITLED AMATEURS IN ENGLAND TO PLAY IN AID OF CHARITY Public May Witness Theatricals Arranged by Duke and Duchess of Devonshire. of, but it has been given to few to have seen the famous Chatsworth House theatricals, where the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire bring together periodically the best amateur talent the country possesses. But the public is to have an opportunity in the near future to see these celebrated amateurs on thy stage of 'some London theater. The pgfformances, of course, 'are to be given in ald of-charity—namely, the new club formed for the benefit of sol- diers and sailors, called the Union Jack Club. Arrangements are, proceeding apace, and all that is wanted now is an available theater, for it is intended to give a series of evening performances. The Duchess of Devonshire, the leading spirit, being the chairman of the committee, with Lady Howe in the vice chair. it is settled that \ I ONDON, April 25.—Many have heard at last the Chatsworth programme will be glven. It will be a triple bill. First there will be “Our Bitterest Foe,”” when Leo Trevor. who is always the moving spirit in the Chatsworth theatricals, will reassume the part of General von Rozenberg, a Prus- slan commander. Captain, Jeffcock will play the fugitive Frenchmam, Henri de la Fere. Miss Muriel Wilson, who has a reputation as the finest amateur actress in England, takes the part of Blanche d'Evean. s The second item is “The Eternal Femi- nine,” wherein the Princess Henry of Pless, taking the principal part, first up- braids, then hurries off to meet her fugi- tive sweetheart. The third plece is ,Robert Marshall's “Shades of Night.” In this Captain Frank Mildmay, M. P.; Miss Muriel Wilson, Leo Trevor and the Princess Henry of Pless avpear. | . P e L F55 o T g 55 - ., DUCHESS OF SOMERSET CLEVEREST OF HER RANK Versatile English Woman Is Artist and Author and a Popular Hostess as Well. LONDON, April 25.—The Duchess of Somerset is the most versatile and prob- ably the cleverest of the ladies of her rank, Recently she organized an art exhibition and sale in Grosvenor Square to which she and other distinguished amateurs con- tributed. She has written much for the press. Once she contributed a series of articles on the Dart, from its source to Dart- mouth, passing as it does along a good stretch of the Duke’s land. These ap- &eared in the Pall Mall Magazine. IMPRESSIONIST CRAZE THE BUTT OF SATIRE Charade of St. l’eieuburg Amateur Theatrical Is Written by For- eign Office Official. ST. PETERSBURG, April 5.—A fea- ture of the latter end of the St. Peters- burg social season has been an amateur theatrical performance given by the Countess Kleinmichel, the popular leader of society in the Russian capital. The performance took the form of a charade on the word “decadence, written by Baron A. de Huene, an official of the Foreign Office. T! charade was a broad satire on the e for ultra-im- pressionist art now vrevalent in St. Pe- tersburg. All concerned were prominent members of soclety, The American Bm- bassador was present. ¢

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