Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN'‘FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1903. e —————— s SHIP NEARLY RUNS ASHORE Second Officer Jones of Trans- port Sherman Charged With Endangering Many Lives - BLAMES CAPT. BRUGUIERE Man on Bridge Says Master Told Him to Log Wake Island Before Reached . Passed as the transport Sherman, Philippines, came near running s Wake Island, a small piece of . mid Pac between the | i the Ladrone iglan rday did the story be- alleged that the the passengers t Second Officer s he bridge at the e, wa ’ steered the ship m her cours with the reckless- 1 langered the lives e arrived trip here several days agc F. W. Jor whom these grave charge when inter- X was not - nd was F ring on t by Captain Bru- He » captain told h - ship ca og Wake Island recked to “The 1 two passen- Captain Bru- rsing with them f the glasses on the ne for me to see with At 6:30 he nd on the > told me to ent is as follows: ) come on s and oc > trouble would —_————— CONFLICTING AFFIDAVITS FILED IN MINING SUIT Jp fer Hopkins and Santiago Ainsa Dif- as to Location of Office of Mexican Coal Company. fr file erday in t pr gs ag; the Mexican t ¢ Mining Company of t s of the Sant a, a stock- nd only serve that surrounds the fairs oncern. The affidavits wer t - suits #gainst 1k ompany inst 1 by Kate J. who is seeking by the aid of the Black sums she in- vit the of- e Hobart ctors of the last No- Hop- ct that the sometimes b that last June. he incor- copy of the show that concern cted bu s to the effs ation com- are in Review's Christmas Number. OAKLAND, Dec. 21.—The Hayward has_issued a handsomely il- ristmas edition, setting improvements which fort the many been made ing the present y e have and telling of the of the interior of eral prosperity county SCOTT’S EMULSION. There is no specific for consumption. The nearest approach to a cure is right living and Scott’s Emulsion. No matter what the, treat- ment may be Scott’s Emul- sion will prove a valuable addition. It has often turhed the scale of health the ‘right way. Because Scott's Emul- sion contains the pure cod liver oil it furnishes heat and fat. The hypophosphites pro- vide tissue-food, glood-ood and’' marrow-food. The com- bination of the two represents a wonderful form of nourish- ment and one that can be readily taken and retained at any stage of the disease. Scott’s Emulsion gives best results when used most reg- ularly. Made a part of the consumptive’s regular diet it will invariably afford relief. Occasional Emulsion is a test unfair to' the Emulsion and the patient, We'll send you a sample free upon reguest. SCOTT & BOWNE, gog Pear] Street, New York. from San Francisco to | >eam, two and . the | the, in that vicinity dur-| use of Scott’s | WLAREN FILES FORMAL CHARGE pert Accountant ‘Accuses Secretary of University With the Embezzlement of $3515 | e ST |A PRECAUTIONARY MOVE | S | McKowen’s Chances of Release | on Habeas Corpus Removed | by the Aetion of Regents | P 3 William A. McKowen, the embezzling secretary of the University of Califor- nia, has been formally and specifically charged with having embezzled funds belonging to that institution. Complaint ‘was filed against McKow- en yesterday afternoon in’'Oakland by Norman McLaren, acting for the fin- ance committee of the Board of Re-| gents of the university, and a warrant was accordingly issued by the Alameda | County District Attorney. As the ac- cused man has been in the custody of the Sheriff ever since he confessed his crime last Wednesday, necessity of ar- resting him was obviated. But the pros- | ecution which the Regents evidently intend to press relentlessly is formally | under way. | The complaint accuses McKowen of having on May 25, 1903, embezzled the sum of $3515, which had been donated | to the anthropological department, the | money having been paid to him and he having appropriated it to his own use. | The name of the donor of the money | thus pilfered is withheld at his request, | but it is known that this item is only | one of several positive proofs of dis- honesty that have been unearthed by | Expert Accountant McLaren in his ex- amination of the secretary’s books and | vouchers. | A CAUTIOUS MOVE. |E The formal charging of McKowen with embezzlement was apparently | lone as a precautionary measure in his attorneys should attempt to | tain his release through habeas cor- | s proceedings. It was announced | Thursday that no formal complaint d be filed until the bookkeeping ex- perts had concluded their task and the | exact amount of McKowen's defalca- tions was ascertained, and that Attor- | ney Harry A. Wright, on behalf of the ccused, had promised to take no ac- tion to secure his client’s liberty pend- ing the investigation. McKowen him- self at that time declared he had no yvearning for freedom until his case had been disposed of by the Regents. Con- sequently. the filing of the formal com- | terday came as something of r to the miserahle prisoner. Accountant Norman McLaren last evening acknowledged that sufficient evidence to convict McKowen of em- bezzlement, if he should attempt to withdraw his confession and substitute a defense or seek to elude justice through a legal technicality, has al- ready been obtained from the books Thus far the bookkeeping experts have devoted their efforts to getting specific facts upon which to base a formal prosecution, and having succeeded in iccomplishing that they will now ‘go through the hooks more systematically. It is expected that their task will not be finished until after the holidays. The Board bf Regents will meet on January 12, by which time the finance commit- hopes to have all the available evi- | dence to lay before them. In speaking of the.effect which Mc- Kowen's peculations will have on th» finances in the hands of the university authorities. President Wheeler said vesterday that the scholarship funds, so far as known, still contain the origi- nal amounts subscribed by their donorg. It is the funds provided by the State for the maintenance of the uni- versity that have suffered, as these were dipped into by McKowen. to make good the deficiericies in the scholarship funds caused by his race track plunges, | These deficiencies in the State funds, it | is supposed, weré covered up by M Kowen when he charged up the money to “expenditures.™ McKOW! NOT INSANE. President Wheeler does not believe that McKowen will attempt to evada | the penalty for his crime by pleadi insanity or relying on some technicality | in the proceedings of the law. s | | | “He is mot insane,” said President Wheeler. “That plea would not werk in this case. And I don’t believe thsra | is any chance for him to take advan- tage of technicalities. We have checks | in our possession that were cashed by | him, and on these he certainly must | hay cured the money President Wheeler denies the story that $9000 entrusted to him by the par- | ents of Filipino children being educated in this country were engulfed by Mc- | Kowen's race track operations. Luck- ily for President Wheeler this rhoney was safeguarded in such a way that McKowen could not have spent it if he would and therefore not a cent of it | has been misspent. | “That monéy I held in my own name,” said President Wheeler. “It | was no matter of the university's at | all. 1t is true that McKowen dispensed | the money for the maintenance of these Filipino boys, but it was done under my direction and it was impossible for him to get hold of any more money than I was willing to give. I have vouchers for all the money that was paid out for these boys.” e e ———— OCCIDENTAL LODGE' | INSTALLS OFFICERS Ceremony in the Masonic Temple Is Followed by Presentation and a Banquet. The officers of Occidental Lodge, F. [and A. M., were installed in the Ma- sonic Temple last night by-James A. Snook, the retiring master. After the ceremony about 2560 went to the Lick | House, where they partook of an instal- lation banquet. { The new officers are: Edward C. | Landis, worshipfuk master; Byron- G. | Mantle, senior warden; Willlam V. Bry- an, junior warden; Charles L. Haskell, | treasurer; Walter G. Anderson, secre- tary: James M. Gleaves, senior deacon; | Samuel H. Clawson, junior deaco: Walter K. Fletcher, marshal; ler- ick A. Houseworth, senlor steward; i(‘-enrge E. Kammerer, junior. steward; | R. Fletcher Tilton, organist; George T. | Fischer, tyler. Retiring Master Snook was presented | With a jewel of his rank and a case of silverware for Mrs. Snook. | pleteness anything of the ! features of the old Tivoli NEW TIVOLI OPERA-HOUSE IS READY FOR OPENING SHOW TO-MORROW NIGHT Architectura.l, Structural and Decorative Art Combine| to Equip San Francisco With a Playhouse That Any City on Earth Might Be Proud to Have i — . + IN THE UPPER PICTURE IS SHO"NN A PORTION OF THE NEW TIV- OLI'S HANDSOME INTERIOR. THE LOWER ILLUSTRATION is | OF THE BUILDING'S EXTERIOR. — - & When the general public—or as much of it as could proceure admission tick- ets—enters the Tivoli Opera- house to-morrow evening it will see very little to remind it of the old Tiv- oli that for thirty consecutive endeavored to give what San Francisco demanded in the way of combined mu- sical and dramatic entertainment. The transformation eclipses in com- kind ever produced upon the stage of the vener- able structure that has been aban- doned. Manager Leahy told it all when he stated that only the human had been new vears moved across the street. Even the atmospheré is changed. The | odors inseparable ‘from staleness have rgiven way to the more pleasant ones pertaining to. fresh paint and uphol- stery. Sentimentalists may grieve when - they first miss the hard-seated, straight-backed chairs in which they sat in the old house, but such regrets cannot withstand the onslaught of | solid comfort that comes with reclining at the proper ease angle in a seat of padded leather and with enough space in front to enable the legs to be ex- | tended or crossed without kicking sny- thing. . It is also much more agreeable to have an unobstructed view -of the stage without neck-craning than to sit and wish mean things of the large- headed man or _big-coiffured” woman whom fate has placed in your line of vjsion. The old-timer who sits in the new Tivoli may sigh perchance for the old Tivoli and the old days—and more power to him for so doing—but it would be unwise to bet on his willingness to ®ive up the new for the old. ENTIRELY MODERN. There are few theaters anywhere to compare with the new Tivoli in all the modern essentials to public conveni- ence. It is big and handsome and com- fortable and as safe as strict compli- ance with the building and fire ordi- nances could make it. Architectural ingenuity and decorative art have made it a playhouse that any city on'earth might justly be proud of, and that San Francisco is proud of it finds® nianifes- tation every time a loyal citizew is al- lowed to inspect its interjor. Pride is also reflected from every glance cast upon. the unfinished exterior by the townfolk who pass it. As the exterior speaks for itself—or, at least, will speak with more respect- compelling eloquence when the work- men have finished their tasks and re- moved the unsightly scaffolding—it is of the completed interior as it will be seen by the first-night audience to- morrow that this article purposes to treat. Y Of the structure as a whole,. let. it be understood that it is entirely, of stone, brick and ornamental metal The style of architecture throughout is French renaissance and the scheme is sustained in the decorations. The to- tal seating capacity is 2200—1000 in the auditorium, eight boxes and as many loges; 700 .in' the dress cirele and. 500 in the upper circle. The balconies are unusually free from obtrusive posts, the cantilever system of support hav- ing been used as much as possible. NUMEROUS EXITS. The theater has a clear width in- side of 124 feet and its depth from the main entrance to the back of the stage is 100 feet. The main floor is level with the street surface and through the nu- merous exits the house could be emp- tied. in a very few minutes. Unlike most theaters, the main auditorium opens directly upon two streets—Mason | and Eddy-through five wide doors. Each balcony | arate stairways, two,of these being outgide the theater walls and two oth- ers at opposite ends of the foyer. At the main entrance is an elevator to give rapid and easy access to the upver balcony. Each floor has a separate foyer, the main one being 12 feet in width and 180 feet in length—spacious | enough to give about 1000 people com- fortable standing room. ' Beneath the | cornep structure is the gentlemen's cafe, descended to by two wide stair- ways. 3 To see the entire interior in all its beauty one must stand upon the stage. From this viewpoint everything indi- cates most careful treatment architec- turally. The lines are so placed and the subdivision ‘of parts so arranged as to make an effect at once ingenious and graceful. On either side, level with the dress circle, is the handsome group of four boxes, with their moroeco up- holstery and glistening brass work, and extending beyond them, on the main floor, are four luxuriously furnished loges, with low dividing walls of marble topped with morocco. Each loge has a separate dcor from the foyer. The two balconies sweep gracefully in per- fect semicircle. VIEWING THE STAGE. From the middle front of the dress circle is the best place to view the boxes and stage. The great proscenium arch, brilliant with its many electric lights, rich in gold and artistic decora- tions, encircling the stage opening and flaring out to sides and ceiling to the very center of the house, some 30 feet in- depth, with its open ornate boxes gracefully stepping from line of balcony to stage level, and with its ° further magnificent plastic ornamental arcade settings as background to boxes ris- ing to the full height of the audito- rium, is a decorative feature worthy of note. The stage is 120 feet in width, 68 feet in depth and 60 feet in height, and its censtruction is up-to-date in every detail. It is equipped with an agbestos curtain and aset of scenery upon which the painters have been at work for months. The electrical switch- board is patterned after that of the Metropolitan Opera-house, New York. Numerous airy dressing-rooms promise comfort for the performers. Throughout the interior the decorat- ive work is an artistic combination of delicate green, cream and gold, and when all the lights are ablazs the gen- eral effect is bright, but lacking the garish that disfigures so many theaters. Surmounting the proapénium arch is an appropriate picture group in which the colors blend most harmoniously with the environment. But bare description, no matter how elaborately or glowingly worded, can % is approached by sep- | . convey no adequate idea of the beauties of the new Tivoli's interior. Every one in San Francisco will hasten to see it, of course, and equally of course it will be inspected by every theater-going visitor to the city. So it might be un- fair to forestall in any degree the pleas- ure to be derived from a personal in- spection. FOR THE OPENING. To open the new house th: manage- ment has appropriately chosen an at- traction pertinent to the season. or, the Wheelman,” is its title, is announced as a musical extrava- ganza that. will bring out the full strength of the company and the best of the scene painters’, mechanics’ and electrieians’ art. togethér by Ferris Hartman, whom there is no better caterer to old and young children to be found any- where. Paul Steindorff, thé music di- rector, has composed a new march and dedicetted it to ‘the new house, and it will be the first orchestrai number to resound there. The cast of “Ixion” will include Bes- sie Tannehill, one of the best singing character comediennes in .America; Wallace Brownlow, an English bary- tone, who will make his first appear- ance in musical comedy in this country, and such established favorites as Annie Meyers, Anna Lichter, Aimee Leicester, Mamie Davies, Nettie Deglow, Ferris Hartman, Arthur Cunningham, Ed- ward Webb, William Schuster and many others. ‘There will be more than one hundred and fifty peopls on the stage at one time. Among the ballets will be the ‘““Greek Picture,” “Ballet of Love,” “Wines of Californi. Ballet” and “Early Days in The ballet movement from Tschaikow- sky's “Nutcracker Suite” will be one of the incidental numbers played by Di- rector Steindorff and his orc ALCAZAR'S BILL THRIL “Blue Jeans,” the Buzzsaw Drama, Holds the Boards This Week. All plays seem to look alike to the Alcazar company, which is again that it is an unusually versatile one. This week the buzzsaw drama, “Blue Jeans,” is the bill, and it doesn’t lose a thrill in the acting. There is The piece was put] than | | { DREYFL Favorable Report Will Be Sub-| mitted to the Commission | by Mercier on \\'Nlnosdu_vI SRR 1 PTANCE EXPECTED| A | Should the Outcome Be Final Triumph for the Captain, He | Will Be Restored to the Army | SRR | PARIS, Dee. 21.—It has been learned that at a meeting of the Dreyfus Com- mission next Wednesday Vi cler, reporter for the comm ITS ACCE | one of the directors of the Ministry of Justice, ,will submit a report recom- mending revision of the case of Cap- taln Dreyfus. It is not yet positively known whether Mercier's report will recommend revision br the Court of Cassation or by'the court-martial, but | there is every reason to believe that the | | | | | | | | | 1 | | | | | b { | | | to say | | shrewd fun a plenty in the olay, wads | of heart interest and a buzzsaw action, Durham—one rather expected him to in not to spedk of the yearlingl begin mind-reading after the Orpheum | bills of this and last week! He how-| { ever took the center of the stage as if | he had been born to the business, while | Frances Starr valiantly laid her pretty cheek against his shaggy neck. Of the long cast Miss Starr as June is perhaps happiest in her part. She gains in ten- derness and depth daily. Naturalness she always had, and every note of her work rings truly. Miss Block is cast as | the adventuress, Sue Budaly, and with | her black brows and eyes, succeeds in convincing that she would like to be an adventuress if she could. She is a very amiable villainess, Jeans.” Mr, Osborne does not quite hit it as the political boss, Colonel Rise- ner. He Hardly seems to have the character definitely outlined for him- self, and it creates, therefore, a rather hazy impression upon the audience. Mr. Durkin is a pleasing Perry Bas- com. In the smaller roles two distinct hits ! are made. Eleanor Gordon makes one of them. This young woman is coming out at a hopeful rate and does this week a sketch of the Dutch servant Beelena that is full of humor and char- acter. Her dialect is delightful and her makeup of a high order of ‘seif- sacrifice. Harry S. Hilllard is also very funny as the fool boy, Isaac Hawkins, particularly in its relation to the pret- ty parts usually assumed by the lead- ing juvenile, and Marie Howe w: clever as the mother. The play is as well put on as usual at the Alcazar and furnishes an ex-’ cellent Christmas entertainment. BLANCHE PARTINGTON. Central. . The Central Theater threw sensa- tional melodrama in ‘the -shade last night and kept an immense audience laughing and applauding for nearly three hours with the jingling, musical extravaganza, ‘“Alphonse and Gaston.” From the time the over-polite Frencl men arrive in _a dirigible balloon and however, | though quite heavy enough for “Blue | | Court of Cassation will now reconsider the case in the light of the facts gath- ered by Mercier, at the same time pass- ing upon the other documents submit- ted. While it is impossible at this stage to predict what view will be taken by the commission, it is expected that it will adopt, by at least a majority, Mer- cler’s recommendation. If the revision of the case should be favorable to Cap- | tain Dreyfus he will be restored to the army, no matter what protests may be made, but it.is not expected that he will assume active service. Mercler’s report, it is believed, not only established that Dreyfus was in- nocent of writing the bordereau, but dwelt with emphasis on the modifica- tion by Gribelin, keeper of the War Office records, of his testimony before the council at Rennes. Grebelin then swore that Dreyfus was guilty, while the modification of his testimony now indicates that the alleged treason was eommitted by Colonel Henry, who was at the time chief of the intelligence de- partment of the Ministry of War. g A e e N Bank Teller Gets Seven Years. TRENTON, N. J.; Dec. 21l.—Jjames M. Edge, the bank teller who embezzled about $110,000 of the funds of the First National Bank of Paterson, N. J., was to-day sentenced to seven years' im- prisonment in the penitentiary. * - * | begin the exploitation of America the fun is fast and furious. One humorot situation follows another in quick suc sion, and a big chorus of well- trained voices opens and closes each of the three acts, The music is of the catchy variety, and many of the néw popular songs are effectively rendered. Miss Virginia Ainsworth, who appears in the leading female: role, made a brilliant hit with her ‘superb vocal performances. She possesses a voice of remarkable range and power. Tony West, as the long, | lean, lank Gaston, filled the bill to a nicety, partner, Alphonse, was very clever in| his vocal specialties.. The singing of | Myrtle Vane and|Lilian Levy, fhe rag- time piano-playidg by Elslie G. Rafael, the drum specialty by Hssie Doreen| and the fancy dancing by Merle Bunn: and Grace Darnley, were greatly appre- ciated and enthusiastically encored. Henry Shumer figures in the cast as a| candidate for office, passing around the glad hand; Ernest Howell as a man of ideas who needs only money to become a milljonaire, George Webster as an up- | to-date policeman and Elmer Booth as one whose object, in life Is to put money | into circulation. Miss Genevieve Kane has the role of a leader of the aristocracy. Some ele- gant costumes are worn by the women of the cast, and the chorus girls are strikingly graceful and pretty. “Al-| phonse and Gaston” is one of the fun- | niest pieces ever seen at the Central. | The actors enter into the lively spirit of the piece with relish, and there is vim and snap to every bit of the rollick- ing production. There were many cur-| tain calls and the opening night recep- | tion of the Central's Christmas-week attraction assures a big week's run. | The Chutes. The Chutes offered its annual Christmas spectacle yesterday for the first time and twenty pretty and tal- ented children gave a half hour's en- tertainment that was like a glimpse of fairyland. Their specialties ranged | frem vocal solos to ambitious ballets, the “fencers’ quadrille” being espe- cially interesting. A beautiful elec- trically illuminated Christmas tree, from which every child in attendance | next Friday afternoon will be given a present, was shown at the .conclusion of the act. Joe and Sadie Britton, the | inimitable colored dancers; Esmeral- da, the talented: xylophone soloist; Carter and Mendel, sh‘lt‘\\'nlk. conver- | sationists; Vera Chandon, singer of illustrated songs, and the animato- scope, showing many new and amus- ing moving pictures, completed an-un- usually good programme. The ama- teurs will appear on Thursday mgh(,I Fischer’s | 1 0 U, at Fischer's Theater, is| giving visitors during the Christmas | week the worth of their mouey in op- | portunities for many good laughs. Last evening the business was good. Columbia. “Dolly Varden” began its second | week at the Columbia last night. Lulu | Glaser is winning new fame in the | piece. California. “Foxy Grandpa’ is in its second week at tha California Theater and is draw- ing crowded houses nightly. The Burton Holmes Lectures. The Burton Holmes lectures, which | made such a favorable impression here | last season, will again be given this Jan- uary in San Francisco. Mr. Holmes ex- | peets to give ten or more lectures duripg | his stay in this city; these will be divid- ed into two courses of five lectures cach, ibly one or two extra lectures. TR e courmatewill | e Jaas: follose: | Course A will comprise an all-American serics of gubjects. the individual topics befng: “The, Yosemite Valley,” “The Yel- lowstone Park,” ‘The Grand Canyon of Arizona” and two on Alaska® Course B, which will be given on evenings alter- nating with the all-Afhérican series, will be devoted to Mr. Holmes’ journey of two summers ago by a new route’around thé world, In this series he will give his ex- periences in Norway, Russia, Siberia, China and Korea S CSE T0 BE REVISED and Millar-Bacon, as the short |" NORTH SHORE RAILWAY DEAL Bloeck of Comp Large Bonds Acquired by a N cate of FEastern -Capitalists SR . EXPIRATION OF OPTION 4 P J Bankers Entertain Belief That the Real Purchaser Is E. H. Harriman of Sonthern Pacifie — . North Shore Railr. onds t value of $1,500,000 h with the Mercantile this city. The opt - pired last Saturd piratién the requirements f chasing syndicate had be ted with. Intelligence derived from several sources is to the effect that t tions for the purchase of th being cenducted om behalf 3 H. Harrima A railroad an who is familiar with the affairs, of the deal remarked terday: “Tt is‘obvious that one « three companies—the Southern Pa Western Pacific or Santa Fe—ls inte: ested in the transaction.” Positive nterest in the negotiations eadquarters of thé Sans from ta Fe. When John Martin, president of the North Shore, was in New York a few weeks ago a well known ecapitalist fered to take a large block of the gom- pany’s bonds provided the negotiations could be conducted speedily. *The capi- talist or agent of thé purchasing syndi- cate agreed to take the bonds at their : and pay accrued inter: es to acquire the North ad is entertained in bank- b any railway men hold to a cont that the ¢ v. The latter insist ruthern Pacific iz in position to extend its lines northward by otfer routes and would not eare to buy the North Shore for the purpose of widen- ing its suburban system, Other railv observe that the Santa, Fe is making extensive prepara- tion to extend its system to the great redwpod forests of Northwestern Cali- ¢ men fornia. They argue that the Southern Pacific is taking measures to meet fue ture competition on the north coast i Give Her a Kodak. We carry a complete stock of them. E strument g a Geary & Co.. 112 Sale of Merriwa Stock. Owing to the lateness of the hour last night the sale rriwa race horses wa ance of the stock w night at the Occidental change. Thirty-seven fine breds were disposed of at price ing from $75 to $5000. Antong the chasers was S. Polk of Montana, bought a number of the highest priced 1 be d animals, including the bay sister of Articulate. RS SN Little gold clocks ks, ean- delabra and tra A nty line for Christmes. Pl everybody. San- born, Vail & Co. . ——e—— Suspicious Fire in Hotel. " OAKLAND, Dec. 21.—Fire in a closet last night at the Eureka Hote¥, Seventh and Washington streets, ap- peared to have been deliberately ed, but H. Luderman, the proprietor, has no idea what might have prompt- ed an incendiary to work. No serious damage was done. R Pretty papeteries in beautiful boxes— envelopes and paper tied with silk rib- bons. Useful for Christmas. Sanborn, Vail & Co. . e e —— BUTLER. Pa.. Dec. 2l.—There wers no deatbs to-day from typhold fever and But one new case was reported. ADVERTISEMENTS. ’/V A UK d 22 et Bt —One of our alluring Cellaretteswilldelight the man who keeps Bachelor’s Hall. Mass- ive and simple in their lines—capacious "and handsome—in the fin= ishes that diserimina=- ting men like. Charm- ing gifts for women. All the most wanted ideas—Writing Desks, Toilet and Work Ta=- bles, Dressing Stands, Costume or Skirt Poles. A visit to our :Show Rooms, where only exclusive things are shown, is one of the real Holiday Op- portunities. Open Evenings. derichs MARKETST. ‘' opp.Hearny - f For Stomach Disorders : Cout and Dvsoepsia DRINK VICHY CELESTINS Best NATURAL Alkaline Water. A VIGNIEE CO,, San Francisea 4