The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 14, 1904, Page 9

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TH E SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1904. MANY STORIES OF [NION ACTS the Stablemen ALOXNG Evidence Shows Threats and | Other Means Were Used o i than a dozen wiinesses were t Hunt n Judge the side of the employer is ia stable “unf. stories of th busine: Assau ence w was corroborated. of the Car- testified in front “unfair unfair “there he is a an who ild raise his 1 the street words mentioned. hay and had been led wl sked him to refuse Nevada stable and story White, each L. C e secrotary tion, ners’ Assoc he had heard the pi evada & call out at 1 do so the horses e the men at the the to he work tives, did not they w boy- his hay a black as within their power. ESCORTED BY OFFICER. ob- Pe e Officer J. F. O'Shea, detailed the trouble at the N that he had seen the erfere with the loading i had heard a man in a to the non-union em- will get you.” He or- away. The officer es- corte non-union men to their Y = 1ited outside the restau- r t them back. Before that time re brought to the men at stabie ey objected to the < y th Van Attorney use union xamination a member the Citi- recallel d the s one Lockhart n the circle of ated that Lockhardt rig, no such rig in said to. have n Miller a vile name “had a gun.” Pier was none of I Later the pair led a rig from he would not 1 re- the ve one argument e, sued in which red-headed man cast upon the watch- mar d that he “would do 1 tchman, t0o.” Plerce put the men out. Mil- d the men departed, 1's clothes helping door. one of Pierce’s non- corroborated the ir with the red-headed te. f Pierce’s non-union upstairs in the sta- | cab” used by 1 front of the place d that Monroe, the kets, was louder in than an he ssions REMOVED. charge of the for Blake, Moffitt & that representatives 1d called upon him and he remove the firm's the Nevada sta- made and, seeing ng stables, he told n that he would not com- tiveir est. a bullder and contractor, told the court that he had seen twenty to valking around in front of 'hp stable and saw Monros directing them. They talked in a loud weice, but only eried out “Unfair stable.” Teams, be said, were obliged to drive around the strikers In order to enter the sta- ble. Farris said that he wo greeted jokingly by his union acquaintances, who asked him if he was a “scab.” D. M. McCarthy, who is in the horse with S able Owners’ Assoclation, saw ade of pickets with banners and observed Monroe in the crowd. He heard the cry of “scab,” but could not say where it came from. The crowd that gathered outside the stable, he eazid, interfered with the progress of pedestrians. He testified that when he drove horses through the crowd he had to do so by main force. C. P. Howes, a real estate broker, corroborated the preceding witnesses and said he had heard remarks stating that the stable belonged to the “trust” and was “down on laboring men.” He had heard the strikers say that the GRAPE-NUTS. Poor Memory means poorly fed Brain The safe way to i By o active money-i to feed it on Grape-Nuts 10 days’ use will tell you some facts. Against Pickets Sent! by s ‘ Hurt Stable Business| the others. s and a member of the Carriage | BANK LICENSES ARE BELOW PAR | State Board Is Pleased Predicament of Kings of Finance Who Overreached 'MARKET 1S TOP-HEAVY Monuments to Capitalistic Genius May Be Purchased | at the Bargain Counter: 1 —_— | The Bank Commissioners are having | lots of fun over the distress of the in-| corporators of the “interim” banks. The wiseacres who thought to gather up a few bushel baskets full of the coin of the realm through an oversight of the lawmakers find that they get only dross. It has all come about be- cause a stanch secret drifted aw: from its moorings and floated into the hands of peovle who thought they might use it too. When the Legislature wanted to get rid of Dan Kevane it had to abolish the Bank Commission to accomplish its object. Some time elapsed before a new board was created. Meanwhile there was no restriction in the matter of incorporating banks. A wise man from Los Angeles saw how he could get a bank franchise for next to nothing and sell it at a mag- nificent advance when the law was once more in effect and licenses were difficult to secure. banks with a capital stock of $5 in each Every member of his family was bank president. Then he told a friend. The friend incorporated a few banks on his own account and told two friends. A Sacramento capitalist start- ed four banks with $20. Then Martin Kelly and his henchmen began to form banks. Before the Legislature re-established the commission there were more banks in California than in all the other States of the Union combined. The combined capital of these financial in- stitutions would not buy a private car to Boston. The new Bank Commission appealed to the Attorney General, but he decided that licenses must be granted on appli- cation. The banks were licensed. The incorporators smiled and waited for customers. They are still waiting, but the smiles have disappeared. “Interim” banks are a drug on the market. There are too many of them. None of the licenses have been sold and the Bank Commission thinks none of them can be sold. The price of banks is now far below par. Martin Kelly has four of them to sell for §2 apiece, and he paid $5. The Los Angeles man gives one anges. The Sacramento capitalist put his licenses in to stop the break in the levee last spring. — .. BOARD OF WORKS APPROVES PLANS FOR ILLUMINATION case. Grants Permit to Knights Templar. Will Remove Fences in Excelsior Homestead District. The Board of Works yesterday ap- proved the plans for the illumination and decoration of Market street by the Knights Templar during their con- clave in September next and a permit for the same was issued. The plans contemplate the erection of two col-| onnade Fifth and at Steuart streets and a triumphal arch at Third street. Bids will be invited for poles for a permanent scheme of illumination on Market street. E. Lewis, L. H. Allen and E. S. Burkhard, representing the Excelsior Homestead Association, appeared be- fore the board and complained that no property could be sold in the dis- trict until the streets are opened. They stated that Edinburgh, China and Vi- enna streets were obstructed by fences erected by Emhamk’s dairy. sioners Schmitz and Maestretti stated they would personally go over structions removed. The City Engineer was directed to prepare plans for an engine-house on Twentieth street, near Missouri. The City Engineer recommended | certain improvements on Corbett ave- | nue, Seventeenth street and Clara | avenue, but it is necessary that prop- erty owners who are liable for the work petition for the same. The City Engineer filed a report of | ! the names of fifteen owners maintain- | }lng area walls for sub-sidewalk space on Fourth street, which is about to be widened. E. J. Coffey was appointed foreman of street sweeping. Grades were ordered changed on | Mission street at Onondaga, France, Italy, Mohawk and Foote avenues pre- paratory to the bitumenizing of the street. I i “men went out of the back door be- cause they were afraid to go out at the front.” ‘; George Spencer, secretary and man- ager of the Union Pulp and Paper Company, had been visited by repre- sentatives of the Stablemen’s Union and asked to remove his horses from the stable. FOREMAN HEARD WORDS. The foreman of the Nevada stable, formerly in the livery business at Stockton, P. L. Bury, heard Monroe declare the stable to be unfair and the employer of “cheap labor and Chinese labor.” He said that the banners of the pickets frightened horses entering and leaving the barn. One rig, he said, was forced to go to the back door to obtain entrance. E. G. Duffy of 1131 Market street cor- roborated former evidence, and M. E. Severance, a non-union buggy washer, told of the throwing of a rock through the window of the stable. F. Marstrand, another non-union man employed in the place of the strikers, said that Monroe had told him how strikers had punished one man on Elghth street and that the union men had been fined by the union for both- ering non-union stablemen. J. H. Babbitt, a horseshoer, verified evidence previously given regarding the acts of the pickets, and T. J. ‘White, secretary of the Stablemen's Union, was sworn as a witness. His examination will commence this morn- ing. | at He incorporated six | bank away with every bbx of or-| Commis- | the | ground and take steps to have the ob- | Police Court Environment gery Joyce, Two Years He Mrs. Annie B. Joyce, whose attorney proudly introduced her as the owner of five blocks of valuable realty, was | found guilty of addressing offensive language to fourteen-year-old Mary | Hansen of 375 Naglee avenue and will be sentenced to-day by Police Judge Mogan. Little Miss Hansen, although sup- ported on either side by the presence of a parent, was so stricken by stage- fright as she sat upon stand that her tongue refused its of- fice. She tried to answer the questions addressed to her in kindly tone by the Judge, but the best she could do was to gasp, while her eyes protruded and her hands trembled. When her mother attempted to prompt her the defend- ant’s attorney thundered a protest that increased the child’s confusion and when the court upheld the objection | and substituted the matron in the chair the girl clung to her side. sen briefly repeated the complained of epithets—they - are unfit for publica- tion—and her husband earnestly cor- roborated. The defendant asserted that instead of her having sald uncompli- mentary things to any of the Han- sens, she had been fairly deluged with unprintable remarks by every member of that family and her foster daughter, Margery, twelve years of age, was ready to testify to the same effect. Margery’s testimony unchained the Hangen girl's tongue, but did not cause ble recession of her eyes. more antipcdal in temperament than the two young maidens fronted each other. Margery was not {in the least daunted by her environ- ment, but looked the Judge straight in the face and told her story with as | much calmness as if she were rehears- ing a commencement oration. Mary, with hands clasped and every feature reflecting perturbation of spirit, looked at the unruffled Margery with an ex- pression of horror. It was Margery's assertion that she never heard her ‘guardian chide Mary that loosened Mary's organ of speech. “Why, Margery Joyc burst out, “you know that's a story, and you know, Margery, how wicked it is for you to say such things.” i Utterly ignoring the interruption, | Margery continued her glib narration to the end and then replied to the Judge's questions with a promptness that could not have been excelled if they had been anticipated. Nor did she once glance at Mary, whose faculties seemed to be more than ever befogged when the case was concluded. AT " she suddenly Florian Andre, milkman, was also far advanced in bewilderment as he tried to tell Judge Mogan the details of the robbery case in which he was the com- | plaining witness. But his mental con- dition was of alcoholic origin. He al- leged that on Wednesday morn- ing of last week he was way- laid and robbed of a purse | containing about $80 while he was pro- ceeding along Stevenson street, be- | tween Third and Fourth, and that the men who held him up were Edward Woods, Harry Scott and Edward Burke. The case was called for hear- ing at 11:30 o'clock Tuesday, but Andre did not appear, and an attach- ment was issued for him. When he did appear y erday his manner plain- ly indicated recent over-indulgence in stimulants, and his testimony was so incoherent as to make every one con- nected with the trial extremely ner- vous. He confessed that on the day ! and night preceding the alleged rob- bery he had been circulating all over the city, collecting money for milk and spending it for intoxicants. The Judge gave him until this morning to bunch his scattered wits. . Philip J. Kelly was pronounced guilty of failing to provide for his minor child and Judge Fritz will sen- | tence him to-day. He is father of three children and his wife testified that her labor alone supports them. e James Smith, accused of disturbing ‘the peace of a Montgomery-avenue | coneert hall, was reprimanded and dis- | charged by Judge Mogan. The specific | offense charged against Smith was that | he spoiled the intended effect of a sentimental song warbled by Miss Jen- nie June, mezzo-soprano, and entitled, “’'Tis Better to Have Loved and Lost {a Short Man Than Never to Have | Loved at AlL” As the lady sang the touching verses Smith shattered the harmony by butting in with a vocal ac- companiment that was akin to the bellowing of a bereaved bull calf, and, | as all efforts to silence him were futile, | his arrest was necessary. The man- agement of the show did not desire, to have Smith severely punished, at- tributing his conduct to ignorance rather than malice, and the court was responsively merciful. PR “I was making for the ferry,” said Michael Hickey in response to Judge Mogan’s inquiry as to why he was found loitering early yesterday morn- ing at Fourth and Market streets and why a screw driver and a wire cutter were in his possession. “What were you making for the +| ferry and were those implements used in the making of it?"” Honor. Hickey promptly replied that he was making haste for the ferry and that the tools were not employed to ac- celerate his gait. He arrived here from St. Louis two days ago, he stated, and was starting to return to that Mecca of the restless when his arrest took place. A policeman, however, de- clared that he had seen Hickey at least a week ago dawdling on Market street, and that on Monday night two cigar stores on that thoroughfare were bur- glarized by means of just such imple- ments as those found in the defend- ant’s pockets. So the court pro- nounced Hickey guilty of vagrancy and ordered him to appear to-day for sentence. queried his T e Mary Grant told Judge Fritz that a policeman told her she could sell liquor without a license so long as she sold it discreetly, and that her arrest by another policeman was not owing to indiscretion on her part, as he wore plain apparel and acted and talked like an ordinary citizen in quest of a drink. The court informed her that the witness | Mrs. Han- | Beings | never con- | TWO LITTLE GIRLS SHOW ANTIPODAL TEMPERAMENT ——® Terrifies Fourteen:Year-Old Mary Hansen So That She Cannot Speak, While Mar- r Junior, Displays Equanimity ————— she must either obtain a permit to sell liquors or cease selling them. P “Early to bed and early to rise” is not the motto of the lodging-house at 35 Turk street, wherein George Curry, gripman, shot and killed his faithless wife on July 5. When the case of Curry was called in Judge Mogan's court yesterday three witnesses who live in the house failed to respond and bench warrants were issued for Miss Martin, Miss Batchelor and Joseph Deane, all of whom were found asleep by the officer who went to bring them |in. They were ordered into custody, with bail fixed at $10 apiece, and in- formed that if they do not appear this morning they will be kept in jail un- til the examination is concluded. . e Samuel Green, a barber who sent an obscene picture to a candy girl, was found guilty of offensive conduct and i will be sentenced to-day by Judge Fritz. The defendant declared that he did not send the picture and that the picture he was alleged to have sent {was an advertisement for a patent medicine and is in unrestricted circu- lation. But he failed to make good his plea by producing a duplicate of the advertisement, although he lpd been given ample time to procure one. s e One day, about six months ago, Peter Bargonas, teamster, hurled a heavy rock at the head of a fellow workman, but the missile missed its { intended mark and collided with the | skull of W. H. Curtis, a passing citi- zen, inflicting such a severe injury that Curtis was confined to the hos- pital several weeks. Bargonas pleaded absence of malicious intent and as Curtis seemed less eager to prosecute than to have his doctor’s bill paid by the defendant Judge Mogan contin- ued the case from time to time In or- der to allow a settlement on that ba- sis. For several months Bargonas regularly paid Curtis a portion of the ! surgeon’s account, but at last he re- fused to pay any more and it was for thus violating his agreement that Judge Mogan yesterday ordered that he be placed in custody. The case will be heard next Friday. . . . John Blackwood had a lucid inter- val and realized that inability to pro- cure intoxicants would be his only means of resuming sobriety, so he had himself arrested and charged with vagrancy. “I was beginning to see things,” he stated to Judge Mogan. “The blue giraffe that followed me from Market and Kearny streets to the Hall of Jus- tice disappeared when I entered the elevator, but two pink parrots and a ring-tailed zebra were with me all night in the cell.” “No snakes?” inquired the bench. “It was to avoid them I came here,” said Smith, “for I knew that another day of boozin' would be sure to bring ‘em. Snakes would mean my finish. I detest em.” After twenty-four hours’ total ab- stinence Mr. Smith will be turned adrift to meet temptation fairly in the face and laugh at it. . “It was this way,” Grace Hummel- tenberg whispered to Judge Mogan as she leaned across the bench to reach his ear. “You see I ain’t accustomed to champagne—a little beer is all I ever touch—but there was nothing else to drink at that party and they would insist. I didn’t want to be un- | sociable, you know, and—well, I guess the cop has told you the rest.” Miss Hummeltenberg was notified to reappear next Monday and ascer- taln whether her story has been sub- stantiated by investigation. —_—— Evening Primro$es in Yosemite Valley. Yosemite meadows are now full of beautiful evening primroses and every evening hundreds of people from camps and hotel walk down the road to see them. Why not spend your vacation in Yosemite among the towering cliffs and grand waterfalls? The round trip on the Santa Fe, including ride through the Bi Trees, is only $28 650. Ask at No. 64 Market streef, Santa Fe offic . —_——— Mother Deprived of Child. Kate Laughlin will have to continue her fight for the custody of her §-year- old daughter, Marguerite, because Judge Troutt yesterday overruled the demurrer of the mother to the appli- cation of Mrs. Clara Wagner for let- ters of guardianship over the child. Mrs. Wagner is the girl’s aunt and al- leges in her petition that the mother is immoral and dissolute and unfit to have the custody of her only offspring. The father of the child is dead and his estate is involved in the proceedings. —_—a—— Living up to a name is a difficult and a great achievement. Making a new one is greater. “0ld Gilt Edge Whiskey”’ made a new name 8o long ago that it is now able to live up to it as an old, old one. ———————— Chargea With Burglary. Chales Trulsen, 18 years of age, was booked at the City Prison yester- day on a charge of burglary. He is accused of breaking into a yard ad- Jjoining 315 Howard street on July 11 and stealing a quantity of copper and piping belonging to Carl L. Schalitz, proprietor of copper works at 309 Howard street. The stolen property was recovered. GOING 1 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. A “‘Hair-saver' that grows in popularity. NEWBR.O’S HERPICIDE SOME SUPPLIES ARE REJECTED Health Board Seeks to Put Blame on Supervisors Be- cause Samples Are Ignored QUALITY IS INFERIOR I I 1 1 Needed Articles for City! Hospital to Be Purchased | Out of Special Allowance} The Board of Health made a futile ! attempt yesterday to place the blame | on the Health and Hospital Committee of the Board of Supervisors because articles furnished to the City and County Hospital did not conform to the original samples upon which the con-: tracts were awarded and were rejected on that account. The attempt -was made at the meeting of the committee to consider the matter of purchasing urgent supplies for the institution un- der a special appropriation of $5000. Dr. Ward, president of the Health Board, stated to the committee that forty-eight yards of damask furnished by Murphy, Grant & Co. and 1300 yards of bleached linen from Levi, Strauss & Co. were of inferior quality compared with the adopted sample and had been rejected by Warden Fleming. Ward intimated that the committee was to blame in the matter, but Dr. d’Ancona, chairman of the committee, replied that it was the duty of the warden to.refuse to accept any sup- plies which did not come up to the samples, | Charles W. Fay, clerk of the board, ! explained that the samples were ae-\ lected by the hospital officials and after | the samples had been branded by the committee its duty ceased. It was then the duty of the hospital officials to see that goods of equal quality were fur-| nished. A committee of ladies, consisting of | Mrs. John F. Merrill, Mrs. Smedberg and Mrs. Beaver, appeared before the | committee and submitted a list of ar- ticles absolutely required for the hos- pital, which were approved. The cost of the articles, which included bed- | spreads, pillow cases, sheets, ete., ag- | gregated $4000. The committee decided | to meet at the hospital next Saturday morning at 10 o’clock to inspect the samples submitted. i | The committee asked for permission to expend $300 of the remaining $1000 in the special fund for surgical imple- | ments. A formal petition to that ef- fect will be filed and in all likelihood | the desired permission will be granted. e —— LARGE INCREASE IN THE RECEIPTS OF WORKS BOARD Cashier’s Report Shows Income From Various Sources During 1903- 1904 of $171,537 30. J. T. Donahue, cashier of the Board of Public Works, yesterday submit- ted his annual report, showing that the receipts of the office during the fiscal year 1903-1904 aggregated the sum of $171,537 30. Of this amount $46,365 was received from street space permits; $65,961 50 from side sewer deposits and $21,339 50 from fees for house building permits. The receipts show an increase of $41,672 63 over 1902-1903 and of $91,- 593 05 over 1901-1902. The disburse- ments during 1903-1904 were $120,- 003 23. | | —_— COMMITTEE RECOMMENDS MANY IMPROVEMENTS | Supervisors Favor Repair of Folsom Street and Reduction of Side- walks on Fourth. The Supervisors’' Street Committee yesterday referred the petition of Su- pervisor Hocks for the repaving of Folsom street, from Seventh to Elev- enth, to the Board of Works with the recommendation that the work be done as soon as possible. The committee reported in favor of the reduction of the width of side- walks on Fourth street from nineteen feet to fifteen feet and of a large amount of street work in various parts of the city. ————— Want Assessments Reduced. Applications were flled yesterday with the Board of Equalization for reductions in assessments by Alex W. Wilson, southeast cor- ner Eddy and Mason streets, | from $54,500 to $45,000; southwest corner Turk and Taylor streets, from $238,5600 to $200,000: Louis Friedman, lot on Market street near Fourth, from $88,250 to $62,150; Thomas S. ‘Williams, southeast corner Third and | Mission streets, from $119,000 to $95,- 000; P. J. McGoulin, corner Mission and Ninth streets, from $36,460 to $19,500; W. N. McCarty, southeast ' corner Ellis and Mason strets, from $184,500 to $150,000; D. L. Bliss, lot on First street near Natoma, from $96,600 to $87,500. J. F. Cowdery petitioned that the arbitrary assessment of $450,000 on the estate of Samuel Davis, deceased, be stricken from the roll. —— . Dr. M. H. Schord, Dentist—Now located in Grant bullding, 1005 Market st., cor. Tth. * ——— Almost always the most indigent are the most generous.—Stanislaus. that *'kills the Dandrufi GQNB 1 | versity of Cambridge, | ginning August 4. Fall of the Bastile LEARNED MEN WILL LECTURE Public to Be Given Chancei to Hear Noted Speakers| Now at State University| SUBJECTS INTERESTING | iy “Russia and the War” Will| Be Discussed in Address by e The public of San Francisco will have | | the opportunity of hearing some of the visiting professors now lecturing at the | University of California, through an ar- | rangement made by the trustees of the Mechanics’ Institute. The lectures have been arranged as follows: The first will be given Wednesday, July 20, on “Russia and the Present War,” by Archibald Cary Coolidge, Ph. D., assistant professor of history, Harvard University. Professor Coolidge is considered one of the lead- ing authorities on Russia in the United States. Frederick Jackson Turner, Ph. D., director of the school of history at the University of Wisconsin, and au- thor of “The Significance of th Frontier in American History,” will lec- | ture July 20 on “The Influence of the West on the Developmént of Demo- cratic Principles.” Francis Barton Gummere, Ph. D., pro- fessor of English at Haverford College, author of “The Beginnings of. Poe- try,” will give a lecture August 3 on “The Popular Ballad of Tradition,” with readings from early English bal-| lads. ! “Faith and Science” will be the Iub-' | Ject of the lecture to be given August 1 10 by James Ward, M. A., Sc. D, LL.D., | tellow of Trinity College and protes- sor of mental philosophy at the Uni- England. Tickets for the four lectures may be | obtained by applying at the Mechanics’ Institute Library, 31 Post street. —_——— Congressional Commission Coming. The Chamber of Commerce received a communication yesterday from the Merchant Marine Commission, ap- pointed by the last session of Con- gress, stating that the body would in- vestigate conditions at this port be- The commission will meet at the Chamber of Com- merce and will listen to arguments and reports by the business men of | this city. For Cnmpc, Diarrhoea or Bowel Complaint there is no medicine will afford relief quicker than the Bitters, Take a dose at the first symptom and avoid unnecessary suffering. It also cures Nausea, Indigestion, Dyspepsia and Malaria, Fever and Ague. Big Reductions on Doca M Korona Comerssin Sereral Sizes Jlm.fet 0azaar 1789————1904 Mechanics Pavilion THURSDAY, JULY (4. THE ONLY CELEBRATION UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THER FRENCE SOCIETY. Literary Exercises 1:30 p. m.; Games, ste. Concert 8 p. m. All Night Ball, 10 p. m. ADMISSION—25 cents. EVENING—50 cents. B0-cent Tickets purchased in afterncem will be honored at night. SEE—————— MISCELLANEOUS AMUSEMENTS. BASEBALL At RECREATION PARK, Eighth and Harrison Streets. SAN FRANCI.CO vs. OAKLAND. les. and Friday. Advance sale of seats at 5 Stockton st. Professor A. Coolidge |, H . A STUPENDOUS SHOW! Roy and Clayton; Estelle -llm l-m Sieback and Orpheum Motion Leigh Lut Times of Green and Werner; Brothers: Gillihan and Murray and | VALERIE BERGERE AND COMPANY, Presenting “HIS JAPANESE WIFE." Regular matinees every Wednesday, Thure- day, Saturday and Sunday. Prices—10c, 23¢ and S50c. Commencing NEXT SUNDAY MATINEE ROSE COGHLAN AND COMPANY In Her One-Act Playlet, “BETWEEN MATINEE AND NIGET.” CALIFORNIA BARGAIN MATINEE 25¢ and 50c. The hilariously funny comedy, THE HON. JOHN NORTH By Herbert Bashford. Presented by our Favorite Comedian, STOCKWELL, NEXT SUNDAY NIGHTOpening of Special Melodrama Season—*'A THOROUGHBRED TRAMP.” Special Popular Prices, 15¢c, 25c, 50c. OPERA GRAND::: MATINEE SATURDAY. JAMES NE AND THE uf A. C. Gunter's Famous Drama, MR. BAHNES mi“,f“wn NEW YORK NEXT SUNDAY MATINER THE COWBOY AND THE LADY. | SPECIAL SUMMER PRICES— 13, 25c and 508, Bl.llleo.“ l D Pflcfi TIVOLI&SiEe. EVENINGS AT 8 SHARP, R 0 B IN == CAST And the BEAUTY Promenads Cirale, 34 Floor, Smokers’ Paradise ELEVATOR ALWAYS RUNNING. Usual Tivoll Prices—35¢, 50e, T3e. COLUMBIA ".2%n THIS AND NEXT WEEK, Nightly, Excepting Sunday. In Her Greatest Comedy Success, By Hubert Henry Davies. SEATS SELLING FOR SECOND WEEK. July 25—HENRY MILLER. TO-NIGHT—ALL WEEK. MATINEES TO-DAY AND SATURDAY. VWHIT E [ e Alcazar siock 60.] IN A SUMPTUOUS REVIVAL OF SE ““Will do a big week.” —Chronicle. *“No one will ever regret seeing ‘Fleartsease’ EVE., 20¢ to The. Mats. Thurs. & Sat., 256 to My Next Monday—WHITE WHITTLESEY In the Fascinating Romance, Market st., near Eighth. Phone South i TO-NIGHT, AI This Wesk. Best Reserved Seat in’ Orchestra, S0c. GREAT Seats Always Selling—Only Matines Sat. MATINEE SATURDAYS ONLY. COUSIN KATE WHITTLESEY at the Alcazar.”’—Post. THE PRISONER OF ZENDA. Matinees Sat. and Sua. The Tremendously Successful Comedy-Drams of Home Life. tional Political Battle! A Thrilling_Editorial A Pyrotechnical Evenings. . Matinees. . Next—Mammoth Production of All Irish Playe, - ROBERT EMMET...... resckery “A LUCKY STONE.” ! WAS THERE EVER SUCH A b UNANIMOUS VERDIOCT? READ AND REFLECT. Ashton Stevens: “‘Out of the firet act alome T had more than 30 cents’ worth.” Peter Robertson: “ Blanche Partington hit.” Elinor Croudace: ““One of the most attract- ive shows in town." “New people fully up Charles H. Warren: to_expectations.’ Max Bergheim: '“Von anfang su ende mit einem urkomischen humor l-nle Matinees Saturday and Sunday. ME POPULAR PRICES. SA Next Attraction—"The Whirl of the Town." A and Evening in the Theater. ——TO-NIGET— GALA AMATEUR PERFORMANCE ——Ccncluding With— NBW LIVING PICTURES Take a ride on the MINIATURE ELECTRIC RAILRO. AD. Two Young Lecpards in the Zoo. ADMISSION. ... 10c | CHILDREN ‘When Phoning Ask for The Chutes.

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