The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 24, 1905, Page 9

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THE SAN 'FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1905. POLICE RECOVER KELLYS JOKE SARGENT'S LODF ERDS SERIDUSLY Diamond Thief to Be Charged Gaddini Says He Shot at a Upon Seven Counts of Supposed Footpad and Not Grand Larceny To-Morrow at Rival for Girl’s Hand FRACING OLD CRIMES NO WOMAN IN THE CASE Both Men Emphatically Deny They Ever Quarreled Over Police Feel Sure That This Man Robbed Salesman of 2 Buffalo Ring Company| Affections of Miss Wall . is & nd thief, who| The shooting of Robert Kelly by Er- e ays ago by Detec- | Nest Gaddini in front of the residence of yDea of this eity, will | Dr. Lux, 1214 Vailejo street, at midnight on Wednesday was the result of a prac- tical joke, according to the statements of both men. Gaddini yesterday was re- leased on $§100 cash ball. He told the seven sounts of grand In addition to the tted in this and recovered 2 from & sales. | Police a stralghtforward story of how the Eafarent shooting happened. His tale is borne out alo, and there is little |PY Kelly. Both swear the shoot- committed this crime | il Wwas accidental and that no bad ng to the police, is an | blood existed between them over the af- An effort is being | fections of Miss Gertrude Wall. According to the story told by both men, Kelly left his house shortly before | midnight. A merry party had been in what he has done in any cities and for various ' he admitted to the | Progress there, and Kelly escorted Miss had a guilty | Wall to her home, 1602 Hyde street. When ! work ana that | he neared his home on his way back, he perceived Gaddini and another friemd, V. C. Derham, approaching. Kelly thought it would be a good joke to frighten the pair, so he stepped into the shadow of Dr. Lux's fence and await- heir arrival. When they approached, Kelly jumped out and said: ‘“‘Hold up your hands.” Gaddini, thinking he was being attacked by @ foodpad, quickly emptied his revolver at thug. Kelly fell wounded at the last| shot. When he bent over his victim, Gaddini | says he recognized Kelly. Derham was $0 badly frightened by the shots that he, too, fell to the ground, though he was s | uninjured. According to the statements | of both mien, Gaddini rushed at once to | telephone to the Central Emergency Hospital for an ambulance and did not try to escape, as was reported. MISS WALL DISTRESSED. In the meantime & big crowd began to d the police arrived on the story was circulated that men had quarreled over Miss Wall, t Gaddinl lay In wait for his victim, and when he saw his chance, fired at him, and, thinking him dead, fled. Detective Harry Braig was detalled on the case, and after an investigation*came to the conclusion that both men are tell- ing the truth. Miss Wall is very much distressed over the matter and refuses to discuss it at all. She, however, scoffs at the idea of the men quarreling over her. The name Lawrence wh ynds gent et pu tw six others, e was steal- claim she be | | had a narrow escape from instant death. being treated at the Central Emer- ; Hospital yesterday, he was re- pital. say he will soon Tecover. has not Sargent to: If either of the men had quarreled over Mis Wall, they deny the facts very em- tically. Gaddini says he barely knew the young lady, having met her but twice. He also claims Kelly was a very | good friend of his and that they bhad a quarrel. KELLY WILL NOT PROSECUTE. | Gaddini 1s & prepossessing looking | never the supposed | Sargent | geny's wound is not serious. The bul- WItDesses | 1o entered back of the ear and pene- -t trated the fleshy part of the face. He | The doc- | FANOLS CSE 15 RELPENED | Distriet Court of Appeal | Grants Charles O'Brien | a Writ of Habeas Corpus FINDS ERROR IN TRIAL | e | Plea of Man Who Committed | Murder in Sacramento in 1878 Is Not Recorded ot T The District Court of Appeal yesterday | granted the application of Charles | O’'Brien for a writ of habeas corpus. It s | returnable on November 21, at which time | the arguments of counsel will be heard. | The application was granted on the ground that the plea of the convicted man was not entered on the records of the |-court before which the trial took place. O’Brien has been fighting for some time to have a writ granted in his favor, SACRAMENTO, November 23. — The crime for which Charles O'Brien is serv- ing a life sentence at San Quentin is one of the most famous in the annals of Sac- ramento. On the night of December 7, | 1878, a pistol shot was heard on Beven- teenth street between I and J. It was a time of intense excitement, the big Prot- estant Orphan Asylum near by having burned that night, and no attention | was paid to the report. Next morning the body of Policeman Joseph Scott was found lying upon the sidewalk with a bullet through his heart. Several years afterward, a convict named James Ivey, in the San Quentin State Prison, informed the authorities that three men then confined in the prison were the persons who had committed the crime, and he had overheard them detall the particulars of it. On the expiration of | their terms they were brought to Bacra- | mento, where two of them made a full confession. On the night in question they had stolen a ride to Bacramento from i Marysville in company with a man named | Bdwards, and leaving the train before it | reached the city, made a compaot that | they would rob the first man they met. This man happened to be Officer Scott, who had been detalled to watch the or- | phan asylum ruins. He reslsted, and was shot dead by Edwards. The men did not | search the body, but fled from the city to Stockton. Three of them finslly arrived | in Sonoma County, where they burglar- | ized the house of Judgé W. C. Wallace, | who apprehended them and they weresent | to the San Quentin prison. After their ‘,release they were tried In Sacramento | for the Scott murder before the Superior |Court. On the understanding that they would recelve life sentences the three men confessed their complicity in the Scott murder. Edwards escaped to the Bast, where he committed another crime and was sent to a penitentiary. O’'Brien is one of the three life termers who pleaded guilty. Whether or not he en- tered a formal plea is a question which the local authorities do not attempt to say, but they consider he has been a long time discovering his alleged ground for release. So far as is known here his commitment to prison was in the regular form. —_————— | Buy Your Winter Clothing Now. Men’s fashionable $20 fall suits and overcoats can be had for $9 85 at the great clothing sale that is golng on now at Herman Lesser’s, 1067 Market . MIND OF BURNS 1S CHANGEABLE Testifies in Davis Will Con- test, Admitting He First Said Codicil 'Was Genuine FELICITATES DEVISEE Tells Him Money Will Be His, but Later Changes View and Goes to Other Side Thomas P. Burns, paying teller of the Sub-Treasury, has at least the courage of his last convicton. This fact was demonstrated yesterday when he was on the stand as a witness in the contest of the codicll of the will of the late Million- aire Samuel Davis. He appeared for the contestants, declaring under oath that in his opinion the codicil is a forgery. How- ever, he calmly admitted that during a period of six months following his first examination of the instrument he .in- formed Attorney Garret McEnerney and John J. Barrett, of counsel for the pro- ponents, and Harry Creswell, a benefl- ciary, that it wes unquestionably gen- uine, and that he was among the first and happiest to congratulate Attorney Cres- well, his friend, upon the faot that he wes named as & beneficiary in such a sound and unassallable addendum to the last testament of the deceased. He was first shown a photograph of the codicil by Mr. Creswell, he sald, and later informeéd Mr, Creswell that after a ‘“hasty, gasual and cursory” examina- tion of the Instrument he had concluded that theré could be no question as to the validity of the instrument. He congratu- lated Mr. Creswell, he further admitted, upon the good fortune that had befallen him as a beneficlary. Glancing up from the exemplar in his hands Mr. Burns saw Attorney Creswell standing in the court- room, and he hastily withdrew his state- ment that he had informed the attorney that his examination of the codicll was “‘hasty, casual and cursory.” Continuing, Burns admitted that after seeing Mr. Creswell he called on Mr. Mec- Enerney and told him that the will was genulne. Bubsequently he was summoned by Attorney Pomeroy and Carl Bisen- schimel, who requested that he examine the codicil and exemplars of decedent's handwriting. He did so and at the end informed Mr. Pomeroy that he saw no use for further labor on the instrument; that he did not care to be & witness, in the first place, as he had other things to do. The following morning he telephoned to Mr. Pomeroy that he saw no reason to change his opinion that the codicll was genuine. Later, upon request of Mr. McEnerney, he consented to be a witness for the pro- ponents and was intréfiuced to Attorney Barrett, who supplied him with a photo- graph of the codicil and others of ad- mittedly genuine ha.nrlwrmn's of the de- ceased. Bix months after this, he admitted, he telephoned to Mr. Pomeroy and told him that ne had changed his opinion as to the géniuneness of the codicil; that he had finally reached the copclusion that it was a forgery and he would take.the stand and so testify if it was the desire of the contestants that he do so. It was the de- sire of the contestants that he so testify, “and,” said Burns, “‘I am here, and my present opinion is that the codicll is a forgery."” —_———————— WANTS CROSSINGS PAVED.—The North PERSONAL mp is at the Hotel of Watsonville is at the iv( New York City is at italist of Portiand, Eimer B. Stone of Napa E tel St. Francis L. Reed, & grower of olives in South- rnis, is at the Lick House. Knapp of Philadelphia is at the §t. Francls. He is touring the Cali N. Hotel coast A M Shaw of Chicago, accompanied by Mrs. Shaw, is registered at the hotel St. Francls Felix Hoendorf has returned from =a four weeks' trip to the Northwest and is at the California Among the arrivals at the Hotel St Francis yesterday were 8. J. Whittemore and A. C. Bilicke, hotel men of Los An- geles Louls F. Swift, president of Swift & Co., the big provision packers of Chicago, is st the Palace. He is accompanied by | his wife and family. They will remain pere ufitil to-morrow night, and then jeave for Santa Barbara, where they will spend the winter. ST PETEFER Culifornians in New York, NEW YORK, Nov. 23.—The follow- ing Californians have arrived in New | York: From San Francisco—D. Marx, at the Imperial; Mrs. H Lewis, at the West- H W. Boown, B8 Green, at the Murray H. Klimball, at the R. Kmight, at the Astor House. From Los Angeles—Mrs. J. O. Hill, at the Herald Square; J. 8. Brown, at the Imperial; J. F. Chandler, at the Grand Union. P IS Californians in Paris. PARIS, Nov. 38—Mrs. R. N. Cas- tagnen of San Francisco is visiting in Paris. min: ————————— Status of Division Street. City Attorney Long yesterday ad- d the Board of Public Works in an n that so much of that portion vision street, between Berry and Seventh, as lles within the lines of Channel street, as designated upon the Van Ness map, is a publio street, but the city has lost its rights to Division street between Berry street and the Pueblo by reason of a judgment ren- dered against it. Long says he can- not advise as to the status of Division street lying between BSeventh ‘and Channel ehore red line on the “Red Line Map” and King street because he has not been furnished with an abstract of title and a suit is now pending affecting the first named portion. POSTUM CEREAL. PERSONS Whose stogpachs rebel against tea and coffee find :;5! POSTUM FOOD COFFEE PLEASES PALATE AND STOMACH. Resd the “Road to Wellville ™ in at the Hofr- | Grand | streets and between the in-| young man, 20 years old and a son of the | | late John Gaddini, a well-known wine | merchant. He conducts the business of | his late father at 825 Montgomery street, ad lives a few doors away. He says he as been in the habit of carrying a re- | volver, as there have been many hoidups in the vicinity of his home lately. | Kelly 'says he will not prosecute his| | friend under any circumstances, so the | | charge of assault with a deadly weapon | that has been placed agalnst Gaddini | will probably never be pressed. As the ambulance carrying Kelly was being o the Central Emergency | | Hospital by Driver John McCarthy it | | narrowly missed being injured by run- ning into an unlighted obstruction at the corner of O'Farrell street and Van Ness | avenue. The presence of the unlighted obstruction was reported to Lieutenant | Colby of the City Hall station, but he| paid no attention to it. Two other re-| ports were made, but nothing was done | all night. Many persons who were driv- ing by were in danger of their lives. i | —_—————— I“'ILL FORM CLASS FOR FEEBLE-MINDED PUPILS | Board of Education Grants Appeal of Parents and Considers Bids | for New School. A delegation of parents of feeble- | minded children appeared before the | | Board of Education yesterday and | made an urgent appeal that a class be | | established for the accommodatitn of | | their oftspring. It was stated that at | | least thirteen children desired to avail | | themselves of educational privileges separate from thé regular schools. Superintendent Langdon heartily fa- vored the plan and recommended that the board carry it out. The recom- | mendation was adopted unanimously and Director Boyle was delegated to | arrange, for the placing of a portable schoolhouse on the school lot located on Bush street, near Hyde. Langdon said that a number of feeble-minded | children now attending the regular schools would probably apply for ad- mission to the separate school. The class will be formed on January 2, 1906, when the schools open for the new term. The Board of Education discussed with Works Commissioner Algeltinger | and City Architect Bhea bids for the Washington, Lagunda Honda and Sun- nyside schools, which were opened Wednesday and are all below the esti- | mates of cost. It was decided to post- pone action until to-morrow morning, whenJt is understood that the bids will be accepted so that work may be rushed on the buildings, which are sad- 1y needed. —————————— WET RAILS CAUSE BRAKES TO SLIP AND CARS COLLIDE Flagman Gives Warning, but the Grip- man Pays No Attention to His Signals, Says Witness. At Jones and Sutter streets, about | 7:40 o'clock last evening, Hyde | street car 42 crashed into Sutter strest car 86, knocking it from the track and breaking an axle. The Sutter street car was lifted back on the track by the crowd which gathered and was taken to the car house. According to a witness, H. Headrick, gripman of 'the . Hyde street car, ala all he could to stop it, but owing to the ralls being wet the brakes would not hold. He then began ring- ing his bell a8 @ warning and the flag- man stationed at the corner signaled to the Sutter street car to stop. The gripmén of the latter car, having the right of way, pald no attention to the signal and the car was nearly across the track when the other car struck it on the rear end and knocked it from the track. The Sutter street car was in charge of Gripman H. Blanchard and Conductor H. J. Jones. There were no passengers on It street, opposite Jones. ettt Houor S§t. Andrew’s Day. Central Improvement Association yesterday pe- titioned the Supervisors to pave the crossings on Market street at the terminations of Sutter, The forty-second-annual celebration of St. Andrew’s day was observed with | a banquet last night in the maple | room of the Palace Hotel by a large | crowd of loyal members of the St. An- drew's Society. Among the speakers were Courtenay W. Bennett, the Brit- ish Consul General: James W. Kerr, John J. Hunt'and W. Drummond Norle. | Bush, Pine, with & ten-foot strip of bitumen or asphalt pavement on account of the bad condition of the basalt block and cobblestone “pavements during the rainy season. ———————————— JAPANESE DIES FROM INJURIES.—K. Ogl, a Japanese, died at the German Hospital yesterday and his body was taken to the Morgue. was a window-cleaner and while cleaning a window on Tuesday at 1728 Sutter y/ == has for sixty years is more popular than ever both fession. This has able penaky of fame Imitation and ous manufacturers—swayed reached the point at last—in their buying and using it. So rife have these an offence punishable by heavy ‘extract containing the following N NI LRSS SN2 22 2 | been the standard extract of witch hazel and to-day with the public and the Medical entailed upon POND'S EXTRACT the Neither of these however, would be perilous to public health if unscrupu did not jeopardize the health and lives of their common and unidentified witch hazels and offering them through wbolualelndrehfldmuifisnnd d thing” and “just as good” as POND'S Not content with marketing an inferior article these manufacturers hazel fortified with Wood Alcohol (poison) or Formaldehyde (poi,m)orbodugotbeinminatpaflofuflwhoweredeceivedhw Legislatures of New York and lllinois have enacted laws which make bottle hofd et street he fell to the ground. =——— | ; AR N REE e P NN EE R a2 <\ Z /4{ x4 mevit- Substitution more by Profit Principle— e J)eople by adulterating as “the same stores EXTRA( of Gain—of fin imprisonment, or both, to Wond d latad bprisca) or Foe containing same be labeled be secured against the hazels, we are impelled California and Sansome streets | (0 IN HASTE 10 BE SWOR Officials-Elect Whose Qual- ifications Are Disputed Take the Oaths of Office USE ALL PRECAUTION Walsh, Furey, Wilson and Phillips Appear Before the County Clerk and Auditor The four officials-elect of the City and County of San Francisco whose disqual- ifications for the offices to which they were elected have been made known by The Call during the last few days, have taken every precaution to secure their positions. With frantic haste they ap- peared at the office of the County Clerk yesterday morning and there took thelr oaths of office. They only received thelr certificates of ‘election from the Board of Blection Commissioners ;on Wednesday evening, after the municipal offices were closed, and it was then too late to file their oaths, but on the first opening of the offices the next morning they were there to fulfill this last requirement. The four are Willlam J. Walsh, Coroner- elect, and Andrew M. Wilson, Jennings Phillips and J. J. Furey, Bupervisors- elect. They were quickly sworn in in the presence of Deputy County Clerk Lee. Then, to make sure that they had made no blunder and that they had done every- thing in thelr power to secure their seat- ing in office next January, these four suc- cessful candidates scurried to the office of Auditor Harry Baehr and there filled an- other set of oaths. In the history of the office this is the first time that the oaths of the candidates who had received their certificates of election were flled with the Auditor and the spectacle of these four men signing thelr names to the form caused a great deal of attention. The news of their actlons quickly spread through the corridors of the City Hall The actual taking of their oaths does not change the legal standing of the of- ficials-elect, but merely completes every step which they must take prior to their final installment in office. The only way a contest can now be begun is by °n ap- plication to the Attorney General for a writ of quo warranto. In the meantime, with the certificates of election in their pockets, these officials-elect, who seem to be clearly disqualified under the provis- fons of the charter, will draw their sal- ary after the date of their installment in office until they are ousted. 3 —_————————— Miss Peters’ Violin Reecital. Miss Edith Chevaller Peters, a clev- er young violinist, gave an interest- ing recital last night at Steinway Hall before a large audience. The young lady proved a talented player and re- ceilved many encores. Golden State Limited Now in Operation. Dally service is now given by the Golden State Limited between San Francisco and St. Louis and Chicago, via Los Angeles, El Paso and Kansas City. New composite-observation cara, train libraries, electric lights, steam heat- ers, perfect ventilation, superb dining car serv- jce—everything to make the trip enjoyable. Particulars of Southern Pacific _agent. . CASTORIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the M{ Signature of FOR BARBERS, BAK- BBU SHE ers, bootblacks, bath- houses, billiard tables, brewers, bookbinders, gandy makers, canners, dyers, flour mills, foundries, laundries. paper- hangers, printers, painters, shoe factories, sta- blemen, tar-roofers, tanners, tailors, ete. BUCHANAN BROS., Brush Manufacturers, 609 Sacramento St e —————————— The AMUSEMENTS. SAN FRAN'SCS COLUMBIA Gicxo THIS AND NEXT WEEK. Nightly, Including Sunday—Mat. Sat. Special Matines Thanksgiving Day HENRY W. SAVAGE Most Successful Comic Opera Staged San Francisco in & Decade, SHO< Ofters the in O-GUN By George Ade and Gustav Luders. JOHN E. HENSHAW and a Strong Company. December 4—George Ade's Greatest Comedy, “THE COLLEGE WIDOW." TO-N EDWARD BAXIER PERRY The Blind Pianist, in Pxplanatory Recitals. Seats, S0c, $1 and $&80. Now on sale Shevman, Clay & Co.'s, where complets pro- Erammes may be obtained. Tues., Thurs. and Fri. Nights, Nov. 28 and 30, and Dec, 1. Mats. Wed., Thurs., Sat, and Sun. RICHARD OUTCA Creator of “BUSTER BROWN” and “YELLOW KID.” and 50c, Seats at Sherman, Clay & Co's. AGADEMY OF SCIENGES HALL Market Street, Between Fourth and Fifth. The Galifornia Promotion Committee's LECTURES ON CALIFORNIA xm%to 4 r‘.‘n (Except Sunday) BY GNIFICENT STERE- OPTICON VIEWS AND MOVING PICTURES. ‘Week Commen November 20 - SAN JO. COUNTY Presented by COLVIN B. BROWN of Stockton . ALAMEDA COUNTY Presented by MRS. L. P. CRANE of Oakland. 3 will also talk on CALIFORNIA ot AD! Women in Out Hospil;l; Appalling Increase in the Number of Operations Performed Each Avoid Them. Year—How Women May ness, sleeplessness, melancholy gone "and ‘‘want-to-be-left-alone” ings, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. The fol.owing letters cannot fail to bring hope to despairing women. Mrs. Fred Seydel, 412 N. 54th Stree#, West Philadelphia, Pa., writes: | Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— “T was in a very serious condition when I wrote to you for advice. I bad aserious womb | and ovarian trouble and I could not carry & child to maturity, and was advised that an | operation was my only hope of recovery. I | could not bear to think of going to unrzut ou ‘s Going through the hospitals in our large cities one is surprised to find such 8 large proportion of the m:nu lying | on those snow-white women | snd girls, who are either awaiting or recovering from serious opers-| tions. Why should this be the case? Sim- ply because they have neglected them- u{vu. Ovarian and womb troubles are certainly on the increase among the women of this country—they creep upon them unawares, but every one of those patients in the hospital beds had slenty of warning in that bearing- own feeling, pain at left or right of e womb, nervous exhaustion, pain in the small of the back, leucorrheea, diz- ziness, flatulency, displacements of the womb or irregularities. All of these symptoms are indications of an un- healthy condition of the ovaries or womb, and if not heeded the penalty hasto be paid by a dangerous operation. When these symptoms manifest them- selves, do not drag along until you are obliged to go to the hospital and sub- mit to an operation —but remember that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has saved thousands of women from surgical operations When women are troubled with ir- regular, suppressed or painful menstru- ation, weakness, leucorrhcea, displace- ment or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, bloating (or flat- ulency), general debility, indigestion, and nervous prostration, or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, lassi- | medicine have restored thousands to tude, excitability, irritability, nervous- | health. Address, Lyno, Mass. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Fail. | tal, 30 wrote you for advice. I did as | structed me and took DIydia B. Pi | Vi le Compound: and [ am not only & ‘woman to-day, but have a beautiful girl six months old. I edvise all sick suffering women to write you for advice, a8 you bave done so much for me.” Miss Ruby Mushrush, Chicago, Ind., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkbam:— “Ihave beena t sufferer with inq?;f menstruation and ovarian trouble, and about three months ago the doctor, after using the X-Ray on me, said I had an abeess on the ovaries and would have to have an operation. My mother wanted me to try Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound as a last resort, and it not only saved me from an operatiom but made me entireiy well.” Lydia E. P nkham's Vegetable Com~ pound at once removes such troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you need the best. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. Her advice and of East AMUSEMENTS. 1 u!:g_l:i!.l?& . W, BISHP, I OPERA MAJEST'G Lessee and GPAND HO» <~ il [T G e 3O ot S MR. RICHARD MANSFIELD To-Night at 8 O'Clock AS THE BARON CHEVRIAL IN A PARISIAN ROMANCE (Only Ttme) TO-NIGHT AND ALL THIS WEEK. MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. Continued Stupendous Success. THIRD RECORD-BREAKING WEEK. THE LIGHT ETERNAL Martin V. Merle's Great Drama of the Persecution. SEE THE GREAT MIRACLE CROSS. Sat. Mat, “THE MERCHANT OPF fine as anything New York has sent | VENICE”; Sat. Night, in “DON CAR- us.”"—Chronicle. LOS.” SEATS FOR _THE FOURTH WEEK d_and Last Week—Mon., Nov. ——NOW SELLING— 27th, as Alceste in a production of Mo- liere’s comedy, “THE MISANTHROPE™y Tuesday, “KING RICHARD I (last time); Wednesday, “DON CARLOS™ (last time): Thurs. afternoon, Thanks- giving Mat, “BEAU BRUMMEL” Thurs. night, “THE MERCHANT Ol Bvenings—25c, Sdc, 75¢. Sat. Mat—25¢, S0e. Bargain Mats. Thurs. and Sun., 25 everywhers VENICE” (last time): Fri night, “BEAU BRUMMEL” (last time); Sat. (last) Mat., “THE MISANTHROPE"; and Sat. (farewell night), only time In “DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE.” PRICES 32.50 TO 50ec. Good Seats Left for All Performances. opei T TVO Lnouse EVERYBODY DELICHTED! TO-NIGHT—EVERY NIGHT Our New Company In De Koven & Smith’s Romantic Comic Opers. mflighwayman Includes HELENA FREDERICK, CORA TRACY, LINDA da COSTA, UR CUN- NINGHAM, GEORGE KI EUGEN! WEINER and TEDDY WEB! A Vaudeville Carnival. Entire Change of Programme by the 22--Fadette Woman's Orchestra--22 Ot Boston, CAROLdXN’dE B. NICHOLS Con- uctor. Charles Leonard Fletcher; Troba, and Lucy and Luecler. Last Times of Lawrence Grifiith and Company: Marion Garson; Joe Flynmi Plerce and M: and KEMP'S “TALES OF THE DESERT.” Thurs- Regular Matinees Every Wednesday, agx. Saturday and Sunday. Prices—10c, 25¢ an BUSH STREET CHAS. P. HALL, Prop. Phone Main 127. 25¢ MATINEE TO-DAY. This Evening, All Week, Matinees Satorday and Sunday. The Famous Extravaganza Co., THE UTOPIANS Big Chorus, Ten Vaudeville Headliners. O-HANA-SAN In Superd Japanese Living Plctures. Pflell—@rhm 18¢c, 25, 8¢, S0, Matinees 25c. Reserved. No Higher. Parisian Belles.”” Next week—‘‘The Proorietors. D. ALCAZAR " “Storms of Applavse”—Call TO-NIGHT—MATS_SAT. AND SUN. MRS. DANE’S DEFENSE ‘With the New Leading Actress, . EDITH EVELYN, as MRS. DANB. s *:;W,;:'m—":“.,_'_".“fi_;‘ r—:-.; MY FRIEND FROM INDIA B e Crauasre Doy it Gty of Someawe’ GCENTRAL"st Street, Near Elghth; Our_Lease Expires Next Sunday Night. ‘This Is Our Farewell Week Hers. This Evening to Sunday Matiness Saturday and 3 SPECIAL—NEXT MONDAY, NOV. 21, w‘m&mmm’u -um'mun-l.g‘oxunm Sale at the Central Matinees, 10c, 250, BASEBALL! AT RECREATION PARK. REGULAR MATINEE SATURDAY. SPECIAL MATINEE THANKSGIVING DAY. Usual Tivolt Comic Opera Prices— 35, S0c, ile REFINED BUSLESQUE AND VAUDEVILLE PART 1—ACROBATIC, MUSICAL, NOVEL- TY. COMEDY. PART 2—A Merry Jingle in Two Acts. THE TELEPHONE GIRL As Produced over 300 Times at the Casine Theater, New York. Full of Laughter and Applause. Belasco & Mayer, Matinee dally at 2:30—10c and 20c. Eveme Reserved, 30c. ings, 8—10c, 20c. Order Seats by Phone—Main 3280 PRINCESS TRIXIE RIDE ON THE CIRCLE SWING! Open-Alr Attractiom: DIVING ELKS! CAKEWALK SITIIM NIGHT Commencing 2 PRINCESS FAN TAN 4

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