The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 15, 1906, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL., MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 1906. DEATH FROM GAS ENDS WILD ORGIE Miss Mary Schallenmiller Loses Life, but Mrs. R. Hermann Is Resuscitated. MROS. F HERMANN o 1371- 1at previou erm e had 0 the M r. Ro street, ber y night £ s of the gas s I"J"knl ness of ia Ohlys, thought and ed a|saved the life of Mrs. Her ,is a | 4 ne | German and recetved e on® 12| tigation being conducted by the. New | fiat below. mative land. She nas worked in| YOrk legislative committee, and this has yesterday | West Africa and has iraveled - over | aided him in perfecting his measure. He time an expres o4 misioh 2P thi Sorid Ohiva her aer | expresses the belfet that it will correct trunk of Miss Schball sistant, Is a pretty Yoolt¥ i) ahp | Precticaliy:aft o eh insurance eylia;ax uneble to get an ans s repeated | lives with her mother in the flat up. | PoSed by the New York inquiry. ringing of the bell. The two young | stairs women suspected that something was | wrong and they came 4 the stairs the kite and broke into lower flat door of the PARDEE DENIES They were almost Chfikad by the Beavy fumes of gas wh Lhe rooms. Placing cloths over ir mouths, these brave women rushed lnlu | of Mrs. Hermann To | borror they found her lying on | i oor apparently dead | t d fortune favored the asphyxiated Miss Buckell happened to be a | nurse. Quickly she felt the| SACRAMENTO, Jan. 14.—Governor Par- It # beating. With | dee was asked to-day concerning the her assistant she car-|euem of the report that the removal of to the kitchen an - means of re. | Major Tompkins as warden of San Quen- due tin prison was and working rat they succeeded k outward signs of life. f the house resuited Miss Schallenmiller, | Board of Prison Directors should appoint General Tompkins’ successor, that there is mo truth in those reports. ntimated to a member of ne CALLS FOR A DRINK. ax McGllv- he fiat above, Wa to en Tompkins removed. 2 the board by anybody or r own for the institutfon. 1 assume that just what they have done; at any rate, aid not consuit me before taking action, { they would remove drink.” | tein him H {good work for the National De- | needed where he is. Park stigation. self in such connection d been | Yes, I bave read that the | about the appointment of & postmaster Guard and fied and w of t Waller to her been hbors state and was nded period bout recover | enmiller had entered v of Mrs. Hermann only three She had but recently arrived Francisco, coming from Tacoma. | cket of her clothes was found ba s ving m’gfpoj;?‘;,‘"; e e aad| WASHINGTON, Jan. 1i—Senator Dry- it SR ¥- | den has revised his bill contemplating the nurse whose quick- action probably to his investigation, and that he had sent word to the State they | J. B. Lauck as The Governor sald: the Prison Board or to any other person that 1 wanted 1 sent no message through any channel and 1 had no desire in the matter ex- that the prison directors should act on best judgment and do whatever was is they and i had no intimation from the board whether Wiarden Tompkins or re- As for Adjutant General Lauck, he is doing is T never thought of him connection Wwith the office of prison warden, d 1 do mot belleve he ever thought of him- preposterous story 2is for e hall ana Berkeley getting mixed up with State prison CHICAGO TIRES OF CRIME ERA Mass-Meeting Called to De- vise Method of Ending Fre- quent Murders of Women LIFE HELD T00 CHEAPLY Fifty-Four Killings Record- | edin the Lake City Within j Less Than Six Months e Special Dispatch to The Call. CHICAGOC, Jan. 14—The murders of | four North Side women within less ghan | two months, in a district not more than | 2 mite square, and particularly the most wanton murder in the city's crime an- | | nals of Mrs. Besste Hollister on Friday night, has stirred the eitizens of that sec- tion of the city to indignation that will | find volce in a huge mass meeting to be held some time this week. Many resi- | dents of that part of town are arming | and are advising their wives to go armed | and the feeling is strong throughout the city that something must be done to stop the murders. The crimes which have aroused so much | | feeling were the killing of Miss Maude | | Reese at 200 Evanston avenue on the nht of November 22, the Almberg-Moel- | ler murder and sulcide, which occurred in an alley at North Clark street and Buck- | | | ingham court on Jenuary 5: the murder | | | | of Mrs.’ Louise Hughes Gentry in her | | home at 582 La Salle avenue the follow- | | ing day, and the killing of Mrs. Bessle | Hollister on Friday. The nutle\1< of the movement for the | protection of helnless women Is in the | | | Lake View and Buena clubs, organiza- | | | tons composed. of the most influential cit | | 1zens of the North Side. Meetings of the | members of these clubs will be held at | | once and plans will be formulated for is- | suing a call for a convention to which all law abiding citizens are to be invited. | Two of the officers and many of the | | | clubs have suffered from highwaymen | and burglars within the last few months, | | | £ 2¢ the membershin as a whole is in the | right temper to take summary action | against those responsible for this specles | of lawlessness | What measures for the suppression of | | crime will be taken are not known, but | | it is xlunned to raise a fund by popular ion to employ private detectives [ to 210 In driving the ertminal element from the city. The fact that Chicago is | a Mecca for crooks of all kinds, from | of the West, has been brought parts | | closely home within the past two months little at- ) persons who ordinarily pay 1 tention to police affairs, and the deter- | mination is strong that this condition | must not be allowed to remain. Fifty- | four murders have been committed in | the city since July 26, in twenty of which | | the victims have been women, and of this number ten of the murderers have es. i | caped. The police are criticized freely. Many | of the patrolmen and detectives are a | cused of being incompetent, and drunken- neglect of duty, improper methods and petty grafting are lzid at the doors | of subordinate officers. | | Chief ot Police Collins to-day made a statement in which he claimed women vere perfectly safe on the streets of Chi- | ago at any time. He laid the latest | crime and all crimes of a similar charac- | | ness, | ter ta *young degenerates.” The Chlef takes the view that the crime which cost Mrs. Hollister her life is sporadic in fts nature and not lfkely to be duplicated | again In a long time. “A woman is as safe on the streets of Chicago now as she - was at any | time,” sald Chief Collins. “The men of | (‘hk‘ngn are as manly and as chivalric as ever.” PLANS CONTHOL (F INSURANCE Government control of insurance and will | reintroduce it in the Senate to-morrow. He had followed very closely the inves Publicity is the keynote of the bill, and, coupled withi this, are safeguards for the detection of wrong-doing and the punish- ment of those so offending. It defines pol- icles or imsurance contracts as instru- mentalities of commerce and provides for the regulation of the business through the medium of a comptroller of insur- ance and along the lines, similar to the control exercised over national banks, The author says he belleves this will go far toward meeting objections of those who have questioned the constitutional possibilities of Federal regulation of in- surance. The Senator says the bill has the indorsement of the President, admin- istration officials, eminent constitutional lawyers in and out of Congress and others who are familiar with its general | features as comine nearer to meeting the | demands of the situation than any of the, other numerous pending measures. Sen- ator Dryden has long been a champlon of Federal regulation. Senator Dryden said to-day: The bill contains some fifty separate provi- sions, of which the first thirtesn relate to the organization of the proposed Bureau of Insur- ance in_the Department of Commerce and La- The bureau is to be In charge of a comptroller of insurance. who is required to furnish a bond of $100,000. The provisions of the act apply to all cor- porations, assoclations or _partnerships en- gaged In Interstate insurance business, or who make or deliver Insurance contracts outside of the State of incorporation or origin or au- thority, but have mo application to fraternal socteties or organizations carrled on for the sole benefit of memb:irs and not for profit. Such assoclations or socleties may voluntarily take advantage of the act and after complying with its provisions, become duly authori: by the comptroller to transact interstate In- surance. The comptroller is required establish rules fees for con- and regulations reasonabl 1 affairs: 1 have read it a good many times in ler, | SRR T BV, 8 15 ol meny U I | e i Bhanem o mariats iniaing and her | midered it o absurd as Dot to be worth de- | ML S50 OU HO N are ey vs tig Zas jet in | nial Surely, there can’t be very many per- | {ransmit any report or statement of facts re- e s Jen wher, | ®ons who would belleve that a Governor of qmm is $100 for a.y of delay. ~d x A litornia—no matter who the Governor might setual and ble expense of every tle gas | pa__would be actuated in an important matter eummmun or speclal investigation of affairs » had tight- | by such vetty motives as his story assumes. | or an insurance corporation engaged in. inter s ¢ er quantity | And,_as a matter of fact, I took no part in | state jnsurance must be by the Bm%rl gas re . police are sat- | the Berkeley postotfice fuss. tion so examined. All &':’.- and fees for sfie of tk " The truth is that 1 bave mever advised the | making such examinations, however, must be . the gar | giate Board of Prison Directors to appoint or | preserted in the form of an: ftemized- bill ap- was a though Mrs. | remove any warden of any prison. The con- proved by the comptroller of insurance, and 2 said the day b that | stitution and the '3";1::';‘: o= bv-rddeugn- amount thereof must be paid into nt Diak 290 ok she | Sive authority to do ngs, and they | treasury 3 i - she | Deht to exercise such authority: and to the C oy Ve They e that | pest of my knowleédge and belief they do ex- en wert to the We have a board bathroom | ercise 1t. Sombosed ad been once turned out. | > Mrs. Hermann's room was | controlled by petty politics or personal influ- | cnces, instead "ot by thelr best fudgment of se plain evidences of | What will advance the welfare o g+ previous night's debauch were | ti0P8 under thefr charse, nd. Twelve empty beer bottles wer B Pty b ® WET® ! New safe deposit vaults. $2 per annum. Citi zens’ State Bank, 518 Montgomery strest. - * ———— . TOPEKA., Kai Northwestern Pacific from Topeka o completed to-night . MRS. HERMANN WILL RECOVER. Mrs. Hermann is a widow, 63 years Her husband died two years ago left her considerable property. She of stupor turned on the | able and consclentious men, and it is an un- worthy fnsult to them to assume, as some per- ns seem inclined to do, that their acts are Jan. 14.—The Topeka and froad, a branch of the Ullon “The Quest of the Useful” is the er- rand of the multitude—made easier, in half its aspects, hy the fixed habit of “‘ad.-reading.” i R TR Guest (in cheap restaurant)—I say, :;llter, have you such a thing as a hot Wnuer——stop yer kiddin’. On de level, pard, does I look like a guy what has money to burn? Say, ef I had a “hot rol. youse kin betcher 'life wouldn't be doin’ stuni dis | See?—Chicago | Ministers' NE W MISSIONARY INSTITUTE HOLDS ENTHUSIASTIC RALLY Eastern Visitors Give Words of Advice o+ —p i ONE OF THE SEX ) GIVE THE! TATIONAL ¥ e NS DT B There wag a hig rajly of the Inter- | denominational Young People’s Mis- sionary- Institute and others in sym- pathy with the great movement at Cen- tral Methodist Episcopal Church yes- terday afternoon, Dr. John F. Goucher | presiding. . The exercises rather ‘took | the form of last words of advice from | the Eastern men who came out spe-; to launch the institute in Sun[ cisco. Their efforts had met with | kable success, o much so that . I, H. P. Sailer expressed the opin-! jon that those who attended the classes | | would be pleased to have gone over it all again. The Rev. H. H. Bell, D.D., ! the Rev. J. W. Cronkhite of Burmah i C. V. Vickrey, the Rev. George W.! | White, D.D..” Wiillam G. French and | | Harry Wade Hicks occupied the plat- | form. | The rally was brought toia termina- tion with prayers and the singing of the hymn “When I Survey the Won- drous Cross.” There will be a meeting of the exec- | utive committee of the institute at the . Young Men's Christian Association this morning, The Bastern visitors will-at- | tend a joint meeting of the Woman's Occidental Board and the Presbyterian Union at 920 Sacramento street at 11.o'clock this morning. DIES T0 ESCAPE | TOILS OF LAW Somewhere in the waters of the bay is | the body of a thicf who sank to his death | rather than be captured by his pursuers | and perhaps sent to prison and -disgraced | for his crime.. It was a tragic occurrence | even for the water front, where the com- | monplace is ever subordinate to things of unusual character. The name of the thief will remain forever unknown, in| all probability, for no one could be found who identified him during the brief period when he sought to evade the officers of the law and fafled. { “That was a brave man,” sald a sailor | who saw the chase. “He was a thief, but he put up a plucky fight to get away and then died game when he saw that| he’was sure to be caught.” The tragedy happened a little after mid- night yesterday morning. A man was | seen slouching along the piers north of | Market street and Special Officers T. E. | Agnew of the American-Hawail Sugar Company watched him closely. At pler 2 a barrel of Wwine stood convenlently close to the shadow of a. piling. It was’ the chance the thief had been looking for. He looked around for a moment to see that no one was watching. Agnew had | stepped in the shadow of a building and was unnoticed by the thief. Just as the man was about to carry off the wine barrel Agnew stepped out of the shadow. ‘‘Halt,” he cried.. .The. thief took one startled look, around, saw Agnew and then turned and sped.down the long - row of plers. Agnew started the chase and rapidly gained on his man. . A few yards more Body KEAW & ERLANGER REPLY TO RICHARD MANSFIELD Deny Taat the Theairieal Trost’s Piay- houses ar: Clesed to Madame Dernhardt. PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 14—Richard Mansfield, who arrived here to-day for a two weeks' enguagement, to-night gave out the following correspondene supplemental to the telegram sent b him yesterday to Klaw & Erlanger. theatrical managers in New York, ask- | ing them to open their theaters to Mme. Sarah Bernhardt and thus avoid | endangering her health by playing nightly in a tent: A NEW YORK, Jan. 13.—Richard Mansfield: ‘We feéar that you have b imposed upon. Mme. Bernhardt's managers have access to theaters of their own and are not applying to us for any dates. There §s neither danger nor necessity of her pla tents. ¢ & ERLANGER. PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 14.—Klaw & Br- { langer: ‘i he statement that you had declined to book M Bernhardt fn you -aters is generally beileved, snd If it is not true the public, as_well 1. has been imposed upou and I'am ‘very to have afforded you the opportunity of making a public deni: RICHARD M NO MAN 1S STRONGER THAN HIS STOMACH. Let the greatest athlete have dys) and his museles would soon fail. cal strength is derived from food. mun has insufficient food he loses strength If he has no food he dies. Food is con- verted into nutrition through the stom- ach and bowels. It depends on the strength of the stomach to what extent food eaten is digested and assimilated. Pcople can die of starvation who have abundant food to cat, when the stomach and its assoclate organs of digestion and nutrition do not perform their duty. Thus the stomach is really the vital or- gh.::of the body. If the stomach is"weak” body will be weak also. because it is upon-tho stomach the body relies for its strength. And as the body, econsidered as a whole, is made up of its several mem- bers and organs. so the weakness of the y as & consequence of "weak " stom- m:h will be distributed among the or- which compose the body. If the is weak becauso it is ill-nourished thul phyaicn.l weakness will be found in ans—heart, liver. kidneys, ete. Thu llver will be torpid and inactive, giving rise to bilionsness, loss of appeti weak nerves. feeble or irregular action of heart, rflp(nuon. dizziness, bcndnche backache and kindred disturbances and weaknesses. Mr. Louls Pare, of Quebec, writes: 3 il Y 3 Ly all the while evi [P e was would would seem to lie heavy ach. T clal that l°|n :’n" dyspepsia, w el wders mlm ; 1 ;dt - ‘L“took r > ¥ no better. h?!l- wvunedm e sogn found W 1 lna duler lnto tak Plam’l med! N “*just a8 good.” it highest praise.” E'y"n pu'fi;'} bbing m! dna, led to in and he would have caught him. The | m‘{?c!ne-. mfldfih—und for th:od,—l’bo- thief saw that it Was useless to run far- : ple’s Common Sense Medical Adviser. A ther, and without hesitation he leaped intc the chill waters of the bay. ] He reckoned without knowledge of Al~| new. The officer. shouted out to the Ne- braska, and the quarterm of that ship heard the call. He saw the swim- l ming thief and jumped into a small boat. He gained rapidly. The thief saw that he was caught. Again he did not hesitate. wnn a dellberation that was heartrend- & ha threw up hig.arms and sank to. hn de.t!L He came Up once and went dow again. There was the circle of ripples where he had disappeared. That was all. | The quartermaster of me Nebraska rowed about for an bou.r, oodld find | no trace of him. He had died ; be unllu and dblracei % - g‘..,.m R A FE N R ARG ain t, Buffalo, N. THE PALACE MOTEL for best cooking. THE PALACE HOTEL for quickest service., mnuctmvnhhqux. | | simply sat and QUELLS MUTINY ON LEAKY SHIP Captain Sheppard Spends 4 SAVED 1IN MIDOCEAN Skipper and Crew on Drifting Wreck Are Resecued From Waves (in Nick of Time GRS NEW YORK, Jan. 14.—Four days on the deck house of the bark Edward L. May- berry, with seas almost continually breaking over her and during all that time remaining with his revolver ever pointed at a mutinous crew, is part of the experience of Captain Josiah Shep- pard, who arrived to-day on the Ameri- | can line steamship St. Paul Captain Sheppard and his ten men were rescued In mid-sea by the steam- | ship Stacia, taken to England and thence | transferred to the American liner. Cap- | tain Sheppard lost his vessel as a result of her soringing a leak in the height of | a severe gale on December 10. The bark left Pascagoula, Miss., for Philadeiphia with a load of yellow pine November 14, and on December 9, during veered to west-northwest, and the May- berry drifted off into the Gulf stream en- | tirely unmanageable. The crew, negroes shipped in the South, collected a butt of water, some pork, flour | and beans and carried them to the top of | the deck house. Later in the day all hands were forced to seek refuge on the roof. It was then, according te Captain .'Jemm that four of the negroes, A. | Davis, Emanuel Martin, Randolph Pe- | ters and “Jerry” Jones, became mutinous and declared that they were going to de- | sert the shin. Captain Sheppard pulled out his re- volver and declar2d that he would shoot { the first man who attempted to lexve. This quieted tnem somew that the food be not the result was that served with Captain revolver in hand. at, apportioned out, and the first meal was Sheppard standing | “Ona night,” said Captain Sheppard, “they decided to murder me. They talked in grours and continually followed my | move ts, keeping as near as possible. | T didn’t get a wink of slcep that night. I watched them as best I That seemed | could, my revoiver in hand. to have a quickening effect, for after that !fe was less strenuous. You can imagine our position when 1 tell you the sea was continually making a sweep over | us.” On December 1i they were reduced to one sma'l bottla of water, and this the | captain carefully guarded. | howcver, did not last, it rained, and they were able to secure thirty callons of water, On December 15 they were sighted by the steamer Stacia ndon, bound from Honduras to vessel ran down near the bark and Captain Henry Hindes signaled that it was too dark for rescue, but that he would stand by during the might. On the moraning of December 16 they were taken off without accident and finally landed in England. | | Try the Unitea Sintes Laundry. 004 Market street. phone South 420. * T it | Lady Wyndbam Quin, the daughter of Lord Dunraven, s among the practical orticulturists of the peerage and owns a | wondertul violet farm. AMUSEMENTS. THE STOLLE Paintings=+Art Talks LYRIC HALL ToMorrow (Tuesday) Evening, at 8:15, THE LR - DEN GALLERY Thursday Evening PARIS NO. 1. Saturday Matinee—PARIS No. 2. Hurdreds of Great Paintings in These Subjects. Seats $1.00, 75¢, SCe. at Sherman, Clay & Co.'s. EXTRA! EXTRA! ALHAMBRA THURSDAY EV G, JANUARY 25. SATURDAY MATINEE, JANUARY 27. CALVE And Her Concert Company SEATS §3, $2, $1.30 and $1. Ready Thursday at Sherman, Clay & Co.'s. Voluminous Vaudeville! Fred Lennox and Company, Presenting “Omn His Uppers,” by GEORGE ADE: Rice and Cady; Herbert’s Doxs; Lewis MeCord und Company: LeBrun’s Grand Opera Trie: Five Piroscoflis; Mareena, Nevaro and Mareenn: Jo- seph Newman, and Orphenm Motion Plctures. Showinz “A Trip Throush Ceylon.” Regular Matinees Every Wednesday, Thurs- day. Saturday and Sunday. PRICES—10¢, 25c and 50c. AGADEMY OF SCIENGES HALL | Market st., between Fourth and Fifth. THE CALIFORNIA PROMOTION COMMITTEES LECTURES ON CALIFORNIA Daily from 2 to 4 p. m. (except Sunday). Illustrated by Magnificent Stereovticom Views and Moving Pictures. For Week Beginning Monday, January 15. SAN BENITO COUNTY Presented by Rev. G. T. Meeker, fromr 2 to 2:30 STA Nl!l—&fis COIJ Presented by H. H. SANTA CLARA cvum Presented by M. I Jordan, from 3 to 3:30. SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY, Presented by Colvin B. Brown, from 3:30 to 4, ADMISSION FREE. Racilg' NTY . from 2:30 to & Days on Sea-Washed Deck- | house With Pistol in Hand | | a gale, the vessel was discovered to be; leaking. About noon on December 10 the wind, which had been from the north, but they insisted | The strain, for on that night | SAN FRANCISEOS GOLUMBIA o ok fEE TO-NIGHT BEGINNING Matinees Wednesday and Saturday. Farewell Testimonial Engagement Mme. HELENA MODJESKA Supoorted by a Streng Company. Direction of Mr. Jules Murry To-Night, Tuesday and Saturday Nights, “MACBETH" Wednesday Matinee and Friday Night, “MUCH ARO ABOUT NOTHING™ Wed. and Thurs. Nights and Sat. Matinee, “MARY STUART” HE ARRIVES NEXT SUNDAY NIGHT, THE YANKEGE CONSUL And there’s.a host of pretty girls with him. Not forgetting the twenty song hits. e axo €T ST wveer Loaram hmfl H. W. BISHOP, Lessee and Manager. Every Night This Week—Matinees Thursday, Satarday and Sw Hoyt's Farce Comedy, A CONTENTED WOMAN ‘With Amelia Gardner and Franklin Underwood. A LAUGH IN EVERY LINE. SEATS.... R sakiss e, 30e, Friday Eve—Benefit I O. O. F. Board of Rel! Next Week—NELLIE STEWART, the Great Australian Actress. and Georze Musgrove's Engi 3 CENTRA-L TELEPHONE SOUTH 818, Under Direc of H. BISHOP. The Great Melodrama of New York Life. THE PRICE OF HONOR A _Play of Wondertu “MEET ME AT TH SEE THE BIG STORE EVATOR ScENm. T::R BUTTED IN. 25c, 3Be and 30 10¢, 13c and 25e Heart Inte O Next Week—HOW B Evening Prices. .. Saturday and Sun_ Matin oeeaa TTVOL Rspuse “AbalTma Slm@ays Foxy Quiller SECOND WEEK De Koven and Smith’'s Comic Opera Triumph, FOXY UILLER Beautiful Scenery. Costumes and_Accessories! SPLENDID CAST! PERFECT EGULAR MATINEE USUAL TIVOLI PRICES- GRAN HOUSE FAREWELL PERFORMANCES America’s Greatest Tragedienne, NANCE O’NEIL To-Night—ELIZABETH To-Morrow Night, Wednesday Masiuse...... mP‘lRES OF ST. JOHN & MACBETH THE JEWESS (tarewsil pertormance). .. MAGDA Beginning NEXT SUNDAY MATINEE— YON YONSON o,\uromv BUSH STREET CHAS. P. HALL, Prop. and Mgr. Phone Main 127 Commencing TO=NIGHT -All Week Matinees Every Tuesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday, T. W. DINKINS' Extravaganza Company, THE INNOCENT MAIDS Markie and Moran, Aleene and Hamilton, Curtin and Blossom, Eugene Jerge, Deonzo and Elliott, i Two Laugh-Provoking _Burlettas, “The White Statue” and randed.” Beauty Shorus of 25 Clever Girs Can Dance and iy . Night Sing. POPULAR PRICES—Evenings, 15c, 25¢, dfe, B0c, 75c, all reserved. Matinees, 25c, reserved. E D. Price, ALCAZAR H%: 'l‘o-NlGH’I'-—WA’I‘S. !l’l'A AND SUN. ONLY NOVELTY IN TOWN William Gillette's Latest Success, THE ADMIRABLE CRICHTON A Fantasy by J. M. Barrie. GORGEOUS SCENIC EFFECTS Delightfui Whimsical Comedy. Bves., 25c to T5c; Mats. Sat., Sun., 25c to 30% NEXT MON.—The Jolly College Faros, A STRENUOUS LIFE (James Wobberts, Freshman), By Richard Walton 'l‘uhy SOON—A MODE! ALHAMBRA TIIEATER Corner of Eddy and Jones Sts, Phone East 1877 BELASCO & MAYER, Proprietors. Commencing Monday ) Vum Jan. 13, for One aunvemr munm fium-y and Sunday. Ressouse Popular Demand Belasce % Mayer Present THD PHENOMENAL CHILD ACTRESS, Little Ollie Cooper In Her Wonderful Dual Role, THE PRINCE AND THE PAUPER Scenery, Costumes and Music! Entire Alhambra Company in the Cast! Alhambra Prices Will Prevail—Evenings, 10c_to 50c. Matinees, 10c, 15, 20c. . Next Week— Herschel Mayall in “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Belasco & Mayer, Proy rietors. BOTHWEI.L BROWNE’S GAIETY GIRLS Presenting “IN VACATION TINE.” L A HOST OF AT'nuL'nONl ON THB f-‘. -A" LIONS IN THE 200! BARNES ITVING m:. THURSDAY.

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