The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 26, 1906, Page 9

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NEW OFFICERS FOR RAILROAD CORP BOARD ASSIGNS owanoy - Ny THCHER ¥ Pedagogues Secure Regular | Positions in Department for Opening of New Term e ] RESIGNATIONS ACCEPTED BT s A Vice Principalships of Two High Schools Created and Appointments Are Made B £ ucation ment of teachers department to the beginning in t nary 29, ng term: to the Starr King noell, 10 ; Miss Genevieve Lick Grammar to the Columbia e Miss M. Curran, tran: Reld, to the Jefferso McCabe, »ur y ; Miss Mary Lah ,_vice Miss Urm- Thomas, to the lass; Miss Laura C. Primary School, new to the 1, o ; Miss Edith Car- Crocker Grammar School, vice , _resigned; Miss Josephine e Garfisid Primary School: Miss the Garfield Primary to_the Noe Val- . Campbell, tran Diggs, to the Fairmount ice Miss Morgan, trans- » to the Spring Val- vice Miss Taylor, Washington s ;. re- Dora Plagemann, to the Bur- , vice Mrs. J. B, Sykes, trans- to Represent Calhoun’s Interests Here. —— " Lanch, to the Garfield Primary C. Groselter, Grammer during Miss Marsh's = Helen F. MacFarland was transferred the viece principaiship of the Clement ar School to the acting sasistant prin- O Adams Grammar of absence of P was recently assaulted by & pu- 2y Duhem. Moores was transferred from principalship of the Frankl pcipalship of the Cle vice Miss Helen Mac- from the ARE ORDERED. was transterred from the alship of the Jefferson \Primary paiship of the Emerson ce Miss S. M. Wilson de- transferred from the to_the position of Primary ansferred. med to the School, n was 8 elected 2 iss Kraus, gned. was assig to the during the leave of N the Grammar ransterred; e mbia. mary School, vesigned; Primary during ullivan e leave of ahsence of Miss E. m from the Fre raded class, to the Frank Grammar ransterred; Training De— g Scott Grammar School Department of the leave of Cbinese le absence H. McKannay from Hum- ember of nt and assig: ing High School, vice E. and E. C. Willlams was Training_Department, vice J. Ross Brower, y Regulate the Sal bstitute list was vice naterred from ar School, viee Miss G. San- zla was elected a member of ng School Department and assigned ning School. Ada B. Moore, & mem- substitute class, and of Nellie regular teacher in the Whittier were accepted s re granted to Alice L. de E. Norton, E. Fi Culin, Mrs. d Eliza McKinne, SCHOOL BOARD MEETS. of Education met as a ol Board and adopted resolu- | ing the position of vice prin- the Mission High Bchool, to | s M. E. Donnelly was assigned, | ion of vice principal of the | e High School, to which A. L. was assigned. resignation of Frank D. Stringham Com tal Evening High School and Mrs. B. Delaney ed to the position. Hendry was transferred from | s s Comcert To-Night. POSTUM CEREAL whict NEVER INTENDED. Intent of n Prevents the g High School. 4 were granted to G. | Stokes and W. F.|[ nee H - e —_——— % x this is ir MANY IMPROVEMENTS IN STREET CAR SYSTEM s i United Ralironds Issues New Schedule feadiville, Pa. and Increased Service om Sev- | cnyn . eral of Its Lines. . = e Manager Chapman of the United e proved service on the | Tw Twenty-fourth streets, | nd Kearny and Mission stree -second and v sc Twenty- | edule will take ef- | . Eiving extra ser. gs and evening, during the Y t 1 Ip; that ted, ? weaknes her eyes | rush hours, shortening the headways. Hereto- | e r but that | fore, 4" seven-min service has,been glven, | whe " . At | commencing Saturday a five-minute servics | ed it was | wili go into effect | fou " habit On the Bryant-street line extra cars will be 2 . » was | put on, commencing Monday, January 29. In¢ Prcased service will be given in the mornings and evenings, reducing the headways wo as to imeet the increased traffic on this line. On_Monday, a new schedule will take on ihe Kearny and Mission streets line, ing better service during the periods of Beavy travel In the mornings and evenings, Six extra cars will be put on this line, with & View to mccommodating the Increased travel, Tmprovements were recently made in the k Postum. | achedules of the Eighteenth and H it” she says, | sireets, Ocesn View, Cemetertes and Mission v to prepare it | street, Mission ‘nxd Ingleside and Thirtieth and eable and re. | GUerTero streets lines. 3 p} on began to | Good News for Redwood Men. eadaches grew less e Chamber of Commerce of San Francisco d severe, my sleep | h:"m.."u s communication from Washing. nd restful, and Dow, | 1on p. ., from Willam M. Bunker that the use, all my troubles } Canal Commission has decided to use Culifor- hia redwood in the construction of the Tafiroad. Heretofore redwood bas not been in tavor, for some reRson. Wwith the 1d do for her. bottles to the the coffee can ars after have disappeared, including the affec- two ¥ tion of the kidneys, of which I was at yesterday | to the | to the Irving M. | leave. Grammar | nce Department, | ed esign gned to the Lincoln | , | ors of “The Prin: s | will High School to (he:‘y THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1906, «“WOODLAND'S” PRETTY MUSIC. IS ATTRACTIVE —_— | { | |1 | | i1 | | [ | [ | | | | 1 | | | 4 458 MEMBER _OF THE WOODLAND” COMPANY, COM- | ING TO THE COLUMBIA {4 - Fanfous Forest Fantasy, With Clever Cast, on way to This City. | R Henry W. Savage's “Woodland” will be the attraction at the Columbia The- ater commencing next Monday night. This beautiful forest fantasy was originally produced at the Tremont The- ater, Boston, a year ago last spring, and immediately leaped into favor, enjoying a successful run there of seventeen weeks. Frank Pixley, the librettist, and Gustav Luders, the composer, were al- ready widely known as the joint auth- of Pilsen” and “King Dodo,” each of which musical plays was given to the public by Mr. Savage, and | the verdict was promptly rendered by the Boston press and public alike that % | “Woodland” surpossed in many particu- lars the previous works of these well- | known authors. i The songsters and funmakers who be seen here inciude such well- | known .and popular comedians as Harry | Bulger as the Blue Jay; Louis Casa- vant as Judge Owl; Sherman Wade as General Rooster; Miss Helen Hale, the dainty little Wellesley Coilege girl, who appears as Jenny Wren; Louise Tozier as Prince Eagle; Magda Dahl as Miss | Nightingale; Ida Mulle as Mrs. Polly { Parrot; Bertyne Mortimer as the Dov. Greta Risley as Lady Peacock, and Eva Fallom as Little Sparrow. ———— | An Interesttng News Letter. | In this week's issue of the News Letter, the actual detalls of hazing at Annapolls are | described accurately by a graduate of the Naval Academy. Kate Greenleaf Locke writes | the first of a serles of articles on the beauti- |'ication of the home. The automobile news is | presented in a new and better shape than ever before. The Looker On tells of how a promi- | nent widow had her reputation saved by an | elevator boy; of the California lover of Miss | Wilhelmina ‘Busch of St. Louls: of an m- | portant secret engagement in Oakland, and | several spicy local anecdotes. The Town Crier | gtves prominent people some hard hits and the | wreck of the Valencia is analyzed from the technical standpoint. . ——————— Russians Re-examined. The Secretary of the Department of Com- merce and Labor ordered a re-examination yesterday afternoon of the five Russian Poles Who arrived from Japan by the Amiral Du- perre and who were held by the quarantine of- ficlals because it was found that they were afflicted with trachoma. The Secretary advised that after the re-examination the men should be kept in the detention shed on the Mall dock nding further orders. Outside experts as- sisted the Federal doctors yesterday. As a re- sult of the examination yesterday, three of the men were released and two were ordered held under obsrevation for ten dayr —e—————— HOLD MEMORIAL SERVICES—At the Calvary Presbyterian Church, Fillmore and , last night memorial services Were held for the late Rev. John S. MaoIntosh, former president of the San Francisco Theo- logical Seminary. from wheat— OUE ST Buoet ADSFEHMRIYS, e tioners. An order bas been issued by the y weight has increased 22 pounds. | gemeral purchasing officer of the Panama Ca- X within moderation, | nel bosrd. which about the -~ eration, | Gooq in this State. N of ST tIt e looks bright to me now, and I conld first the truth when I say that | on the Panama Taflrosd will be Phe Chamber of Commerce has urged the adoption not 1£ 1 would, | 5t Teawoca with success. give uwp Postum and kind of coffee again nd would not if I could, back to the old Name given by ENGINEER SEVERELY BURNED.—Fred Fostum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Ditces. waginess, B B LN NORRL SN NG There's a reason. Read the little book e iy i v *The Road to Wellville,” In pkgs. E Ragith BRAVOS RISE FOR GLORIOUS NOTES OF CALVE e Calve came, sang, conquered, last night Probably no more uncertain audience than the bmlllant crowd that crammed the Alhambra last night has ever met 4 big singer here. Probably no more unanimous crowd ever left the Alhambra. The uncertainty was quite justifiable. Only in that tremendous flash of genius, her “Santuzza,”” that made a scarlet night for us last season but one, has Calve ever been heard here. This we were told; this we now know. Last night Calve sang herself beside Schumann-Heink, beside Sembrich—and then up, gway, beyond into the blue, all by herself. %, She looked at us a little as she looks at Don Jese in the last act, as she came on. A Carmen? Yes; befringed from top o toe, and with a single dangerous rose in her hand. Then, as in “Carmen’s” first act, with only a magic note or two, she had us. A note or two more, and the capitulation of the audience becoming evident, and we had her! And then Calve began to sing for us. Probably Gounod's Stances (“Sappho'’) has never been, never will be again, sung in such magnificently impassioned fashion as Calve sang them Jast night. Her voice answered every ar- tistic and emotional demand upon it. And there is no other voice like it. Heaven— or hell—may hold another such, but we haven't one here. It seems a thing com- pounded of flame and sweet in some magic smithy, absolute warmth, abso- lute sweet. She tipped a miraculous high D flat in one of her songs, she ranged evenly, easi- 1y, sumptuousiy through the rest of the compass in them all. Encored imperfously the Btances, the singer came on as quickly and unaffected- I'y as the encored Sousa to sing the Gou- nod Serenade, broken into after each verse by the homage of the crowd. En- cored again she gave a little French chanson with all the wealth of national spirit, the picture-making genius, that Schumann-Heink brings to the German lieder. Next came the David aria from the *“Perle du Bresil,” in which the flute obligato was admirably played by Mons. Fleury. This was another triumph. The encore was “Gin a body.” One would have been quite contept to see Calve here if one could not have heard her. She acted out the whole thing, yet so cunning- Iy within the limits of the concert stage that the artistic proprieties were only heightened. Then came “Way Down Upon the Swanee River'—and the house went mad. Ever-surprising, Calve had a new surprise here, in the adorable simplicity with which she sang the song. The “Ha- ™ Gain Strength for Work 227 In office and factory, shop, store or kitchen girls are at work all over this land, and, alas | far beyond their strength. Young women who work are especially liable to female ills. Too often the girl is the bread winner of the family and she must toll unremit- tingly, no matter if her back does ache, her limbs and abdomen throb with dull pain and dragging sensations, and dizzy spells make her utterly unfit for work. These are the sure signs of female irregularities which kill beauty and youth. ia . Dinkhams Vegetable Compound builds health and strength for all women who work and are weary. It creates the vitality that makes work easy. From the thousands of grateful letters written by working girls to Mrs. Pinkham we quote the following : DEeAR MRs. PINKHAM : — | feel 1t m: to tell the L E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and B’::;yPurflhr’:zn do'::‘ fw:: Before I took them I was very nervous, had dull headaches, pains in back, and was very irregular. I had been to several doctors and they did me no good. Your medicine has made me well and strong, I can do most any kind of Positive A soda cracker should be the most nutri- tious and wholesome of all foods made Comparative But ordinary soda crackers absorb moist- . ure, collect dust and become stale and soggy long before they reach your table, There is however, one Superlative : soda cracker—at once so pure, so clean, so crisp and nourishing that it stands alone in its supreme excellence—the name is Uneeda Biscuit In a dust tight, NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY . banera” from “Carmen” closed her pro- gramme, and like Calve herself the audi- ence wished she could have been acting it. Here she perhaps touched her highest. The song was sung with all the splendor of insinuation, seductiveness, vocal beauty that some of us had the unhappiness not to find in her Carmen. They wouid hard- Iy let her go, even after another encore. “fPhe “support” also matters. Mons. Fleury is a flutist of exceptional distine- tion, his reading of the Handel sonata being the best of classicism. Mr. Von Norden sings an artistic tenor, sweet and resonant. Mons. Bouxman is a basso of iarge dramatic gifts and owns a pleas- ing if mot very large voice. Miss Ver- an unimportant violin, and s accompanies with consum- | mate discretion There is to be another concert to- morrow afternoon. the programme entire- Iy new. BLANCHE PARTINGTON. SO g PROGRAMME OR MOZART CONCERT IS COMPLETED remedies. strength ! cordial invitation to More Than One Hurdred German Socie- ties Will United in Celebration of work without complaint, and my periods are all right. I am in better health than | ever was, and I know it is all due to your I recommend your advice and medicine to all who suffer. Miss Asey F. Barrows, Nelsonville, Athens Co., Ohio. write her for advice. Oh, if American girls who work would only realize that they have but one life to live, and make the most of their precious health and Mrs. Pinkham extends to every working girl who is In ill health a Such letters are always kept strictly confidential, and from her vast experience Mrs. Pinkham prob- ably has the very knowledge that will help you—and may save your life. B 1.ydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Cures Where Others Fail Composer's Birthday. Over 100 German socleties will participate in the celebration of Mozart's birthday. The AMUSEMENTS. celebration will be held at Native Sons' Hall 3 = rext Monday evéning. Tickets are on sale SAN FRANGISCOS at Sherman & Clay's music store. The fol- mmm’l i & | lowing musieal programme will be render: “Bundeslied,”” male chorus, under the direc- Last 2 Nights—Matinee Saturday "!I»’sh of J. Riegger: we!com‘e by the nm}» dent of the German-American League, 5 | Hermann; “Non piu Ondrai,”” aria for bass John P. Slocum Offers the | ise as Fgaro), Bastl Tetsan IMMENSE COMIC OPERA HIT, THE logy in German, Dr. F. Kuckein; Mich Hymen lachelnd Entzeucken, YANKEE CONSUL | contraito from *“Titus,” Mrs. Lillie Birming- | ham; string quartet, E-fiat major, Kopta Quartet—Wenzel ~ Kopt st_vielin; Haas Koenis, second_ylolin; Andre Verdier, viola; | o &L | Wenzels Los Villapando, violincello: English | For™ Lo b R e \‘”;’;“ Big Cast | oration, Alfred Roncovieri: -Fruehlingsluefte Y. Night. Leie und Linde,” aria for soprapo, from “‘Ido- meneo,” Miss Helen Colburn Heath; ‘‘Della Sua Pace.’ aria for tenor from “Don Gio- vanni,” Mackensle Gordon; concerto for planio- forte, A major, Mrs. Oscar Mansfeldt, accom- panied by the Kopta String Quartet; (a) “Horch aut den Klang der Zither,” (Don | Juan): ) “Der Process Schon Gewomen? ¢ ‘s’ Hochzeit), Dr. S. Schalkhammer; > (Duo), Mrs. L. -Bir- Basil Tetson; (a) “'Das Veilchen." (¢) “To Chloe,” Mrs. L. Bir- ham; (a) “Bin Maedchen oder Weibchen,” | ) “In Diescn Heligen Hallen" (Zauberfloets), { Basil Tetson; quartet from ‘‘Requiem,” Miss | H. C. Heath, Mrs. L. Birmingham, Mackenzie Gordon and Basil Tetson. Reginning NEXT MONDAY “There's an Exhibition in it.” HENRY W. SAVAGE Offers His Greatest Musical Success, ' WOODLAND By the Authors of “The Prince With HARRY BULGER and a Strong Cas SEAT SALE NOW IN PROGRESS. ‘AJ_LL ¢ PHONE EAST 1877 CORNER OF EDDY AND JONES STREETS. BELASCO & MAYER, Proprietors. TO-NIGHT., SATURDAY NF T, SUN- DAY MATINEE AND SUNDAY NIGHT. LAST FOUR PERFORMANCES OF HERSCHEL MAYALL Portraying the Strange Dual Characters in DR. JEXYLL AND MR. HYDE Prices—Evngs, 10c to 50c: Mats., 10c, 15c, 25c. NOTE—OWINg to the appearance of Madame Calve at the Alhambra Theater on Saturda: afternoon, January 27, there will be mo per- formance of “Jekyll and Hyde'' on that day. Next Week—A Sensational. Spectacular Production of MICHAEL STROGOFF. ALHAMBRA MATINEE TO-MORROW (Saturday) Direction Will L. Greenbaum. HER CONCERT COMPANT. mbsu’rs $3, $2, $1 50, S1. California Bouvenire as Valentines. Good to send East. Sanbern, Vall & Co., 741 Market. * ———e——————— SUES UNITED RAILROADS FOR DAMAGES TO CARRIAGE Peter Martin Wants $100 From Corpo- ration as Balm for Collision With Polk-Street Car, Peter D. Martin yesterday sued the United Rallroads for $100 damages sustained through a Polk-street car coliding with his carriage on_Pacific avenue on January 26, 1004. The Sternberger & Hutsler Delivery Com- pany has sued the United Rallroads and W llam N. McCaw for damages in the sum of $30 eamch, resulting from a collision with a wagon and 8 Post-street car. Julie Rooney has sued Isaac Trumbo for $105 83 alleged to be due for services as a domestic. —_————— HIT BY SCANTLING. D. Sullivan, 402 Grove street, was hit on the head and severely injured by a falling scantiing yesterday after- noon at the American planing mill. e at Sherman, Clay & Co.'s. ‘)cno;('i‘nu-—nmmAum. Pianist. — Belaseo & Mayer, B Proprietors. E. D, Price, General Manager. TO-NIGHT—MATS. SAT. AND SUN, ‘POSITIVELY THIS WEEK ONLY Most Novel, Humorous and_Pleturesqu: Ty ‘That Sen Prancisco Has Ever Seem: The Admirable Crichton A Fantasy by J. M. Barrie. DELIG! i Production—Perfect Ca: FUL WHIMSICAL COMEDY! Eves.. 2c to Tbe; 'l'lh"?axl:y‘"c :;::....Hc to B0c. NEXT MON.—The Farce, A STRENUOUS LIFE 0), (James obberts, Freshraan) BY WALTON TULLY, Mon.—University of Califernia Club Night. AGADEMY OF SCIENGES HALL % Market st., between Fourth and Fifth. The (Wlh' Promotion Committee's LECTURES ON CALIFORNIA Hiustrated by Maguificent Stereopticon Jews and oving Pictules, For Week Ing January 22. US COUNTY Preserted by H. H. ¥ohltmors from 2 to 2:30, SANTA CLANA COUNTY Presented by M. 1 Jomian fiom *:10 to SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY cese Ly Coivip B. Drown trom 1 to » l‘x::-:q’i’mu :"n‘ tach Lecturs for “ Audience to Ask Questiona : LTLsNen FRER. b Free lltercia .71 these apd ald o < ‘ties tn be had ar the Committee's neni;;un. ers, 25 New Montgomery st. ¢ ~ AMUSEMENTS. IF2erfostec M. W.BISHOP LESSEE & MANAGER EVERY NIGHT, INCLUDING SUNDAY, ATINEE TO-MORROW AT 2. SPECIAL SEASON. NELLIE STEWART And Muscrove's Dramatic Company fn SWEET NELL OF OLD DRURY “There iy not a_ break in its Barmeny. very part, from the top to the tiniest, is d in_the keemest spirit of team play."'— in the Ex:m!nbr. 1. Asiton Stevens, Reserved Seats. $1 50, . 50 and 2Be. Thursday ‘‘Pop” Math $1 to 25e. '5--BI6 NEW ACTS--5 Eight Allisons; Les Brunin; Vernom Troupe: Estelle Wordette and Com- pany, and Orpheum Motion Pietures. Last Times of Seville Mandeville: Fred Lennox and Company. Preseating “On Hix Uppers.” by George Ade: Rice and Cady, aud Herbert's Dogs. Regular Matinees Every Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday. Prices—10e, 25c and Gc. A‘-‘FORNIA G BUSH STREET CHAS. P. HALL, Proprietor and Manager. PHONE MAIN 127. 25c—MATINEE TO-DAY—25¢ Matinees Every Tuesday. Friday, Sat., THE BEST YET: The Popular Enstern Burlesquers The *“Alcazar Beauties™ Co. “Pretty Gitls and Lots of Them.” Also—James B. Carson, Halght and Dean, Seyons, the Misses Sawtsil and Sears, Kelly and Bartiett. The Three Keeioy Bros. in Two Original Burlettas “MALDS, MIRTH AND MELODY.” Popular prices—Evenings, 1be. 25¢. 30¢, e, 5c. All reserved. Matinees, 25c: all reserved. NEXT MONDAY—-WATSON'S ORIENTALS with the original W. B. Watson. LYRIC HALL, 112 EDDY STREET & =~ Three NI Sun. i 5 Katherine M. H. Blackford, M. P, V. L. Qecupation.” fres; Wednesday night, ‘Health," day night, ~Choles of T v Gllfrni - dcksy Lerved for ladies AReir escarta. Keturning trains leave track after 8fth ang ~ THOMAS M. WILLIAMS, Presideat PERCY W. TREAT, Secretary, AMUSEMENTS. ONLY MATINEE TO-MORROW. De Koven and Smith's Comic Opers, Beginning Next SUNDAY NIGHT Oftenbach’'s Sparkiing Opera Bouffe, THE BRIGANDS USUAL TIVOLI PRICES—20e, S0c, The. GRAND: o HOUSE LAST TWO NIGHTS. MATINEE TO-MORROW PRICES—25c. 50c. TSe. Next Swaday Mat—WAY DOWN EAST, First Time at Popular Prices. BOTHWELL BROWNE’S GAIETY GIRLS Presenting “IN VACATION TIME/ And a Splendld Continunous in the Theater, Afterncons at 3 and Evenings at . A HOST OF ATTRACTIONS ON THE GROUNDS! SEE BARNES" DIVING ELKS. 3 BABY LIONS IN THE Z00! CAKE WALK SATURDAY NIGHT. ‘ADMISSION. ......10c | CHILDREN Phone for Seats, Pacific 301 MISCELLANEOUS AMUSEMENTS. et LANE LECTURES. COOPER MEDICAL COLLEGE. Corner Sacramento and Webster st FRIDAY REVENING, January 26, at 8§ o' cloek. DR. WILLIAM OPHULS “THE PREVENTION OF Subdject, EREVEN =Pt ADMISST 1S FREE. Roller Skating MMI!! Mechanics’ Pavition Rink.

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