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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1906. MOTHER BURIES HER BABE ALIVE Woman in-New \[ulco. in a tunfv«mn. Admits Inhu- man Treatment of Infant 'ESERTED BY HUSBAND She Shows No Shame for Her | | Action, Saying She Was Not | t Able to Support the thld — to The Call. March 12.—Mrs. confined in the Coumty risbad on the charge of murder, | nfession admitting that | ths-old baby a 7. She made | 3 \\"h!'ul a sign of shame nting for the action by she was unable to support er her husband left her, and | den to her on account witting her about the shand. The crime was en miles west of Lake- ounty. She did not s: >t Kill the babe be M bors r k t f the child w rom the house mble eatly HICAGO SOON TO HAVE CEMETERY FOR UNION MEN igarmakers Take the Ipitiative Providing for New Burial Ground. in skér mjous took prac the shape 3 or two large enough for 5000 been acquired. The 1 be reserved str ropriated arry out tend to benefit of but will | he !Lrnnx ns of Chi- | he rest of the city app Will of s Georgian. por sends us a copy of an old wi in the office of the or- dinary County, Georgla. Aft- e he “sol- Nichol- . aw. 1 im- ; justice to and spend buying a slab je the remains of n the Sth five years in the and never lost a day, th of the Methodist 1 hope, to which church conclusion the testator fed on the highest hill with the honors of war, —Law Notes. 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" Let quote his own words in his jetter of 31, 1905: “I~was in great agony mind and body. In the meantime & eman told me of the virtue of your ramid _remedy. I fortunately found #t & drugstore, and by the next orning I did not feel that an opera- s mecessary, and in three days ‘a able to return home, and a com- cure was accomplished, to my reat satisfaction and the surprise of the physician.” Send today to the Pyramid - Drug Company, 182 Pyramid buflding, Mar- shall, Mich,, and get a sample pack- age by return mail and then go.to your druggist and get a box, the price of which is b0 cts., and get well with- out pein, trouble or cutting. t I 7 € boy | No other person may | It volces the | i value. [ UNKNOWN AWRITER USS[AMHUSH | BY INDIAN GANG lThroe United States Deputy Marshals Are Killed in a| Fight in Indian Territory | BATTLE IN MOUNTAINS —_—— | Cherokee Outlaws Lead Their| Pursuers Into a Trap and oot From Hiding Places _VINITA, I T, March 12—-A Cnited | States Marshal’s posse of six men was | ambushed by the Wickliffe gang of full- blood Cherokee Indians yesterday after- | noon in the Night Hawk Indian settle- ment in the Spavinaw Hills, thirty-one miles from Vinita, and three members of | the posse were shot and killed. The mem- | bers of the posse killed were: | L L. GILSTRAP, Deputy United States | Marshal of Vinita. ! OTTO TUTTLE ! DICK TERRY of Tahlequah, posseman. | The Wickliffes, three brothers, Charles, John &nd Tom, were at last accounts be- | sleged in the house of their uncle, Jim ‘Wickliffe, and posses from all directions, probably 100 men in &ll, had gone to cap- ’xure or kill the desperadoes. It is be- lieved that another fight took place this afternoon, but there s no telegraph or | telephone connection with the Night | Hawk settlement. The Wickliffes killed Deputy Marshal | Vier about a year and a half ago and the officers have been on. thelr trail ever since. Deputy Gilstrap, with Otto Tut- | tle, Dick Terry, Thomas Wafford and | others, on Bunday afternoon at 4 o'clock rode up to the home of Jim Wickliffe, | uncle of the Wickliffe boys. The posse | was about to make a search of the place, | when the outlaws concealed in the house | opened fire on them. At the first volley | Giistrap and Tuttle and Terry were killed | and at the next volley all of the horses | were killed, besides the bloodhounds. The survivors of Gilstrap's party fired into the house, but the reply from the outlaws was so sharp that the remnants of the posse soon seught shelter behind | the trees and stones. The little band of survivors decided to send Plezz Mann to Tahlequah for assist- ance, while the other men would shadow the house and if possible prevent the es- 1rape of the Wickliffes. Mann arrived at Tahlequah at an early | hour this morning. Marshal Darraugh | and his deputies set out for the battle- ground this morning. Ten men wept from Pryor Creek and parties started from other settlements, probably 100 men | | in all. The trouble with the Wickliffes dates | back to January, 108, when the Cherokee land office was opened at Vinita. The full-blood Cherokees objected to this pro- ceeding and they held war dances all | over the Cherokee country and the situa- | tion became alarming. On one occasion Peter Wolf, a full-blood Indian, was killed by another Indian for mno other | reason than that he came to Vinita and | | secured an allotment. —_——————— | Americans Would Afd France. PARIS, March 12—Several _prominent | New Yorkers, who spend the major part of their time in the American colony here, have been getting a lot of notori- | ety in the last few days through thelr efforts in behalf of the French Govern- ment in case of a war with Germany. On their own initiative the warlike New Yorkers held = little conference and de- | cided to take a hand in the prospective | confiict. | They agreed among themselves to make liberal donations toward a fund which should be used for the purpose of | putting fn the field a company of ad- venturous young Americans who signi- fled their readiness to enlist in the French cause if war should come, Many millions of American money was repre- sented in the little band, and all plans were made for the equipment of a le- gion in the most expensive fashion, |~ 1f the plan had been worked out the Americans would have been prepared to | take the field in the most gorgeous | equipment ever seen in a military cam- paign. Besides carrying the most ap- proved arms, they would have had the most cxpensive commissariat that could be obtained, and there would have been | & company fund sufficlent to maintain a | regiment in the regular establishment. The New Yorkers gave their inti- mates to understand that their company would be ready to go to the front and strike a hard blow for France. But all their planning has come to naught. Minister of War Etlenne got an intimation“of what was going on, and immediately let it be understood: that he could in no way lend recogni- tion to such a step as long as peace con- tinues. —_—— Bir Thomas, Lipton, expressing in a let- ter his admiration for N. G, Herreshoff's skill in designing yachts, says: “I wish he would not compress so much talent into the designs of the American cup de- fenders.” e The true worth of a girl in Albania is sometimes readily estimated. When she desires to. marry she collects all her money and mounts it on her head, sp that observers may note her financial LONDON CRITICS ARE NYSTIFIED Unable to Learn Identity of “Carl Joubert” Who Wrote Books Against the Czar NAME A SECRET Author Who Died Recently Is Known to Have Been in Touch With Revolutionists REAL Bpecial Dispatch to The Call. LONDON, March 12—Who was “Carl Joubert?” The question which is now puzzling London does not seem likely to be answered for some time to come. On the other hand, an almost complete mystery surrounds the antecedents of the vehement writer who suddenly ap- peared in England from nowhere, pub- lished three sensational books against the Czar and czardom, and recently succumbed to an illness of which prac- l‘.‘“"" no details have been made pub- ic. Even his real name or title is un- known, the author having informed his publishers that the name he used was an @ssumed one and that it would not be safe for him to reveal his real identity. It is declared, too, that “Jou- bert” was not a Russian, although he had lived in the Czar's country for many years and evidently knew it from end to end. One thing is certain, how- | ever, and that is that Joubert, who was a comparatively young man, was in close touch with the inner circle of the Russian revolutionary party, for the forecasts in his books had an extraor- dinary way of coming ftrue, gnd his intimate knowledge of the ruling pow- jers in Russia was unmistakable. DEATH FROM OPERATION. In appearance “Joubert” was the typical stage revolutionist—tall and slender and well-cut features and jet black hair. He came fo London slight- ly over two years ago and soon after- ward published the book which made 80 great a sensation on both sides of the water—"“Russia As It Really Is.” This was followed, something like a year later, by a still more startling work, “The Truth About the Czar,” and for this, “Joubert” stated in a prefatory note, he had been supplied with special information by officials then in the en- tourage of Nicholas II. “Joubert’s” last book was published in both England and the United States only a week or 80 ago. It was called “The .White Hand,” and took the form of a novel, though It served mainly to set forth | the convictions and bellefs of its mys- | terious author. Meanwhile it is probable that “Jou- bert” died as the result of a severe operation which he was obliged to undergo in last November. a statement in which he sald he had recelved information from the revolu- tionary party in Russia that the im- perial family were “in imminent dan- ger of their lives. HAGGARD'S NEW NOVEL. Rider Haggard has evidently decided that the sheemaker should stick to his last and the novelist to writing novels. For a while Mr. Haggard persisted so in_ writing books about farming and such matters that his readers began to despair of ever having any more ro- mances from his pen, and even when | he did begin to turn out fiction again he mixed it up with advocating the “back-to-the-land” movement in a way that did not please his public. Whether or no the public retallated it would | not be polite to say, but at any rate, Mr. Haggard seems to have made up his mind to stick to story-telling here- | after. “Ayesha,” the sequel to “She,” made a good beginning, and now I hear that the author has completed a new novel, the scene of which is lald partly England and partly in the Soudanese desert. English officer who in his youth com- mits a serfous moral error and who registers a vow that thenceforth his | life shall be kept unspotted. Hc keeps | his oath, too, though under circum- stances of great trial and difficulty, and the success of his great platonic experiment is shared by an Eastern woman of high rank. Meanwhile, hav- ing written “finish” to this novel, author of “King Solomon’s Mines” has straightway embarked upon another one, which he says is a Spanish ro- mance of the period of Ferdinand and Isabella. JOHN BURNS' LIBRARY. There are few better read men than John Burns, the president of the Local Government Board and the first work- ingman to be given a seat in a British Cabinet. He has the most extensive | private library relating to labor con- ditions and social problems to be found in England. His reading in other di- rections covers a wide range of litera- ture, It is natural that among poets he should prefer his Scottish namesake, and he is not a little proud of the fact that he descended from the same stock. "Perhap! my favorite lines in all our poetry,” he told an Interviewer the other day, “are the four, coming very near the spirit of the Sermon on the Mount, where Burns wrote: To make a happy fireside clime For weans and wife, That's the true pathos and sublime Of human life. g The champion of democracy is not so enthusiastic over Bhakespeare because he shows so little sympathy with the toiling masses. “We do not find in his pages,” he says, “any true reflection of the work- ing classes. There may be a few ex- ceptions to this, but, as usual, these merely emphasize what is the rule.” His collection includes a great his- toric treasure. It is a copy of the answer of King Chai I to the depu- tation of Parliament, stating his rea- sons why he thought he should not be executed. .The inscription shows it once belonged to-John- Bradshaw, the president of the tribunal that con- demned the King. —_—————————— Fish Swallows a Purse. Like Polycrates, a local magnate of the Vosges has recovered his property from the belly of a fish. He had not, how- ‘ever, thrown it away to propitiate the gods, and is quite content to have it back again. A fisherman on the lake of Ger- ardmer caught a fine pike, weighing. something like thirty-two pounds, and sold it for eight shillings to the chief hotel of the place. In the kitchen the fish on being cleaned out was found to con- tain a small leather purse, in which was 180 francs in gold. The honest cook at once told the hotel proprietor, wno then remembered that the local magnate in :'-mn. ‘who h::fl.w in the house the week before, accldentally dropped his purse into the lake while out for a row. The property thus miraculousiy recovered has been returned to its owner, who 1dentified the purse.—London ‘Tele~ graph. —————— At Gera, Germany, & man who had had a tooth pulled sued the dentist for the tooth, the dentist desiring to keep it on account of its curious shape and claiming ownership of it. The coufln decided agalnst the mfi’d. ¥ ‘While con- | | fined to his bed, at that time, he Issued in | Briefly, it is the history of an | the | ROLLICKING JOY LITTLE JOHNNY JONES. George Cohan’s Med- ley Brings the Giggles. Loss of Raffael’s Cos- tume Delays Cur- tain's Rising. ——e Howe Conducts as if Engaged in Slash- ing Ham. There is not a chink for a yawn in “Lit~ tle Johnny Jones,” happily introduced here last night at the Columbia Theater. Every little bit helps in the “play,” as George M. Cohan, who made it, calls it. “Play” it is not, but there is only the label to quarrel with in the bright hash Cohan serves up here. For ‘Johnny Jones” is a wholly impartial combination of farce, musical comedy and melodrama, hut consistently joyful whichever it hap- pens to be. And there is only Cohan’s name on the front page of “Johnny Jones.” He wrote all of it, music, lyrics, libretto. He acted the name role in New York—in the ‘fntervals of * scribbling “George Washington Jr.,” in which he is now illuminating Broadway, and again “Forty-five Minutes from Broadway,” a third “phenomenal musical hit." Mr. Co- han is truly a wonder child. “Johnny Jones” is an aundoubted hit here. A large audlence, its personnel per- haps affected by Lent, enjoyed every minute of the piece in most un-Lenten fashion. It enjoyed the music that hooked om to the laziest ear, the story with its engaging jockey hero, some of the cleverest lines it has had a chance to enjoy, and the clever acting that ran through the whole cast. I enjoyed the handsome settings, and the busimess-like and first-class air of the whole perform- ance. It was grateful .for not having en- core after encore thrust upon it after the songs. It was grateful for everything— only for having to wait until ten minutes to 9 for the rising of the curtain. That was because one Jack Raffael had lost his wardrobe, and even for this there was compensation. The conductor of “Johnny Jones” is unique. He conducts as if ‘he were slashing ham when he does not con- duet as if he were a policeman. But Mr. HotWe does get the orchestra to ‘‘move on” with the rest of the show. “Little Johnny Jones” is an Ameri- can jockey, in the first act in London, | where he is to ride in the Derby. There also is Anstey, gambler, part owner in a Chinese lottery, ruled off the Ameri- | can turf, and coming to “make a deal” with the jockey to lose the race. There also is another American sportsman, McGee, of the honest type, and “the unknown, who is a detective in the dis- guise of Providence for the jockey. The Jockey's ‘love, a San Francisco heiress, we algo find here, and her aunt, Mrs. Kenworth, a lady with unlimited wealth and a mania for reforming highbinders. “Incidentally Mrs. Kenwerth is engaged to marry Anstey, and in preventing her niece from wedding the jockey. A The second act finds the Jjockey, | through the machinations of Anstey, | ruled off the English turf. The scene |is on the pier at Southampton, where | the Americans are embarking for home. Comes Johnny, heralded by the hooting -of a crowd and almost in tears. Even ‘th children on the street jeer at him, he says to McGee. And McGee turns | away—for the moment. Johnny asks, “Hain't I one friend?” The unknown (always on the spot) asks: “Have you any money?"” Johnny weeps: “Barrels of it.” | “Then to h—1 with the friends,” the unknown. The steamer leaves Johnny on the dock singing: “Give My Regards to Broad- way,” and it is a pretty handsome il- lusion, where the steamer, laden with people, sails off. But they are not con- tent with this. There {8 a dark change with the song still, going on, and then you see the steamer a house of lights in the distance. The last act takes place in Chinatown, San Francisco, in gala | garb. As George Cohan could not come him- self he could hardly have sent any one better than Bobby Barry for little Johnny: The part is not ‘the most important, Co- han having distributed the interest all round with gmost unstar-like generosity. But Barry is small enough, sprightly enough and boyish enough to take the | role very engagingly. He cannot sing much, true, but gets along otherwise quite happily. But the hit among the several of the pleces Is that of the Un- known. It is the part of parts, and upon it Mr. Cohan has squandered. his best lines. It would seem that the part eould hardly be badly acted, but Tom Lewis makes it a classic, as Cohan has made it a character. The Unknown is chiefly an American and begins this way to say so. “What makes vou Americans 80 proud.of your country?’ one asks him. “Other countries,” says the Unknown. “I like Pittsburg when I'm here,” he says again—ih London, “pittsburg!” shrieks the Englishman. Soothingly, the American says: “Oh, London, then—now, ain't {t curious how I always get those two towns mixed?” The Unknown objects to the waiter who' does not drink because he would starve the saloonkeeper, askes the whiskered man how he expected the barber to make a living, asks the bell- boy who does not gamble where must the poor gamblers go? His every line gets a laugh, and it took.at last only the mere sight of the man to set the audience giggling. Quite as well doue in its way is the e e says It is always sold in bottles hke this RUNS THROUGH s TR U AT s L McGee part, a. rollicking Irish-Ameri- can sportsman, by Sam J. Ryan, and that of Austey by Jack Raffael. The Chinaman, Sing Song, was also clever .in Mr. Bachmann’s hands. / Chief of the women, who matter not so very much, is M Stella Tracy, who i iquant and sprightly as the jockey's sweetheart. She has a bril- liant entrance, disgulsed as a chic French person, and sings a French song with all the point in the world. There is a San Francisco newspaper woman in Miss Adele Rafter (as Flera- belle Fly), who Is a living compliment to the profession. Miss Rafter's Flo- rabelle is a beautiful person to look upon, and scents a “scoop” in quite re- markable fashion. She, Miss Tracy and Mr. Barry do most of the songs, almost all of them hits, and one must not for- get a large and well-dressed chorus, with a male contingent that has not been equaled since “Florodora” days. BLANCHE PARTINGTON. California. Willlams' “Imperfal Burlesquers” presenting a roaring farce comedy in two acts, entitled “An Eye Opener,” commenced a week's engagemént at the California *Theater last night and played to a large and well pleased audience. In addition to the two-act farce comedy this company has some of the cleverest people in vaudeville in its ranks. Miss Pauline Moran proved herself to be one of the cleverest sou- brettes on the burlesque wheel and gained many encores with her song, “A Bungalow Babe." Crawford and Manning, keot the audience in an up- roar with their comedy acrobatic and dancing act. An exceptionally well- drilled and good looking chorus, who appeared in the ensembles, helped to all attractiveness to the performance. Aleazar. The Alcazar company is shining this week in ‘“Mrs. Deering’s Divorce,” that not unfamiliar but ever pleasing com- edy in which Lily Langtry greatly aug- mented her fame. The plece Is well staged throughout and the people be- hind the footlights enter into the spirit of the play with unusual enthustasm. Edith Evelyn -is peculiarly adapted for the part of Mrs. Deering. The clever actress has no difficulty what- | ever in portraying the vivacious a.n!l emotional young divorcee who sep- arates from her husband in haste to repent at leisure. Her work in the last scene at the dressmaker's is a show in itself. Charles Waldron always ac- quits himself creditably and his Cap- tain Deering is no exception. His Lon- don accent is a trifie underdone, but otherwise his acting 1s excellent. Last night's audlence had plenty of fun over these two leaders. Ernest Glendinning is a howling| success in the role of the French cre- | ator of gowns. Too bad the part is not longer. George Osbourne does very well as Lord Granpier, the deceitful old rogue. John Maher is as laughable as yesterday afternoon’s scenes,on the corner of Third and Market streets in the character of Jimmy Foster, whose wooing is vehement but vain. Effie Bond is hardly up to her usual stan- dard as the uncertain-aged Miss Ver- ner. The support of the rest of the| cast is measurably good. Central. Outlaws and a German-dialect lead- ing man, ladies and gentlemen of color and heroines of the clinging and tom- boy varietr combined at the Central Theater last night to make the success of Blanéy's "My Tomboy Girl,” a four- act alleged comedy-drama. The plot, which is first unwound in New York, moves to Virginia after the first act and is considerably handicapped by the presence of a peculiar species of out- law that moves about the village streets wearing black masks in deflance of the constable. The cast, which is a long one, lsi headed py Landers Stevens as the Ger- man Count, the hero of the play. The center of attraction is the tomboy sis- ter of the heroine, who throws the vil- lain, Black Jack, from presumably the second story window after an exciting bedroom tussel; follows her sister, who is *kidnaped by the aforesaid Black Jack, to the mountains, shoots the vil- lain, «blows up the first, second and third assistant villains and carries her sister home to safety. The audience. seemed to thoroughly enjoy every moment of the performance with the exception of the long waits between the acts, which were embel- lished by alleged vaudeville specialties. Majestie. “The Bold Sojer Boy,” a . military play with a strong comedy element, was the offering at the Majestic Thea- ter last night. This play was formerly, used by the young Irish comedian, An- drew Mack, and Donald Bowles as- sumed the role of Lieutenant Adair, which was the same part that Mack played. The character is that of a young Irishman enlisted in the United States army and gives scope for some good acting and singing. Bowles is a good comedian and his work last night will stand comparison with that of any actor who has played Irish parts in this city for many a year. Elsie Esmond, L. R. Stockwell, Mina Crolius Gleason and Frank Bacon did splendid work and the rest of the char- acters were well taken care of by the comedy players of the Bishop forces. The acting of Baby Martine and little Kathleen Murphy charmed the hearts of the audlence. g deceive you in this. “Just»cn-good"mbut "’”&’m”'uu”'n‘e'} Optum, Its is its and allays Feverishness. It cures Colic. It relieves Teethi and Fla It assim! Skolnch nnd d /] In Use For O '.l‘ronh iving heal d na m—m Mo‘;‘:’r’:nl?rl Tig Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of ASTORI The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the tmoromfl.nmha,tndmbeenmdemderm for oéerso ‘o1 Allow no lmituious' nnd against Experiment. What is CASTORIA is a lnrmleu mbltltute for Castor Oil, Paree It is Pleasant. It nor other Narcotic It destroys Worms Diarrheea and Wind tes the sleep. Syru orph! tee. cures C tes the Food, £4 ver 30 Years. TME CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY STAEET, NEW YORK CITY. TUG AND SHIP ARE IN DANGER Vessel Apparently in Dis- Lobos by Monterey Man MONTEREY, March 12—What Is ap- parently a four-masted schooner in tow ) of a tug Is reported in distress six miles | below Point Lobos. The brought to this city this afternoon by | Fred Dana. He states that this morning. while on his way to this city, he saw a ship In tow of a tug about 150 yards from | shore. The ship seemed to be aground and the tug was unable to move the ves- sel. There was a steamship about three | miles off shore. - She was inted 'hlle1 and had two funnels, The ship was mak- | Ing signals to the steamship by waving |is flags. The tug was making great efforts to get the ship out to sea, but when he/ left she had not been successful. The‘ wind was blowing a severe gale and he is of the opinion that the vessel was blown from her course. At the point where' the vessel was grounded there | are many rocks and If assistance is not sent she may possibly go on the rocks. | A. M. Smith, who lives near Point Lo- bos, stated to Dana that he saw the ship Sunday and that the tug was unable to | move her from the point where she had grounded. The tug and ship were bound south. 5 At the Merchants' Exchange it was leaimed tonight that the only vessel leaving this port lately answering the description of the distressed vessel was the four-masted barkentine Fullerton, which left this port on March 10, in tow of the tug Sea Rover, bound for Port Harford. She could be mistaken for a schooner at a distance. She belongs to | the Union Oil Company. The two-fun- port. ——————————— Try the United States Laundry. 1004 | Market street. Telephone South 420. * e ¥ Tivoll. Its popularity holds, as was at- tested by the créwd that filled the house last night. g -t Orpheum. This week’'s unusually good bill at the'Orpheum pleased a large audience last night. 3 —_— Chutes. The Onzos, hand balancers, contor- tionists and equilibrists, made a tre- mendous hit at both perfarmances at | the Chutes yesterday. Ethel White- sides and her pickaninnies; the Bell Trio, vocalists; Bothwell Brown Galety Girls and other clever enter tainérs completed an excellent pro- gramme. The amateurs promise a lot of surprises on Thursday night. —_—— Brandon Will Be Given Hearing. The Board of Civil Service Commis- sioners last night decided to give Ed- ‘ward J. Brandon, former superintendent of sewers, who was suddenly ousted from his position without any apparent reason, a chance to state his case before it to-morrow afternoon at 4 o'clock. ADVERTISEMENTS. Anything to Buy Next Monday night, Nellis Stewart and the Musgrove Australian Com- pany oven a two weeks' farewell en- gagement in “Sweet Nell of Old Drury.” Alhambra. It is not difficult to determine to what particular quality the powerful dramatization of Hall Caine's popular novel, “The Christiai owes {ts great success, The moral atmosphere that pervades the entire play, combined with that essentlal chgracteristic of the modern drama, human interest. has un- doubtedly been responsible for the great hold it has upon the public's af- fections. At the Alhambra “The Chris- tian” was presented last night to a large and appreciative audience. In the role of Glory Quayle Bertha Creighton scored a success. Herschel 11 looked and acted John Storm Henry Shumer as Horatlo Drake was in fine fettle and left nothing to bu desired In his delineation. Edwin T. Emery was acceptable as Lord Ure. Agnes Ranken made a charmingly ef- fecttve Polly Love, and Eleanor Haber, fresh from her Alcazar successes. was excellent as Liza, a cockney mald. Mrs. Callender was in the capable hands of Lillian Elliott, and George Webster | played the Archdeacon with usual v satility. James Corrigan as Father Lamplugh, George Nicholls as the Faro King, True Boardman as Brother Paul mdtnormotthmwmnodh thelr respective roles.- The scenery was good and the great mob sceme at the close of act two was most realistic and_ startling. Large houses will no doubt mark the mk'l »Mncun of “The Christian. fl’-——m flmnmuwmuom lmld ml' the Anything to Sell Some of the three millior. readers of Everybody's are sure to want what you have, or have what you want. The classified department in Everybody's advertises real estate, lawyers, automobiles,- schools, office equipments, pianos and organs, business opportunities, good men wanted, seeds, poultry, hotels —whatever you have to sell or buy. very best kind of American people. 15 cents ts & copy $1.50 a year 5] CURE SICK HEADAGHE. Genuine Must Bear tress Is Sighted Off Point| = report was | 1° nel steamship mentioned {s probably a |y Government war vessel bound for this | SCHAN WHAVEL. Steamers leave Plers 9 and San Franciseo, For Ketchikan, Wranget, Daeen. Troedvell, Heien Skay c. 1n attle. For Victoria, Vancouves, Port Townsend, Seattle, Tacoma, Everett, An- acortes, So. Bel Bellingham—11 & m.. a1, P. Ry.; at_Vancouver to C. P. Eureka |Hn-hl¢l N)—m 1:30 m., Mar 17, 19, 25, 3L & i}mrinna.‘""-' % tmuun For Los Angeles (via Port Los Angsles and Rcdoloo) San Diego and Santa Barbara: Coos Bay, ® am.. Mar. 6, 14, 22, 30, Apr. T Bonita, § a. g Mar. 2, 10, 18, Apr. For Ensenada, San Jose bo. Mazatl: KllA La Paa 3anta Rosalla. Topolobampo, ymas (Mex), 10 & m., Tta each month. ALASKA EXCURSIONS (Season 1906)—The palatial Alaskan excursion steamship Spokane will leave Tacoma, Seattls and Victoria June , July 5, 20, Aug. 2. For further Information, obtzin “older. Right ed to change steamers or sailing dates. TICKET OFFICES, Mont; . (Palace Hotel). 10 Market st. and wharyes. "RflGRT OFFICE, 10 Market st OAKLAND, 968 Broadway. C. D. DUNANN, General Ppuinig Agvn 10 Market st.. §an Francisce AMERICAN LINE. bo - Ma New York..Mar. 31, Apr. 25, May 26, Jun-a St. Louls Apr. 7, May 5. June 2. June 30 Phtladeiphia. .. Apr. 14, May 12, June 9, July 7 Philadelphin—Queenstown— Haverford. . ... Mar. 23/ Merion. Friesland. Mar. 31'Haverford ATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINE. New York-London direct. .i.Mar. 24_Apr. 31, May 19, June 18 Apr. ‘T, May 8. 30 Mmnetonka..Apr. 14, May 12, June 9, Minneapolis. Apr. 28, May 26, June 23, J HOLLAND-AMERICAN LINE. New Twin-Screw Steamers of 12,500 fons. NEW YORK—ROTTERDAM, via BOULOGNE Salls Wednesdays as per safling list. Stat'dam, Mar.28, Noordam. Apr.18. noon Y Ryndam, Apr.4, lf::flx,Amuerdm_ Apr.25.5a Potsdam, Apr.1l, 6amiStat'dam, May 2.10 am New Twin-Screw Steamer New A 17,250 registered tons, 30,400 tons alm.«m-m From New York April 25, May 30, July 4. June 2, June uly T iy 20 -Mar. 24, Aprzl May .28, May 26, .vuum YORK—QU! B!:Vg‘TOWA ERPOQL. Mar. 23, Apr. 20, May 18, Jume 13 Mar. 28, May 4, June 1. Juna 29 Bm'rov-—q( PEENSTOWN-LIVER Cymrie Mar. 24, Apr. 26, May 24 June 21 Arabie. . v...May 10, June 7, July 5, Ausg. 3 VIA i - MEDITERRANEAN bike. | FROM NEW YORK. CRETIC.. c.i..April 3, 10 a. m.; May 1 REPLBLIC Aprll 21, 3 p. m.;: May 31 Oct. l! FROM RUST(‘IN ROMANIC. ... 3:30 p. m.; Apell 28 (‘A‘JOPIC April m.; May 19, June 30 D. TAYLOR, Passenger Agent Pacific Coast, 21 Post st., San Franeisco. TOYO KISEN KAISHA < (ORIENTAL S. S. C0.) Steamers will leave wharf corner First and Brannan streets, 1 p. m.. for Yokohama and Hongkons, calling at Honolulu, Kobe (Hiogoy, Nagasaki and Shanghai. and connecting aé Honekone with steamers for India. etc. No cargo received on board on day of sail 5. 8. Hongkong Maru, Saturday, Mar: B e e Betuedar. Ape. 14 ive & & Nippon, Maru, Thurslay. May 10. 1908 Round-trip tickets at reduced ra Tt puege apsiy St Cmpaty's m -mn- flgor, Merchanty Exchanee JMamburg-American. Plymouth — Cherbourg — !nm Feb. 13| *Deutschland. Mar: }J-xm-m- Most Luxurious Weekly Call —_— e ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. i