The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, March 06, 1910, Page 35, Image 35

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THE OREGON ; SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SUNDAY! MORNING, MARCH 6, 1910.
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AND THEIR' HJBLISHLRS
L
-A4rNQ FACTS OF AMKRI-I
CAN HISTORY," by I). H.I
Montgomery. In no branch of
study or literature haa thera
been auch ' a radical change,
aa In tbo treatment of history. Tha good
historian of former daye waa tha ona
who could maka history read Ilka ro
mance, and tha ona who had tha power
of narrative, and waa able to tell a
conaeoutlva story. In lta class atudy,
the child that could gllbbly count off
the rulera of a country, their cabinet
offloera, their wars -and conflicts, waa
the child that went to the head of tha
clasa. But these aame children were
seldom abla to tell a fact relating to
the commerce, inventlona or domestic
affaire of the country, which were. In
fact, the real causes of tha political
upheavala, while the wara and suc
cession of rulera were but the effects.
This style of history writing and
history study Is fast disappearing and
in us place baa come a grouping to
gether of oontemporary people and
events., showing the relative position
or one thing to airother, which teaches
riot only history In Its truest sense,
but the social, economic and Industrial
forces, as they work out to natural and
logical conclusions. These lessons are
worth infinitely more to a child than
all the narrative history -that waa ever
written.
It Is a history of this most Improved
type that Mr. Montgomery haa written.
The very title of It lmpllea lta char
acter, for plain, simple facta, it cer
tainly la.
The history begins with the forces
that set Columbus' face toward the un
known world and concludes just after
the Inauguration of President Taft, and
yet, the" history ltaelf, Is confined to
' 400 pagea nor Is It small print Con
cise as It is, and brief. It Is doubt
ful If mora real necessary history for
the pupil, could be gotten out of one
of our great voluminous histories. As
a book of ready reference it would not
come amiss on almost any desk, but
It Is particularly arranged for a text
book. It la classified under nine general
heads or periods In the history of
the country, and theae are divided Into
sub-periods, and then arranged In para
graphs, which are almost wholly bare
facts, but put In such a manner that
the student cannot fall to see the re-!
latlon, one with the other, forming tuaf
connecting link in the memory we oall
association, and which Is the surest
of all ways to indelibly fix the events
in the - mind of a reader or student.
Here is a striking Illustration of Mr.
Montgomery's style of compiling his
tory. In summing up the administration
of Jackson he says: "Seven Important
evente marked the administration of
Andrew Jackson. They were: (1) The
beginning of the system of removals
from government office for political
reasons; (2) the commencement of the
anti-slavery movement by William
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Gertrude Atherton., author of "Tower
of Ivory."
Lloyd Garrison; (3) The overthrow of
the United States bank; (i) the dispute
over the protective tariff, and the 'nul
lification' of acts of congress by South
Carolina; (5) rise of the Whig party;
(ft) Indian wars in the south and west;
(7) the rise of American literature anJ
the cheap newspaper." Here are facts
boiled down and so clinched ' together
they can never -be forgotten. In this
way the entire subject la treated. Bo
sldes the history proper, the book con.
tains the constitution of the United
States, several valuable tables, a group
than tha men and women we see uround
us ourselves. Incidentally the story
perhaps gives us the closest study of a
young Englishman that any novelist has
attempted In a great many years. Here
Mrs. Atherton knows thoroughly what
she Is doing. She has lived a very
long time' In England, and to good ad
vantage, and the extent and accuracy
of her knowledge of the English Is
shown by the fact that no other Ameri
can novelist meets with the same re
ception from them. The scene of the
new novel Is laid partly In Munich,
partly In London and partly In the
English country. It Is possible that
Mrs. Atherton knows Munich even bet
ter than she does London. At any rate
her description of life In this artistic
capital will be a revelation to many
who know only Its outer setting. As
a story of modern life and character,
Mrs. Atherton's recent work will more
than sustain the high reputation earned
by her previous works. The Macmlllan
Co., Price $1.60.
convey a living picture In 14 lines must
be possessed with the power of tha
real poet,, and h Is Mr, Venable has
done. , The sonnets are not entirely
confined to describing features, of the
beauty-and life of Florida for a num
ber art ascribed to various persons,
many of whom theiwielvea confined
much Of their work to this mods of ex
pression, as Milton, '-, Sllakerpeara,
Wordsworth and other English - poets.
Richard O. Badger company, A Price
l.oo. .. v, . ' :
"Dick of tha Everglades," by A. W.
Dlmock A boys' book, full tO tha
covers, with tha most delightful adven
tures In (hat weird, uncanny, llttl.0 ex
plored, but quit remarkable country,
tha . J3verglade of ; Florida. Two
schoolmates, - through their honorable,
upright conduct, gained tha' goodwill of
their parents and teachers, and aa very'
good tory writer ntuit arrange it, .re
ceived their reward. In this instanoe
tha boys are , allowed to undertake a
canoe trip through the Intricate water,
ways of tha Everglades, where they
meet with all sort of experiences, run
ning upon strange animals, and under
going . privations and great dangers.
Nor do they escape , several real trage
dies,, and they makemany hair-breadth
escapes. . The book nds with a fina
climax and the reader must rank tha
boys real heroes. The book la well Il
lustrated. Frederick A. Stokes Co.
Price 1.60.
Houghton Mifflin Co., publish the
first of their spring books on Saturday,
February It, with the following' list:
"Little Brother o' Dreams," a tender
poetical story by Mrs. Elaine Ooodale
Eastman: "John Foray th's Aunts," by
Miss EUxa Orne White; "The Earliest
Sources for the Life of Jesus," by Prof.
Francis C Burkitt of Cambridge, Eng
land; "Faul and Paullnlsm," by Dr,
James Moffatt; "Church and Labor," by
Charles Stelzle; "The Principles of Edu
cation," by Prof. William C. Ruedlger
of George Washington University: 'The
First Book of Stories for the Story-
Teller," by Miss Fanny H. Coe; and
school editions of "Llttle-FOlk Lyrics,"
by Frank Dempster Sherman; "Old
Balrnda In Prose," by Miss Eva March
Tappan, a translation of tha "Aeneld"
by Theodore C. WUHsms, ' and Mrs.
Gasklll's "Cranford."
PLAYS AND
PLAYERS
"Changing Voices," by R. D. Brodle
This Is a collection of about 20
poems of more or less length, but none
over two or threo pages long. The
book takes Its title from the first poem
which la only a sonnet, but Is sweet
and sympathetic enough to deserve the
title page, though It Is not the only
one with those characteristics. The
"Three Tears Behind the-Guns" Is to
be put Into emboesed type for the blind.
This Is the story of tho experiences of
runaway sailor, lad on the Olympla;
and It was of this book that Admiral
Dewey wrote to the publishers: "I oaa
vouch for many of tha facts; and the
description of the battle of Manilla
Bay Is one of the best I have ever seen
published." The Century Co.
The seriousness with which teachers
and educators are devoting themselves
to the problem of maintaining better
health conditions In schools is demon
strated by the eagerness with which
they are attacking the most helpful
literature on the subject. Allen's
Faversham'a repertolra xt aeason
will lnolufle a tnuslo drama, ,
' 1. . . ' as., f' ' ' 1
" New Tork haa " 102 moving picture
theatres and Chicago haa in.
Rosa Melvllla haa bought an orchard
In California.
e
The City." Clyde ntch'a laat play,
Is to be seen In Paris.
Billy B. Van has promlaed to shlv
'Tatsy Bolivar" forevar, (
e
Dorothy Morton Is to maka a tour of
tho west In "Tha Widow Jonet."
e -
Tha Climax- la to ba produoed In
London wltn Maria Doro In tha leading
Pt. ...
Charles Frohman la going to produoe
:hantlcUr" next fall In Nw Tork. Bos
ton and Chicago.
e
Oscar Wilde's play. "Tha Duchess of
Padua," is to ba produced in ixmaon
next sesson by QeoYge Alexander.
-Thd rwn of a Tomorrow," In which
Eleanor Robeson has been starred, will
be produced in Berlin aoon.
virrtnl Thornton will succeed
Prlscllla Krentes as leading woman with
the Lyric Stock company. .
Hartford will not stand for nasty
show posters. This waa well sei rorin
in the action of the police In tearing
down posters sdvertislng "The (jueen
of the Moulin Rouge." Hartford Times.
John Howard Payne, author 6f "Home,
Sweet Home," was the first actor born
In America who ever played Hamlet, It
Is said. He waa the original boy Ham
let, having played the part at the age
of 17, at the Park theatre. New Tork,
In May. 1809.
Francis Wilson may write another
play for himself when ha concludea to
give up playing "The Bachelor's Baby,"
which met with great success.
Henry E. Dlxey will appear during the
coming season In an adaptation from a
German play under the management of
Walter N. Lawrence.-
Augustus Thomas Is at present work-
Ing upon a play which will treat of
racial hatred In a novel way, aad prom
ises to ba aa Interesting a drama as
Bernstein's "Israel," or Zangwlll'a "Tha
Melting Pot."
e
Olga Netheraola wlU have a spring
eason In London, opening In May. Later
ha may maka an extended tour of the
larga cities of South America.
Tha Idea of a play in which all tha
characters are birds, as in "Chantlder,"
Is by no means new, for in the aixteanth
cantury, "Aesop's Crow" was performed,
and In it tha actors appeared aa birds.
Naslmova'a repertolra in New Tork
next month will Include three Ibsen
dramas. "Little Eyolf." "Lady Ingra of
Ostrat." and "The Wild Duck" 'The
Fairy Tale." by Snltiler "An Ideal Life."
by Marco Prago. and "The Saa Gull."
by Anton Tchekoff.
e
Henry B, Harris has signed contracts
with Charles Klein to write a play for
Ross SUhl. who Is now playing her
fourth aeason In "The Chorus Lady."
Miss Stahl will appear In New Tork in
tha aprlng of 1911 in her new play.
"Actors did remarkable things In the
days of variety," aald Jimmy Powers.
"You had your specialty, of course,
which consisted probably of songs and
dances and a monologue. Tou knew that
but they had what they called after
pieces, and everyone had to take part In
the arterpieoe. This afterpiece was
never put down on paper, and at theTe
hearaal you Just had to fig re it out for
yourself."
N. C. Goodwin will resume profes
sional activity late In March In the title
role of "An Old New Yorker," a com
edy by Harrison Rhodes and Thomas A.
Wise, authors of 'a Gentleman From
Mississippi." Mr. Goodwin will first
appear In this play la Los Angeles, A
tour of the Pactflo coaat cltlea will fol
low, and tha New Tork city reentree of
Mr. Goodwin la dated for mlU-8eptem-ber.
William Collier will maka a trans
continental tour. Collier's newest com
edy sucoess, called "A Lucky Star," Is
ona of the pronounoad hits of tha New
Tork aeason,
-a a
"My new play," said David Warfleld,
"is by Mr. Belasco and ona Of tha young
er Da MUlea. Tou remember that In the
old days Belasco and Da Mills wrote
some of tha best successes of the old
Lyceum company. Tha theme la a beau
tiful, poetlo one, modern, and at the
ama time fanciful and romantic. It
will ba In a sense, A. dream play. My
own character will likewise partake of
tha fantastic."
e
For next season Mrs. Leslie Carter
haa In mind a new play adapted from
the Spanish of Jose Echegoray. It Is a
modern realistic drama of much force
and Intensity, she asserts, and It will
make a good vehicle for her talents.
Underhlll Is making the adaptation of
tne piece, -meres anomer piay, saia
Mrs. Carter, "which I may do. Mme.
Sarah Bernhardt haa been good enough
to offer it to me, and It Is one in which
she haa appeared, though It haa never
been played in this country."
The careless people who speak of the
players ss puffed up sometimes are
sheer slanderers. Even when they tell
the truth they do not take the trouble
to Inquire Into the reason for the phe
nomenon. The actor la apt to be puffed
up not with pride or notoriety, as Is
supposed, but from the sheer labor and
bulk of carrying so many characters
around Inside of him. Multiply Jekyll
Hyde by the number or weeks in s
H BAKER
Civics and Health (Ginn and company),
an extremely practical work pertaining
to the health needs of schools, towns
and cities, Is becoming familiar to
thousands of teachers all over the
United States. It haa already been of
ficially adopted In the teachers' reading
clrcues of 14 state's.
nt n,i..tinn. r.rfinin. t.. ,.h r,riH poems may fall a good deal short of
and division of the history, several I .classics, but what Is lacking In,
pages of topical analysis and a very
satisfactory index.
The book Is elaborately Illustrated
and Is rich In new and corrected miifi.
Ginn & Co. Price $1.00.
"Passers-By," by Anthony Partridge
"A passer-by," Ambrose muttered to
himself as he held his freshly filled
tum.bler to the light. "I drink to the
passer-by, to those who stop and bend
over anu are curious, to those who walk
on. to those who walk on and come
back." So said the poor hunchback,
Ambrose Drake, and gave title to the
story mat is as lntcrenting ana com
pelling as It Is well written. While not
Btrhtly within the Sherlock Holmes
i lass of detective stories, "Passers-By
combines a etrong detective feature with
romance and tragedy.
The story opens with the Introduction
of the girl Christine, the hunchback, and
the monkey Chicot, as they jjlant their
little street piano in the passage-way
of a London street one dark, rainy
night, hoping that, while the hunchback
plays and the girl sings the monkey may
gather up a few pennies in his hat frdm
the passers-by,, to keep body and sou
together, it is an incongruous group
and the reader recognises it, even before
a young man looks out of the window
and exclaims: "Tha girl, the hunchback
and the monkey! In London of all
places!" Later In the "evening he took
down the receiver and rung up the Mar
quis of Elllngham, giving to tho English
lord, with whom he had no acquaint
ance. this Information: "I saw a 'dark'
haired girl singing in the streets, a
nuncnoacx ana a monxey. within a
few pages the fact Is revealed to tho
reader that this odd group had tramped
to London in search of some ona tho
girl wanted to find, and the some one
was this English lord, out ' of whose
paralyzed hands had dropped the re
celver when he heard that they were In
London. The story, which Is rapidly
told from that on, is v not of lta own
making, but Is -principally the sequence
of an unfortunate tragedy that had
occurred In Paris a year or two be.
fore. It was a tragedy that sent Chris.
tine wandering . tho streets with the
hunchback and his monkey, that WTccked
other lives and put the most noted de
tecvtlve of Paris on the trail of all of
them. But what tho tragedy was, or
who tho real motors were, one must
read to the very end to find out, for it la
one of the most delicately illusive
stories that was ever written. The
author never onca makes the mistake of
rough treatment, or blunders into the
error of disclosing a clue. He simply
plays with his readers as the good fish
erman (loos with his trout, leading It
up to the bait, but never landing it till
just the right moment.
Of all the characters in the book, the
hunchback is tho most interesting, and
strongly reminds one of several hunch
backs of earlier fiction. He is tho ab
ject Blave of Christine, who little appre
ciates his doglike devotion, and while
the reader can despise him for some
things, they could cry over him for oth
ers. The story -carries no moral and
It would bo hard even to find a lesson,
but it is intensely interesting, full of
animation, and moves to a finish In a
masterly way. The book Is well bound
with appropriately mbossed cover de
sisrn, and It has numerous Illustrations.
Little, Brown & Co, Price $1.60.
"Tha Tower of Ivory," by Gertrude
Atherton. The easiest way to describe
Mrs. Atherton's new book Is perhaps
to state what it 1s not., Emphatically,
it Is not a problem novel, a sociologi
cal novel, an historical novel, nor any
of the other peculiar forms of novel
that at one tlma or another of recent
years have had so much of the public's
attention. I . '
It is, however, a real novel, a story
of people Whom Mrs. Atherton has'
mgde more real and, more significant
high literary perfection is more than
compensated for in the strong human
appeal they make upon the heart of the
reader. In almost every poem tho au
thor shows a strong religious senti
ment, and an implicit faith In the real
ities of the heavenly world. Some of
tho poems are narrative and a few have
special significance, although making
a very desirable little book. Richard
G. Badger company. Price $1.00. J
"True Detective Stories" Told by a
former chief of United States secret
service, A. L. Drummond. The author i
has seen' many, many years of active
service in protecting the lites and I
property of citizens from the criminals, 1
be they murderers, counterfeiters or
plain thieves. In tils preface he says:
"For almost 40 years, I have been en1
gaged In the business of running down
criminals, In 1871, I Joined In a sub
ordinate capacity the United States se
cret service. When, In 1894, I resigned
from the employ of the government, I.
was chief of the service. Since then, I
have been at tho head of a detective
agency of my own In New York.
"These stories, for the most part, re
late to events that occurred while I
was connected with the government
service. Many are stories about coun
terfeiters. In the days following the
civil war, the biggest, grainiest crim
inals in the country wefe engaged in
tho making of spurious money and
bonds. Counterfeiting has now dwin
dled to unimportant proportions, and
the 'present generation has little con
ception of tho magnitude of the opera
tions of thoaet old-time swindlers. They
were crafty resourceful men, some of
whom did not hesitate to attempt mur
der when they felt the . halter of the
law tightening about them.
'I wish to add a word about the last
story in this book: 'Three Women and
a Man. It is so astonishing a nar
rative that when these stories were
published aerially in the newspapers
throughout tho country, many persons
had difficulty in believing that three
such women could have existed. Truth,
indeed. Is stranger than fiction. This
story Ilka all the others is absolutely
true."
The atorles bear the stamp of truth
while they are hardly believable
upon every page, for there Is the lack,
In all of them, of tha dramatic climax
professional writer of fiction would I
have given them. This would natural
ly bo the result In tho work of a man
of action, rather than of letters, who
had an immense amount of raw ma
terial be wished to work un. and whose
Jhly desire was to tell the truth, and
keep within )the limits of a given num
ber of pages. The stories also seem to
be utterly without coloring, and so un
finished with so many "half told tales,"
that the clever fiction writer might
glean a wealth of Incidents upon which
to found Innumerable stories, if he
wished to take advantage of Mr. Drum
mohds' experience. This style of nar
rative would be . very objectionable In
ordinary fiction, but. where only truth
meant to bo told, it enhances the
value of ' the tales and stamps their
honesty upon them. There are 17 of
them in this volume, and it only re-1
mains to the individual taste to decide
which Is the best George W. Dilling
ham company, Prlca $1.60.
mm f in iiijn,iiiiwiiiiiiiwmwiiiiJinw;'..'J')lil yi "
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BUNGALOW I
THEATRE
ToSw March 7
H. Godfrey Turner, Presents
WORLD'S GREATEST
WOMAN VIOLINIST
ffi)
MAUD
HEL
Assisted by
Waldemar Liachowsky, Pianist.
n Lower floor, $2.00,
VrtrDQ $1-50 and $1.00. Bal
I I llXOcony, $1.50 and $1.00.
MM Gallery. 75c:
Seats Now Selling at Theatre.
THEATRE
Oeo. L. Baker, Sen. Mgr.
All Week Beginning Matinee Today
Sunday, March 6, 1910
ev GeoO-Baker
With ESTHA
WILLIAMS
EDWIN
and a Strong
WALTER.
Cast, Including
A New Four-Act Comedy Drama
Stirring and Picturesque. Full of Love. Romance and Bright Comedy.
A Magnificent Pictorial View of California.
EVENING PRICES, 25c, 50c, 75c. $1.00. SUNDAY AND
SATURDAY MATINEES, 25c, 50c. WEDNESDAY BARGAIN
MATINEE, 25c. ALL SEATS RESERVED.
Next Week:. The House of a Thousand Candles
r
BUNGALOW
THEATRE
18TH A.JTD VOIUUSO
Phones Xaln 117 A-4334
GRAND OPERA SEASON
S.Tfc TUESDAY, MARCH 8
MATINEES THURSDAY AND SATURDAY
LAMBAMM G1AM
OPEEA COMPANY
REPERTOIRE
Tuesday Madam Butterfly
Wednesday. . Cavalleria Rusticana
and Pagliacci
Thursday Matinee ..Lucia
Thursday Aida
Friday Rigtoletto
Sat. Matinee. . .Madam Butterfly
Saturday . . y II Trovatore
PRICES
Both Evening and Matinea.
Lower floor ..$2.50, $2 00
Balcony $2.00, $1.50
Gallery (no reserve) ...$1.00
DAXLY XATZmBX 16a, 05- 60.
(Holiday Matinees, aright Prloes.)
Beginning
Monday Matinee
w r
Phones Mam 6. A 1020
ADVANCED
VAUDEVILLE
Week Mar. 7
OHXT APFEABA.NCS IN VAXTDETHXB OT
Madame Mauricia Morichini
Prima Donna Mannattaa Grand Opera Sonsa,
Obatelot, Paris
XTsw Tork, anA Tbeatra
The Devil, fbe Servant and
(he Han
A BBUCATZO IJTCIDEHT
DAW GHABI.ES
Avery and Uart
The Sunny Comedians
Allen Wightman
Clay Modler and Pastel Painter
Salllvan and Pasqoelena
In a Comedy Sketch
"A O. O. S. PACKAGE"
First American Tour of
Berg's Six Merry Girls
An European Feature in 3 Scenes
Altus Brothers
Club Jugglers Extraordinary
SPECIAL PBZCEO MATZSTEB TODAT, S5o AUTO 800
Evening Prices: 15c, 25c, SOc, 76c
DATJCT MATXWEB 16o, 85o, BOo. (Holiday Matinees KlTi Prices.)
125-Peoplc-125 45-Own 0rchestra-45
"Florldlan Sonnets," by William
Henry Venable To ona . who la fa
miliar with Florida, Its Inviting
coast and languid atmosphere, this
collection of 86 sonnets will be
a treat and a delight for the au
thor has a poetic vision and the pen to
draw the pictures pe sees. Whil the
popularity of the sonnet may have
waned .somewhat from tha day of
Shakespeare when the literary world i
waa sonnet mad; tha fact nevertheless
remains that it is a very attractive
style of verse, and the ana who can
2Qth Century Thriller
Aeroplane
Automobile Race
SUNDAY AT THE AVIATION MEET
Take Special Trains at Union Depot or Street
rs
Hamilton Will Fly
Sunday and Monday
GENERAL ADMISSION $1.00
32
3SSSR
PANTAGES THEATRE
Advanced Vaudeville
Stars of All Nations
Week Commencing Monday Matinee, March 7
SPECIAL ATTRACTION EXTRAORDINARY
wtaa's
I . m-mm mm,
Living Reproductions of Famous Paintings.
Joe and Ola Hayden
tn
"The Upper Ten and the Lower
Five."
The Hrdlickas
Lyric and Operatic Vocalists.
Pantagescope
'ic
Latest Animated Events.
Eretto Brothers
Novelty Equilibrists.
Musical Montgomery's
Novel Instrumentalists.
Pantages Orchestra
H. K. Evenson, director-
Popular Prices. Matinee Daily. Curtain 2:30, 7:30 and 9.
stock season and you will begin to Ap
preciate tha horrid truth lxs Angeim
Herald. , - , . .
Charles Frohman announces that he U
to have a theatre on tha steamship
Mauretania. It will soon be poestblrt
while at sea1 to do about averythtnx
one does at home except shovel snow
from, tha sidewalks in tha winter and
mow tha lawn in the summer. Alt of
this is according to tha Chtcaffo Record
Herald, which, however, neglects to men
tion tha fact that Mr, Frohman tried the
experiment wrn tha Maria Doro com
pany of "Tho Climax" was crossing and
all of the members wera too seasick to
leave their staterooms, much less give a
performance.
GRAND
VAUDEVILLE
Week March 7
Girlish Novelty in
Black and White
THE
LANTASTIC
HANTOMS
WITH
Hilarion and Rosalie
Cahallos
SPECIAL
ADDED ATTRACTION
The Balton Troupe
8 CHARMING WOMEN 6
Aerial Sensations)
Reese Proser
Assisted by Helen Reed. A
Delightful Vocal and
Minstrel Offering.
Smith and Harris
In their Scenic Travesty
"AT THE NORTH POLE"
Pete Baker
The Famous Dialectician.
Kelley & Wentworth
"The VILLAGE LOCKUP"
GRANDASCOPE
OH JOYTHEATRE
afOBBXSOir, STBAB TXXBD ST.
jJirection or
FHOTX.WB AlaTJBBMinre CO.
3upplled exclusively by tha Amal
gamated Film Exchange, 141 H
Fourth st.
Pictures That Please
and Educate
PROGRAM
STARTING TOMORROW
SUNDAY, MARCH 6
INDUSTRIES
OF SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
Showing Ostrich and Alligator
farming ;
JOSEPH SOLD BY
HIS BROTHERS
Story of Biblical Beauty
THE DOOR
A Comedy
BRITTANY LASSIES
For Young and Old
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Haba-Haba
Special Engagemoit of tha Sirs
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MR. AL SOTHER 3
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Shows Start at It a. m. f
Bun Continuously to It p. m, I
, 100 AWT 1BAT 10a H
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