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2 TOLSTOI'S FUNERAL WILL BE SIMPLE Public May Pay Respects, but Flowers Nor Ceremony Will Be Permitted COUNTESS' GRIEF IS PITIABLE Author Will Be Buried Beneath 'Poverty Oak' on Estate as He Had Requested (Continued from Page One) Wife, having been admitted previously. Tolstoi was then unconscious, and revived. Members of the clergy in the last days made pressing attempts to Rain en trance to the sick room, with a view to Inducing him to n turn to the amis of the church, but the doctors re pulsed them on the ground that their patient was too ill to receive them. The emperor and his ministers are anxious that Tolstoi shall be buried . with the rites of the church, but the holy synod is strongly against this, and probably he will be buried without the administration of such rites unless the emperor commands otherwise. Popular feeling universally is for a I religious funeral, and never before was] there such confusion and bewilderment over the body of a great man who was regarded by the world as one of the Bincerest of Christians. 'TOLSTOI'S SPIRIT STRONGER THAN BAYONETS'.-GEORGE \K\V YORK. Nov. 2(l.—CnriKressmnn . elect Henry George, jr., had this to say tonig-ht on the action of the orthodox church in refusing to lift the ban of excommunication from Tolstoi: "One of the greal lights Of t!;.~ v/orld poes out with Tolstoi, and despite the burning of his books, despite his ex communication and the decree that his body shall not be buried in consecrated ground, the .soul of Leo Tolstoi will be enshrined in the hearts of the great multitude of Russians. "In life they could and did si ize his intimate friends, one by one, and send them out of the province of Tula, and si me were sent even into Siberia, but they dared . t lay a finger on the frail IWe Clothe I I The Family I ■ From Head! I To Foot I Have just what you I I want in Men's, Young I I Men's and Boys' Suits, I Overcoats, Hats and I Also the nobbiest I Suits, Coats, Hats and I I Shoes for Ladies', Wo- ■ H men's and Girls' Wear. I I Styles Newest and Best, Qualities Unexcelled, Prices Lowest. Buy your Thanksgiv- I I ing Clothes here for the I I whole family and charge I them. Pay a small sum I down—the balance at I your convenience. I Every father and I I mother—every man and I M women should have a I a charge account here. I M Makes your holiday I buying easy. Try it I I Men's Suits, $15 to $28 I. Men's O'coats, $10 to $25 I Men's Hats, $1.50 to $4 I Ladies' Suits, $15 to $35 B Ladies' Coats, $12 to $25 i I Ladies' Hats, $3 to $12 H I Outfitting Co. I j5 H. W. Boyd, Mgr. I 408 W. 7th St. I Open Saturday Night TOLSTOI FLUNG ASIDE MEDICAL ATTENDANTS LONDON. Nov. —A special dispatch from St. ivtersbnrg to the Time* say* thai during the- M>rond attack Tolstoi tried to rise and filmic a»lde his medical attendants, who were forcibly holding him ilnnn. Mr declined to breathe the .>»)riii which they attempted to admin ister, I lien morphine wan Injected, lie fell into a doze. Mr. MurfcoTlntlhj wanted to remove him l» smother lied and the count, after ilrmiirriiiu. cnnwntwl, saving: ■•!>«• what you will; it Is all the SMM to me." old man whose wnnls were peace and brotherly love. "To him who had strucV him on the cheek he would have turned the other. His spirit was stronger than bayonets, and his death will be mourned all over the planet." FORBID THEATERS TO CLOSE MOBCOW, Nov. 20.—The police today forbade the theaters from suspending their performances because of the death 5f ('mint Tolstoi. Nevertheless, the playhouses were closed, as the armors refused to appear. At the Moscow Armenian church a public re quiem w as permitted. ARIZONA PUTS MILLION ACRES IN SCHOOL FUND New State Will Own About Half Its Land and Have Short est Constitution PHOENIX, Ariz., Nov. 20.— Ari zona constitutional convention will en ter upon Its final period tomorrow for the actual drifting of the organic law of the new state. All proposed parts of the constitution not yet considered must be passed upon, this week so that, the remainder of the time, which ex pires December 10, may be given to re vision and final adoption, it is proba ble that during the week the conserva tives will make their promised effort to have the recall measure reconsidered and made a matter of separate submis sion In the endeavor to prove their i claim that only a minority of the ter ritory favors the recall applied to the judiciary. Supporters of the recall measure as tentatively adopted assert that the attempt of the opposition will prove futile, though there are many who believe otherwise. , Although numerous so-called radical provisions have been adopted, the con stitution will not be a lengthy docu ment, and from present indications for brevity it will compare favorably with the shortest of state constitutions. Final completion will probably show it to be less than a third the size of that of Oklahoma, and containing compara tively little of purely legislative matter. Of interest tomorrow will be the re port of the state and school lands com mittee, which will recommend the con servation of a million acres of land which will be the apportionment of the new state. The committee will recom mend that no public lands be told for twenty-five years, except irrigated land which has been under cultivation five years prior to the adoption of the constitution, and this is to be sold to the highest bidder. The estimated value of this land is a million dollars. The enabling act places the minimum limit of price on public land at S3 an acre, and provides that no water power sites shall be sold for five years. The state will own, after admission to the Union, about 10.000,000 acres of land, and with the natural forests about half the entire area of the state will be comprised in conserved lands. Impor tant measures to bo considered this week are legislative apportionment, bill of rights, and the educational and the municipal government bills, the lat ter providing lor a freeholders' charter in every city over 3500 population. WOMAN CAUSES ARREST OF PURSUING DETECTIVES PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 20.—L. Stod dard, who claims to be a Seattle de tective, was arrested and put in the city jail tonight on a warrant charging him with an assault today on Mrs. Althea Walker. Shortl" utter il p. m. the local repre sentative of the detective agency by which Stoddard Is employed appeared at the jail and furnished bonds of 1600 for Stoddard's appearance. Stoddard asserts the woman who tn spir d his arrest is the Mrs. Althea Walker who was under citation to have appeared Saturday last in the federal court lor the district of Utah to show cause why she should not be punished for contempt in secreting • I s belonging to the estate of her hUßband, David F. Walker, said to amount to $1,000,000. DETECTIVE MAKES DENIAL Stoddard claims the charge' against him is trumped up for the; purpose of enablin Mrs. Walker and her son, whom he followed from Seattle to Portland, to elude pursuit. He says ade no attack on the woman and 0 much as Within spoak- Ing distance of her. Stoddard says before he left the Union depot in this , Itv a man who claimed to be Mrs. Walker's attorney accosted him and demandeu that Stoddard disclose his Identity, thri atening him with arrest if he did not. Mrs. Althea Walker, according to an affidavit filed In the federal court at Suit Lain City November 7, had short ly bei date started for Seattle by . ' I With her were said to in her i ■ children, Clarence and Margaret Smoot Walker, and lUOOO.OOO tii belonging to the estate of I iia\ iv i . v. alker. FRESNO CALLS BOY SCOUTS )'i:i;. ■- >, Nov. 30.— Tha city and county school superintendents, the churches and the national guard officer* ing the organization "( a troop of Boy Scouts of America. The formation <<f two patrols wore efti today, one In a Presbyterian chap. I one hi a residence section. A Young Men's Christian Association patrol Is being d, and the city here i« enthusiast over the movement. JGIRL HAS LOVE SPAT; ENDS LIFE SEATTLE, Nov. Miss Jean Rutherford, aged 21, killed herself to day by saturating a silk kimono with chloroform and wrapping it about her bead. She had quarreled with her •heart Her parents live at Mar shall, Kan. LOS ANGELES HERALD: MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 21. 1910. SON DECLINES TO USE NAME TOLSTOI Offspring of the Russian Savant Quits Authorship Because of Father's Greatness (Associated ITess) PlTTSHl'i;<;, Nov. 20.—A recent in terview, and possibly tho last that a. newspaper correspondent had with Count Leo Tolstoi, lias been recounted by M. Arpad Passtor, a distinguished Hungarian author and journalist, to the Associated Press here. M. Passtor is editor of Azest, an evening paper of Budapest and In a tour around the world is now in Pitts burg for a brief study of conditions among Hungarians. Only two months ago, in September, M. Pasztor, proceeding by train from Moscow, dropped oft at Yasnaya Poli ana. :i little Village about two miles from the last railway station in the province of Tula. "It was a beautiful late summer day," ho said, "with everything still green and In blossom as I approached in | search of tho Tolstoi house. I located it, but 1 should have wild it was not a Russian home, for I observed that sev eral copies of the London Times lay on tho lawn. "I noticed that a lady sat on tho. veranda reading and 1 presumed that she was the Countess Tolstoi. If so I knew she was born German —the daugh ter of a German professor—and I ad dressed her in German, asking if I might see the great novelist. " 'Have you introductions?' she asked. | '■ 'No, madame, but are not his works introduction enough?' WOULD NOT DISTURB lU'SBAKD "'But,' she demurred, 'if that wore | the case our garden would be. crowded all the while. I am sorry; my husband is asleep now. From what country do you come?' " Hungary,' 1 replied. " 'Indeed? Our secretary, Markoviet sky, is Hungarian, too. You may speak with him. My husband is very old and weak and does not like to speak with visitors.' "At this she ushered me into the house, where I first met the novelist's eldest son, who is perhaps 46 years old. Learning that I was an author, he admitted he also wrote, but added that lie abandoned authorship because it seemed impossible to use the Tolstoi name, since his father had already made it famous. He said ho preferred to take up art and sculpture, and that he was studying with Rodin, the famous Parisian sculptor. "M. Markovletsky, the secretary, In terrupted at this moment. 11 'I know you want to see Tolstoi,' he said, 'but he Is asleep now, so let us walk through the garden.' IS SHOWN GARDEN "He took me through the forest of oaks, which Is the scene of the great storm in 'Anna Karenina,' and then through the great apple orchards, where he presented me with a Tolstoi apple and remarked: 'Tolstoi has the finest and largest apple orchard in Russia. His wife sells the product.' "At 6 o'clock our walk was inter rupted by the dinner bell, at which Markovietsky exclaimed: 'Tolstoi is awake now. We must go back.' He led me through the house, which is a very simple and poor place. There was no carpet on the floor; the walls were white and without a single pic ture. "On all sides were books, in every room, and little furniture other than plain chairs and tables. In a glimpse I had of Tolstoi's room I noted four or five pencils hanging 1 from strings at the head of the bed, and I asked what they might be for. " 'In the night,' said Markovietsky. 'Tolstoi often awakens with ideas, and he always writes them down. He says ideas are like mountains with a tip, and lie means not to miss the summit of tlum.' "A daughter who was picking mush rooms in the garden came in with a basketful of those delicacies just be fore dinner. Tolstoi was a strict vege tarian. I.KTTERS ARE PRKSFR\"ED " 'I am sorry I cannot ask you to dinner,' Markovietsky said, 'but such invitations belong to the wife.' "He. seated me in his own room, how ever, and while there I noted thousands of letters done up in packages of 100 or so. These, as was later explained, are sent every two months to the museum at Moscow. "While 1 was regarding? these things the door opened and a tall man en tered. From the white beard and hair and the peasant dress of blue trousers, Russian shirt and great boots, I knew at once it was Tolstoi. "He shook my hands and sat down opposite me. His eyes were such as one man out of ten thousand has— deep green eyes which penetrated one like the x-ray. He said: " 'You are Hungarian. I like Hun garians. My secretary is one, too. Where are you going?' " 'To Japan to Htudy art and to America to study immigration,' I re- X>l ied. '• 'Art! Who knows what art is? What is your profession?' " "A writer," I answered. " 'And you write what?' •■ 'Plays for the theater.' " 'Oh, that's terrible!' he exclaimed. •No one should write a play. Many of them poison the -soul of the public. What other things do you write?' " 'Poems.' "And at this the aged novelist clasped his hands and wrung them in despair, " 'Poems? Oh, you unhappy man. Why is a man writing poems if he can write prose? Why does he make a poison of his sentences by rhyme and rhythm?' ■• 'This is the case in Russia, too, but I think in a hundred years from now it will be a crime to own land here, All the lands and fields will be common for the people. An Ameri can, Dr. Eliot (president emeritus of Harvard), has the best ideas on this subject. Have you road him? No? I am sorry, then, for you.' "With this the aged novelist cut short the Interview by asking to be excused. " 'I am very old and tired and some times I am weak. Today is a very bad day, I must go.' •He shook hands and was gone. "Secretary Markovietsky returned to me, and I plied him with Questions about Tolstoi's daily life. "He paid: 'He is up every morning and eats little breakfast. He walks alone or rides horseback to the poor Russian villages. One often sees him halt In the road, and. pulling pencil and paper from his pocket, make note* of his thoughts. His happiest moment* are when poor villagers come to him as Judge of sumo dispute' "I asked Markovietsky about the Imperial family's attitude toward Tolstoi. "'lt is not true," lie said, 'that the czar and the Imperial family ore en emies to Tolstoi, The emperor likes him ami is proud that ho is a Russian. i think the Grand Duke Michael often pays a visit to Tolstoi's house.' " SHIPS OFF PUGET SOUND STRIKE 42-MILE GALE SEATTLE, Nov. 50.—A "terrlflf »tonn t« raging oft* the Washington coast and In the olnUt of .luftn <le liira. At 9 o'clock thl* morning the marine observ atory on Tatloooh Island at the entrance of the strait reported a forty-lwo-inlle gale, with the wind Increasing. Shortly after Oil* report the wire* to the station went down and no further report* have been received. Incoming vessels hail great difficulty In maintain ing liead«a> off the'rape. AMUSEMENTS JSSAHGELES VSSHfii Spring Street, Near Fourth —The Home of Variety . COMMENCING THIS AFTERNOON iJLl^j Another Great llSr Variety Show • JP^F That'll Be the jlilil^ Talk o' the Town jWIVWW^ FRANKLYN ARDELL & CO. tlht M f JWVI? C HPKI In th<? hilarious an.l timely political com s%Lj!lM& Ea»er^M THE SUFFRAGETTE" IEP rot ir -^— B^srr* r ROLAND CARTER & CO. 1 Jt?ii^?k M s*" fejt I In l!l<> humorous "Insrlng travesty, WllPll HI "VACATION TIME" ■ I 9 8 SNwB w I ■—ewar—K -i ||| ii l II^SJ "The Marie Tempest of Vaudeville." BqE =2= : - I KATE FOWLER //■ft L.. ■ ■ : 1 in a "somewhat different" planologue. *Cr~T~ =*= ==- Tl England's Foremost Impersonator, Ihf-f - I « ! ! I[| HETTY URMA Ihf j|~ _ _ _ - . _ y\ In her famous characterizations. ' i^fc d! 111 '- M CHRISTY & LEE MM II II'" — — ]- " ' \)\ The Melodious Novelists AHp = ijsP ALEX BRISSON ffll&l f™ ' Europe's Sensational Contortionist /^/P t^-) THE LAUGH-O-SCOPE Matinee Every Day—2 Shows Every Night at 7 :30 and 9 3 Complete Shows Thanksgiving Night %VW^Kl^.ttS^^\%^(^ sl'rlne "*- Between Second and Third. Wl^i>^W%^^m^l Matinee I-ifrj Day at 2:15. THE STANDARD OF VAUDEVILLE New Bill Starting Matinee Today ATT r^ TTC HP A f AUGUSTA * vjrJL/v-/^X-/ >^^^ >^v Whose dainty Pianologues and Spoken Songs /""" "* , \\ have made Her Famous. Her First Appear .^lili**^ J§^.iA^ ancc here in Some Years. Presenting "Flinders' Furnished Willard Simms C& Co. Flat" a wall-papca Bpreßm. Nothing Vv lllard Simms Coj* uo. gg-w ™j>» »'«« daj-- ono Ever lieen to Europ* and had experiences . , , — **/*. g-\ with "The Continental Walter"? Come and VZt-tiqcpl I KsrOS Cat* LO. catch a Ellmpae of his raasniflccnt stupid- OpiSOCll JJIUO.WUB V^V/. ity. ; — _«-. " When your wife sends YOU on "A Shop nPl-llTf»r»<»f^76 lvTaHiCnn ping Tour" you feel about as silly as Madl -1 nUrDCrW* IlldUlOUll J on do , i In this decidedly original skit. "Marsa Shelby's Chicken Dinner" Is a real _ « ■!_> T X J-. A__ fTt\ f* r\ vaudeville classic. You must not miss the I Onn Jt . WaUCbOovU' last opportunity of seeing It. J This city had Us boom, but It wasn't ii Quinn C& Mitchell, are cl T^'. N whyiid th.s Tha e ctLai a ds^^'; "*^ ■ " funny. "ttrcat!" Is the one fit adjective to apply «*-. --!•%«. TV/Tot*fir^O to these magnificent aerialists, who simply i£lQ X 1 lying iVl£irLlllO have no ecuals. 7*^ •» cs gs^?_sLa fortajada S»_gyj= 'ng The Latest—ORPHEUM MOTION PICTURES— Finest EVERY KIOHT, lOC sr,e, 60c, 75c. MATINEE 8:15 DAILY, inc. 25c, 50c. B™ H? 1 ACti^OTHt FOREMOST STOCK DELL A3 W W COMPANY OF AMERICA TONIGHT—FIRST TIME ON ANY TONIGHT LEWIS S STONE and the Belaico theater company will present LJEIL.A BURTON WELLS' New Military Play, | THE CASE OF SERGEANT WILDE | EVERT POPULAR BELASCO PLAYER IN THE 810 CAST— A * SCENIC PRODUCTION OF UNEXAMPLED EXCELLENCE— PLAY FULL OP STIRRING SCENES AND STRONG SITUATIONS WITH A POWERFUL LOVE STORY—THE IIEAI. ATMOSPHERE OF THE UNITED STATES ARMY THROUGHOUT. SPECIAL THANKSGIVING DAY MATINEE Regular Kelasco prices: Nights. 260, 50c and Tsci Matinees Thanksgiving Day (THI'RSUAY), Saturday and Sunday, "55c and 50c _!.__ NFXT ■ WEEK—BLAN«:iIE WALSH'S GREATEST SUCCESS. "THE TEST." w h LEWIS B. STONE in his original role o( Richard Tretman. Seats on sale THIS HORNING. HAMBURGER'S MAJESTIC THEATER h___? A LOS ANGELES' LEADING PLAYHOUSE—OLIVER MOBOSCO, Mgr. The Me**™, Shubert present c^Vlme. NAZIMOVA (Supported by the WAZIMOVA THEATER COMPANY.) Tonight, Tuesday Nigh, and We,!. Mat.-Ib..n'. > "LITTLB BTOLP"- (F»Wt *""* her.). i ( -_ i ,1 q'hurti vi..hn and Thurs. Mat.-—lbsen « A J>Ol_l_ S HOU-br.. m anddSat. N?ghW and Sat. Mat-Schnltzler's "THE FAIRY TALE" (First time here). BEGINNING MONDAY EVENING, NOV. 28 * SEATS ON HAKE THURSDAY » WILLIAM F AVERS HAM Supported by MISS JULIE OPP » nd «'■ Company In THE WORLD AND HIS WIFE I By Charles Frederick Nlrdllnger. Gt->amt-\ niili-TPA unilCC Matinees Tomorrow, Tbnrs. and tat. RAND OPfc-RA HOUbH . phones: Main 1067, Home AIBB7. ITS A TREMENDOUS SUCCESS FERRIS ""•' hl " •uP' rb ""ompany present the THE SPRING HARTMAN tamo»* "»>»''» l "mi* •'"■ CHICKEN 1111. SPECIAL MATINEE THANKM.n INri DAY. SEATS ABE NOW ON SALE. LTT\/V'C PAT?I7 PHANTANT 3:30-5:30: 6:30-8:30; 10:30-12:30. ii, V I_■ CAr li< -.fIAX^ lAIN 1 Third and Main Sts. Tables Reserved. THE M\HIMH» BAND, from the Amazon; i.ii.i.v LILLIAN, Operatic Canta til,- from the Grand Opera. Vienna; THE PROCINI XRIO, from I.a Scala The. atari JK6SIU STAFFORD, Wlilnlllnu •■antatrice. AN OUCHESTKAIi mOOKAM AT 1.1 NCII AM) TEA MEN OF GUTHRIE OPPOSE PLAN TO MOVE CAPITAL GUTHRIE, Okla., Nov 20.—At a meeting of th« Outhrle chamber of commerce today if was decided to abandon legal obstructionnry tactics and center the fight against the re moval of the state capital on the spe cial session of the legislature, called to meet In Oklahoma City November 28. A legislative committee was appointed and plans were made for raising a cam paign fund. Authority was granted to put into operation an alliance with Muskogce and other cities that are in the fight. Telegrams to several of the cities went out tonipht. \_-. AMUSEMENTS ; ' • '/:■ rpHE AUDITORIUM i"^» Bi!- *" *' "SSSS llSiliJP' Tomorrow /^^^^-~~, Afternoon I'/ /^^L- f^T-x .■/ and Friday Afternoon \\L - I 18i3§»M T~i TTO OTA 'O M J^^s^S\ RUSSIAS \ r^Sl •fjfrtjefcDs^Rt f~* T2 "C A T*T3* OT* J^^^L^^Vi BAREFOOT isWzS&^ \ DANCER p^J^^'r^^^^ COUNTESS THAMARA S wirsky JsitiSijiS^TV aV\w/ A 1 In her famous claislc dances, with a Big fJl[/£^<QQ^ylft' \_J Orchestra under the .direction or (Avlwr /7\ ya Mr. Henry Ohlmeyer IT iVVjyt/ A^x/vyi Arturo Toscanlni of the Metropolitan VJyXji { lnL^\ \ Opera House says Thamara De Swlrsky t^V!*^ \ I possesses the "moat musical body" In I I WkjsjW Seats Now on Sale ( / Prices SOc, 75c, $1.00, $1.50 HP *nc audit6rium "THEATER . L. c BEHTSEER, tlr< AUJJIIUKIUM BEAirriFUI,." Mamager. "*• Fourth and Last Week of Dollar Opera Bevani Grand Opera Co. Tonight—LOVE TALES OF HOFFMAN With VICARINO, DE DREUZ, AL.BERTI. FLORIAN, SACCHETTI. TUES. AND THURS. EVES. AND SAT. MATINEE—ALL-STAR CASTS — PUCCINI'S MASTERPIECE. LA BOHEME Sat FAUST 1%. LUCIA £?• RIGOLETTO g£ LA TRAVIATA Thurs. TT TPfIViTnDU 1 - * (iREAT CHORUS THAT CAN SING. Ma 1L iKOVATORE POPULAR PRICES—2Sc, &oe. ««, »1.00. TWTT AITnTTniPTTTVr "THEATER I* E. BEHTMER, Mil, AUUIIUKIUM BEAVTIFt'I.." ' Manager. SEAT SALE OPENS THIS MORNING 4 Nights—2 Matinees—Nov. 30, Dec. 1, 2, 3 Manager Benymer Announces THE SEASON'S STELLAR ENGAGEMENT r^csr!*^***^ the Incomparable {^mtili Anna Parlowa and Mikail Mordkin , jifnOm'wl Supported by the Imperial Russian Ballet and the Metropolitan Opera *jy»Jr V House Orchestra From the Imperial Theaters of Moscow and St Petersburg _„..-,„.<; BALLET PANTOMIME LEGENDS AND CHARACTER DANCES. m?iAMNOWOKAT THEATER. PRICBB-»1.00, 11.60. »2.00. |I.SO AND $3.00. BOX AND LOGE CHAIRB $4.00 AND 15.00. - MOROSCO'S BURBANK THEATER M£Sl™£k LOS ANGELES' LEADING STOCK COMPANY, SPECIAL MATINEE THURSDAY—THANKBGIVINQ DAT I A PLAY THAT ECHOES I § WITH TRUMPETS % 4 AND DRUMS | A Play That Makes You Proud You're an American By Personal Arrangement with DAVID BELASCO DAVID WARFIELD'S Greatest Success I cA GRAND I ARMY MAN A Production That David Belasco Himself Would Be Proud Of The wonderful old G. A. R. Is rapidly pass- Ing away. This is a play that tells the younger generation of the spirit of the he roes of yesterday. It Is the only epic ever written of the men who marched wltn Grant. This Is the first time It ever has been offered at anything below »2 prices. DON'T FORGET THE SPECIAL MATINEE THURSDAY THANKSGIVING DAY Nights 25c, 50c, 76c. Matinees Thursday. Saturday, Sunday. 10c. Jsc'. 50c. NEXT WEEK—'"TEXAS" —A thrilling drama of the plains. Piiifr«^T?[! rnryc ATT?X> New. Cosy, Absolutely Fireproof. ANTAGES THEATER Broadway Between Fifth and Sixth. Unequaled Vaudeville—European and American Stars MATINEE TODAY 2:3O—TWICE NIGHTLY— IOc, 20c, 30c POPULAR PRICES—IOc, 20c, 30c ALFRED THE GREAT —1 Edwin Keough & Co. The Chimpanzee with a A flier With Helen Nelson Human Brain " -& In "A Bit of Blarney- Dally Btaj?e Receptions RhnW an «l t ' ,«• j«. it onow, Allen & Lee Billie and Maud Kellar Come Advanced comedians "Tho Matrimonial Agent" V->Uaa4O Delmar&Delmar - 1 I Plcture . Acrobats and Gymnasts ' —~' MASON OPERA HOUSE . . Wl x Sitli: l \ KB.V NIGHT THIS WEEK AND MATINEE SATURDAY. .M-Kt'IAI, TH^KSmVING DAY MATINEK THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 34. Follow the crowd and see the best ever. You must not fall to See Fortune Hunter wlth FRBD NIBI° "a epjjg JP OILLIIIC XXLIIILCI th« Original Company. PRICES 50C-TO 12.00. SEATS NOW ON BALE. > ■ L . -I, _._ • Corner Washington and Mala Sts. UNA PARK ' x In the Heart of Lot Angeles. NOW OPEN ATTRACTIONS Royal Hungarian Band Concerts Twlc. Miniature Railway. . Dally. The Diving Venus. Carousal. Aerial Swing. Hym.n's Vaudeville Theater (with La- Open Air Skating Kink. dies' Orchestra of 7 Pleeea—Four Acts Joy Wheel. Shooting Gallery. . of Vaudeville and Two Keels of.Plo- Figure Eight. Temple of Palmar, res) . • Th Zoo. Refreshments. NO LIQUORS SOr4> ON TUB GROUNDS. ADMISSION 10c. Ot VMDTP TUTT 1 ATITT? ' Main, Between Fifth and Sixth. LYMPIC THEATEK Commodioas—Comfortable. — ' aiTphin * FARGO OFVER i', A GREAT 7 WHO'S WHO? I I.^ l"'™ BIG SHOW -???????????• MKNDEI, Two Slum. Tonight—7:ls and 0:15. Mats. Mon., Wed., Hat., Sunday—loc, *oc, So*