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![Page 1: KEEL Sacramento San Joaquin Valleys Wedding Witnesses ...chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85066387/1911-10-18/ed-1/seq-3.… · KEEL OF COLLIER TO BE LAID TODAY Officers of the Yard](https://reader036.vdocuments.mx/reader036/viewer/2022062921/5f0344b07e708231d4085f49/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
KEEL OF COLLIERTO BE LAID TODAY
Officers of the Yard WillDrive
Jv: the First Rivet in New&§jj Ship Jupiter .''•/\u25a0:\u25a0•-. [Special Dispatch to The Call]'• c
" / MARE ISLAND, Oct. 17.—After sev--0
eral weeks of waiting the keel of thenew collier Jupiter will be laid at the
• • Mare-I: island building ; slip tomorrow' morning ;at 9 o'clock. Captain " HughHodman, captain of the yard, and Cap-
-0 tain" Oscar W. Koester, *.;retired, ma-o chinery department officer, will , drive_
the first rivet. Lieutenant H.E.; Kays,,;., ..aid to the captain of the yard, will
° \u25a0\u25a0'.assist, and Chief- Carpenter William| •.\u25a0.."\u25a0Q'NeiirLwill be the "rivet boy.";.';.• The stem for the new collier arrivedVjat the building: slip today and will be
...• I •ailed this week: With the laying„;;• "*f the keel the work, on the auxiliary-.;_ "ship will be rushed, and it may be
,•'•_. Jaunched within year. :.'••• Comma*nder Edwin A. Anderson has
'•" ;been ordered to Philadelphia as captain•,. • of the naval. yard.°v. = Lieutenant E. H. Dodd, wireless offi-.." cer'at Mare island, was detached from•'"duty as executive officer of the cruiser
.\u25a0•; Kaleigh today and will resume ( hisli. duties at the local naval station. His?'«place on the man of war was taken by
| a Lieutenant Benjamin G. Barthlow.'= • \u2666
" Lieutenants R. W. Vincent and C. T.• Wade, attached to the Colorado, re-
ported for examination at the yard to-<\u25a0„ ila j*. * \u25a0- *_.
-; • \u25a0\u25a0• \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0>- -.
Captain Standley, commandant's aid« at the yard, ; returned to his duties in-building: No. 51 today, having been re-lieved of the command of the cruiser
'..'fi -.leigh by Captain Wells., Chief Machinist L. R. Ford has been/
#detached from the cruiser West Vir-
ginia and ordered home to await orders..*. Chief Machinist J. R. Burkhart has• been detached from : the Iris and or-
dered to duty on the West Virginia.' Second Lieutenant H. L. Parsons has
taken over the duties of judge advocateof the Mare island court martial board.
Captain B. W. ' Slbley will leave : theyard this week for duty at Philadel-phia.
ATTEMPT TO TAMPERWITH JURY CHARGED
Eureka Shipping Man Is Ques-tioned in Court
[Special Dispatch to The Call]EUREKA, Oct. 17.—Charged with
having inveigled James Tonini, awealthy Eel river farmer and juroriti the libel suit of Elizabeth Kemperagainst the Herald Publishing com- jpany, into a house in the tenderloindistrict last night in order to arrangejury tampering, George G. Hall, a ship-ping man, was brought before the su-perior court this after and questionedTonini was also quizzed.
The court was not fully satisfied thealleged attempt had been made andcontinued the hearing, to be taken upagain at the pleasure of the court.
Attorney J. F. Quinn, for the plain-tiff, read in open court today affidavitsof two detectives who, it is alleged, lastnight followed Hall and Tonini.
Hall is connected with the Vance1-umber company and is part owner ofthe paper published by the defendantcorporation.
DECREES OF DIVORCEGRANTED IN STOCKTON
Four Interlocutory and • Six/!.:;•\u25a0... Final Decisions Given.; {Special Dispatch to The Call]=V- "STOCKTON. Oct. —Judge . Plum-
\u25a0 = mer has granted Lottie F. Baker an\u25a0.interlocutory decree of divorce from
Ecison W. Baker on the ground of in-• tejnperance. The community property
and custody of a minor child were* ° awarded the wife., „. Ada Glynn obtained an interlucutory
'decree in her suit against Alan Glynnon the *. grounds of nonsupport, and
»• OltheaJ. Russell from-Lee R. Russellbn" the same grounds. Desertion wasthe .basis of an action brought, by C.C. McMahon against Nettie McMahon.flf was granted an interlocutory de-
; cree.• Final decrees have been granted as
follows:Ella SI. Murray.: from Thomas Murray..Maild Galer from Tidrow - Galer. \u25a0 •- „*•Annie Lake from William H. X.nkf.
= Maud A. Williams from James N. Williams.Annie Funk from Lafayette Funk.
»SAN MATEO COUNTY
GRAND JURY CALLED
REDWOOD CITY. Oct.. 17.—JudgeGeorge H. Buck today set Tuesday. Oc-tober 31, for r the first meeting. of the
, new San Mateo county grand jury., ;The following names were-.drawn
'»from the box , "and . the venirernen or-= ()• red to appear in the superior court
two -'weeks, from today, when 19 will beselected for grand jury;duty: .:,»*;Charles E. Steele X. A. An(lrr<»n .-. \u25a0
Bart Sheehan Jr. . - Jatnes HannonK. O'Grady . IT. F. ORouk \u25a0
A, Srurla ''\u25a0': It. C.:.Merrill •* ,. F. "A. Cunningham R. B. Bain Jr. . .•\u25a0Louis Lagomarsino " *.J. D. Perry ".'•\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0
Frank W. Merrill .1. C. JensJ. B. Faivey W. J. Plump
, William O'Brien - William\u0084K. W. Howard E. D. Beylard;1 B. Kelly Walt« Anderson ; '.••X.:Furhs ; C.TJ. Beftin.\u25a0 J-.hn Kvue J. J. Smith .
Ml- M. A. Pallas ' Frank A. Smack '
m W. Glennan 'Matt C. Callaji
MISS BOOTH VISITSIN STOCKTON TODAY
Salvation Army Leader to Pre-side at Cornerstone Laying
[Special Dispatch to The Call].STOCKTON, Oct. 17.—Miss Eva
Booth for the first time will come toStockton tomorrow. She will be ac-. ompanied by several army leadersfrom Chicago. The Stockton Union
Bd will play at the Yosemite, wheremeeting will be held, and the
Brown-Curry choir will sing. MissBooth will reside at the laying of theornerstone of the new Salvation Army
Sing.
BERESFORD RANCHERASKS AID OF COURT
[Special Dispatch to The Call]BURLINGAME, Oct. 17.—X. D. McLel-
lan, a rancher of Beresford and memberof a pioneer family of San Mateo\u25a0 ounty, swore to a complaint before
rice of the Peace Lamb today charg-g U Tourelet, a farm hand, with as-
sault and battery. A quarrel betweenM( Lallan and his employe ended in arough and tumble fight.
: TAG DAY IN : CHlCAGO—Chicago. Oct. 17.—:*" Sixty thousand dollars was raised yesterday by
: * , " the Children**Benefit league in the annual" . "tag day" for the {benefit:of ;
fthe rariou*:ph!l';
*, anthroplc organizations. which the league repre-• \u25a0.: \u25a0 M?nt». Three: thousand -r young *women idid;, the
• tugging. ,\u25a0 . •\u25a0/ •\u25a0 •\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0"\u25a0 .\u25a0Vl " • • I
' MASONIC RITE CONFERRED— Washington. Oct." „ 17.—The royal order, of Scotland was conferred
Ilact night on -75 candidates at Ithe | meet) 'ofo • \u25a0 the supreme \u25a0 council \u25a0\u25a0 01 \the " Ancient" and » Ac-
cepted Scottish , Rite "Masons of :the southernJurisdiction.
'"' ' \u25a0 ;-:':':;; '\u25a0 \u25a0 —•;''..\u0084
, ..i-V- -'••-?;»-"'" *"-"----"^
Physicians recommend * \u25a0 the'\u25a0".;- Lurline
' Ocean Water tub baths ;for nervous-ness, Insomnia and .rheumatism. Try
one for that tired feeling. The Lurline»\u25a0 baths are at Bush and Larkin streets.
Sacramento and San Joaquin ValleysTWO BOARDS MOVE
TO SUN FRANCISCOConservation Commission and
Water Control Body Open
New Offices
*[Special Dispatch to The .Call]SACRAMENTO, Oct. 17.—Confirming
the reports circulated some time ago,
the California conservation commissionand the California board of water con-
trol have established an office .in \u25a0; the
Mills building. 'San; Francisco, which
virtually takes these two bodies out ofSacramento. : The bay office is knownas the "branch" office, but Louis R.Glavis, secretary of the boards, willspend the greater . part of his time
there and has with him his stenog-
rapher and special agent. The meet-
ings hereafter will be held in SanFrancisco. ,; - . \u25a0 , ' - -
LUCY CLEMENS TORULE AT JUBILEE
Sacramento Annexation Cele=bration to Begin Friday
Morning
[Special Dispatch to The Call]SACRAMENTO, Oct. 17.—Miss Lucy
Clemens will rule as -queen over the bigjubilee celebration Sacramento is to
hold Friday and Saturday in honor of
annexation.The battle of ballots that has waged
for several weeks closed tonight withMiss Clemens winner by 10,000 votes
over her nearest rival. Miss UrsulaBurns. Miss Clemens' vote was 43,005,
against 32.573 for Miss Burns. 28.743 forMiss Irene Ash and 14,060 for Miss IdaMurray.
Greater Sacramento will go underqueenly rule Friday morning. QueenLucy will be the central figure, in a
public reception Friday night and Sat-urday afternoon she will ride on theroyal float, one of more than 100 to
take part in the parade.Two of her maids will be Miss Ash
and Miss Murray.
Y. M. C. A. SECRETARYON 3,500 MILE HIKE
Pedestrian Arrives at SantaCruz Ahead of Schedule
[Special Dispatch to The Call]SANTA CRUZ. Oct. 17.—Pressing on-
ward to make a 3,500 mile hike. Wil-liam Parker, a well known Y. M. C. A.secretary of Lincoln. Neb., arrived inSanta Cruz today far ahead of scheduletime Parker began his long walk at
Truckee on May 28. He went to LakeTahoe. Yosemite valley and Calaverasbig trees. With three other compan-
ion^ Parker traveled south as far as
Tia'.Tuana and on his return trip,
hearing of the Watsonville apple an-nual went 205 miles out of his route
to see the show. Parker shows nosigns of fatigue. He will travelthrough Oregon, Washington and theninto Canada.
MINING MAN WOUNDEDAS SEQUEL OF FEUD
Revolver, Drawn by Rival, IsFired in Tussle
[Special Dispatch to The Call]FORBESTOWN. Oct. 17.—X. A. ~L&-
--grasse and Louis Garibaldi, prominentmining men. were the principals in an
old feud over a mining claim. L>aGrasse drew a pistol. In endeavoringto wrest it from La Grasse, Garibaldiw*a wounded in the leg when theweapon was discharged.
The men have had a long standing
dispute over mining property and the
boundaries to certain gravel claims.
A charge of assault with intent tocommit murder has been placed againstLa Grasse.
STOCKTON GIRL MARRIEDTO WATSONVILLE MAN
Early Morning Ceremony Fol-lowed by Trip to City
[Special Dispatch to The Call]WATSONVILLE, Oct. 17.—Early this
morning Sidney Tuttle Menasco andMiss Jennie Pearl Hannaford weremarried at the home of friends by
Rev. C. L.- Thackeray of the Episcopal
church. They are spending a honey-
moon in San Francisco. The bride-groom is the son of Mr?. Mary Menas-co. The bride is the daughter of Ed-ward Hannaford of Stockton and form-erly lived in Santa Cruz and San Fran-cisco. The Menasco family rank among
the wealthy in this city.
METHODIST EPISCOPALCONFERENCE BEGINS
Sixty-first Session Will BeOpened Today
[Special Dispatch to The Call]SACRAMENTO, Oct. 17.—The Pacific
annual conference of the MethodistEpiscopal church, south, will be calledto order in its sixty-first session heretomorrow by Bishop B. H. Waterhouseof Los Angeles. Delegates from allparts of the state will be present. Thiswill make the tenth time that the con-ference has been held in Sacramento.
STOCKTON'S NEWCHARTER RATIFIED
Campaign Begun Months Agoby Chamber of Commerce
Results in Victory
[Special Dispatch to The Call]STOCKTON, Oct. 17.—The voters of
Stockton today ratified the new citycharter embodying the commissionplan of government, the initiative,referendum and recall by a majority of556 votes. The vote in favor of thecharter was 1,887, while a total of1,331 votes were cast against it. Amajority vote was all that was neces-sary to carry the charter.
The adoption of the new charter isthe culmination of a campaign begunmany months ago by the StocktonChamber of Commerce. The first ef-forts of the chamber to have the coun-cil call an election of a board of free-holders proved a failure. The councilrefused the request. A petition wasthen circulated and the required num-ber of signatures secured. The petitioncalled for a vote on amendments to thepresent charter, practically calling forthe commission plan of government.The council compromised the matter byagreeing to call an election for a boardof freeholders.
The freeholders were selected on anon-partisan basis and a charter pro-nounced the most advanced yet draftedis the result. Tt provides for the elec-tion of a mayor and four commission-ers, in whom will be placed the entireresponsibility of the city government.The mayor will receive a salary of13.000 and the commissioners $2,400each.
A new feature of the charter is thatof making one of the commissionerscity auditor. It is believed this willwork out with good results. The re-call, initiative and referendum also areimportant features.
If the charter is indorsed by the leg-islature at the special session it will gointo effect next September. The newcharter entirely eliminates partisanpolitics. It provides for the election ofa mayor and commissioners at the di-rect primary, providing they get a ma-jority over all.
BUSINESS CENTEROF SITES BURNS
Incendiarism Is Suspected inLoss of Postoffice and
Railroad Depot
[Special Dispatch to The C^l]SITES, Oct. 17.—The Southern Pacific
depot, the postofflce, the Wells Fargoexpress office, a freight warehouse andthe store of William Woodward weredestroyed by fire early this morning.The loss is In the neighborhood of$10,000. Th« flames are believed tohave been started by a firebug.
GOOD TEMPLARS MEETIN ANNUAL SESSION
Fifty-Second Gathering of StateGrand Lodge
[Special Dispatch to The Call]VAL.LEJO. Oct. 17.—The fifty-second
annual convention .of the grand lodgeof California, Independent Order ofGood Templars, convened at the Meth-odist church in this city this evening.
Rev. Charles Eastman opened themeeting with a prayer. Addresses ofwelcome were given by Mayor E. J.Torney for the city of Vallejo, Rev.George Adams for the Vallejo Pastors'union, Secretary William Service forthe naval Y. M. C. A., Mrs. O. W. Mellinfor the W. C. T. U. and Chief TemplarJoseph Kern for Vallejo lodge No. 64.
The rest of the evening's programwas as follows: Address, "Good Temp-lary—lts Past, Present and Future," byJ. M. Walling, P. G. C. T., "America"and benediction.
SPECIAL ELECTION WILLDECIDE SALOON QUESTION
[Special Dispatch to The Call]REDDING, Oct. 17.—The supervisors
today called a special election in sup-ervisor district No. 3 for Tuesday, No-vember 14, when under the Wylio lawthe people will decide whether saloonsshall be allowed.
LITTLE "INDIANS'"FUN ALMOST FATAL
Woman Is Wounded Seriously
When Boys Fire VolleyFrom Rifles
[Special Dispatch to The Call]CHICO, Oct. 17.—Mrs. Rudolph Eata
was wounded seriously and almostkilled early last night when she wasshot in the hip, and another bulletplowed so close to her head that it
cut a furrow through her hair. Sev-eral boys were playing Indian andwere armed with 22 caliber rifles.
They were shooting at one anotherand also at random. As she left her
home for a shed in the rear of theplace a sudden volley sent the bulletsrattling around her. One grazed herhead and as she dodged into the shedanother struck her in the hip. Hercries caused the boys to flee.
The bullet was extracted today andit is thought that no serious, conse-quence will follow.
FIRST WIFE HAS'HUBBY' ARRESTED
Man Who Married Mrs. MaryD. Remer of Sacramento Is
Alleged Bigamist
RENO, New, Oct. 17.—Perry H. Brem-ington, living here, who married Mrs.Mary D. Remcr in Sacramento, Cal.,
last July, was arrested today on com-plaint of the woman who says she ishis first wife. She charges him withbigatny, declaring no divorce was se-cured. She came to Reno this weekfrom Greeley, Weld county, Colo., andis said to have five children. Brem-ington declares that he obtained a di-vorce in Greeley three years ago. Hewas released on $5,000 bail, furnishedin part by his second wifr.
SECTION MAN CONVICTEDOF RAINIER KILLING
Jury Returns Verdict After De-liberating 24 Hours
OLYMPIA. Wash., Oct. 17.—George H..Wilson, accused of killingMrs. NettieCoble and her husband at Rainier lastJuly, was found guilty of murder inthe second degree today. The juryreturned a verdict after deliberating24 hours.
Under the court's instructions the.verdict means that the jury was con-vinced Wilson killed the young mar-ried couple, but has no recollection ofthe crime. Notice of an appe?l hasbeen given.
The crime was commlttted at Rainier,a small town southeast of Olympia, thenight of July 10. Archie Coble andhis young wife were murdered in theirbed. Wilson, a section foreman, wasarrested and made a partial confes-sion, which he afterward repudiated.The theory advanced by the state wasthat the murderer was insane.
MINERS QUIT AND ATTACHORE FOR BACK PAY
Men Say They Have Not Re-ceived Money for 3 Months
[Special Dispatch to The Call]GRASS VALLEY,Oct. 17.—A force of
miners employed at the Prudentialmine. Forest Springs, have quit workand attached all the ore and amalgam
in sight, charging they have not beenpaid for three months. Tho mine wastaken over recently by George A. Ald-rlch, who announced that he had ar-ranged to take over the NevadaCounty narrow guage railway.
OREGON WILL ARRIVEAT MARE ISLAND SOON
Historic Battleship Coming toTake on Ammunition
[Special Dispatch to The Call]MARE ISLAND. Oct. 17.—The his-
toric battleship Oregon will arrive atMare Island next week from Bremer-ton to take on ammunition before pro-ceeding to San Pedro. Captain C. F.Pond is in command of the Oregon.
DR. R. L. WILBUR WILLLECTURE AT STANFORD
STANFORD UNIVERSITY. Oct. 17.—Dr. R. L. Wilbur, the recently ap-pointed dean of the Cooper medicalschool of Stanford university, will ad-dress the students of the university
upon a medical subject. A lecture ofthis nature is given annually underthe auspices of the Y. M. C. A.
Wedding Witnesses Elope WithBridal Couple as Confidants
Runaway Match Planned at Marriage inAlameda Leads to San Rafael
Direct from a wedding at which theywere guests in AJameda yesterday aft-ernoon. Miss Vera Frances Cole, the 19year old daughter of Charles L. Cole ofthis city, and William S. Bishop of Los
Angeles eloped to San Rafael and weremarried by Justice of the Peace W. F.Magee. To give an added touch of ro-
mance to the affair, their newly weddedfriends participated in their plans andspent the first hours of their honey-
moon in aiding and abetting the run-
away match.It was at the wedding of Miss Car- j
melita Theobald and John Hobrecker i
In Alameda early in the afternoon that |Bishop and Miss Cole derided that they, jtoo, would be married without delay.
At the conclusion of the Theobald- ;
Hobrecker ceremony they confided their !resolve to a few of their most intimate i
friends. Mr. and Mrs. Hobrecker joined
enthusiastically in thep lan. and the Ifour quietly slipped away from the ,other guests of the wedding party and jhurried to San Rafael.
A marriage, license was secured andwithin two hours of the first wedding asecond ceremony was performed, with jthe erstwhile wedding guests as prin- jclpals. Mr. and Mrs. Hobrecker were
the witnesses.Mr. and Mrs. Bishop returned to San
Francisco last evening and will leaveat 8 o'clock this morning for Los An-
geles, where they will make their fu-ture home at the Hampden-Arms hotel.
Mrs. Bishop is the only daughter ofCharles T>. Cole, assistant manager of ,the Pantages theatrical circuit. Though
both Mr. and Mrs. Cole expressed thesurprise when they learned last night
of their daughter's elopement they
were ready to forgive and extend tho
parental blessing.
"This is news to me." exclaimed Cole."Vera went with Bishop to attend theTheobald-Hobrecker wedding in Ala-
meda. but I had no idea that they hadany Intention of eloping and gettingmarried themselves. Perhaps Vera
thought I would raise objections if Iknew of the plan, but I would havegiven my consent readily."
Bishop, who is 22 years of age i,s con-nected with the R. S. Bronson Deskcompany of Los Angeles and is thewestern sales agent for the HeywoodBrothers and Wakefield Opera Chaircompany. He is well known in LosAngeles.
Mrs. William S. Bishop, bride of Los Angeles business man, who wasMiss Vera Frances Cole.
NO PUNY ESCORTSUITS GOVERNOR
Ten National Guard OfficersServe as Staff Johnson
"Didn't Want"
[Special Dispatch to The Call]SACRAMENTO. Oct. 17.—Since Gov-
ernor Johnson 'fired his staff of gold
braid colonels he has been drawing
upon the national guard for an escort.He announced at the time the colonelswere let out fhat he would not ap-point a staff to succeed them.
When Johnson went north to meetTaft he took with him Adjutant Gen-eral P'orbes, Colonel Frank Cannon,
Colonel W. C Schreiber of the Seventhinfantry. Colonel D. A. Smith of theFifth infantry. Colonel G. A. Shastey.
coast artillery; Colonel Lon Bond, Sec-
ond infantry: Captain F. W. Petersen.Fifth infantry; Colonel Allen Wright,
coast artillery, and Captain George
Bauer and Lieutenant J. A. McKee ofthe naval militia.
The governor went to the southwith Taft and is there. He has Forbes,Schreiber, Shastey, Wright, Brigadier
General Robert Wankowskl and Major
R. I. Follmer with him, besides StateTreasurer Roberts and Private Secre-tary Al McCabe.
ELECTION WILL DECIDEPURCHASE OF CHURCH
Proposal of Trustees to BuyProperty Arouses Protests
[Special Dispatch to The Call]ROSEVICLE. Oct. 17.—T0 settle the
question of whether the city shall buy
the Presbyterian church property, thecitizens, by petition.* have invoked thereferendum, the election to be held onthe 3d of next month. It was pro-posed by the city trustees, to purchasethe property and convert it into a city
hall, but strong opposition arose, re-sulting in two sets of petitions, onefor and the other against the proposal.One petition contained 25 per cent ofthe voters of the city and the trusteeswere obliged to call an election in ac-cordance with the wishes of the peti-tioners.
FORMER EMPLOYES AREARRESTED FOR FORGERY
Men Alleged to Have FakedPasses on Southern Pacific
[Special Dispatch to The Call]AUBURN. Oct. IT.—William C. Green
and John Kinder, former railroad em-ployes, have been arrested on charges
of forging passes on the Southern Pa-
cific They signed Division Superin-tendent Sheridan's name to the passesand boarded the train at Roseville. sav-ing they were going to Boca. Thearrests were made by a constable and astate railroad policeman.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911. 3
"ARROWCOLLAR
easy to tic the cravat in—rasy to
notch on—and has oval button-holes, which makes buttoning antunbuttoning easy.
15c.—2fir25e,duett, Peabody & Co., Makers, trwr, N. Y.
: : : ; — — f
i
Don't Wait for Overcoat WeatherGet a Full Season's Use Out of YOUR New Overcoat
f*OLD weather willbe down on us before you can turn around."V Better steal a march on the other fellow while weather
prevails and select your "Roos-Made" overcoat before any of thoseclever novelties are gone. • . \u25a0 -
. For $15 we're showing a line of For $25 we've got any coat thathandsome overcoats, in tans, browns you've mentally pictured—the rangeand grays—light and dark—with is limitless. Browns, tans, grays—velvet, two-way or plain collars and we can't describe the colorings,satin sleeve linings, in rough tweeds Three-quarter and auto lengths, vel-. '\u25a0:;. and cheviots. Take "The Raglan" at vet, plain and two-way collars -: "l\. $20, too—a wide departure from warm, rough tweeds and handsome
\u25a0;.-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 conservative models, with its new cheviots. Imported Coats from \u25a0\u25a0
shoulder and sleeves. These are here $30 to $100 —patterns and noveltyin English mixtures with satin .weaves that can't be duplicated—sleeve linings—they're loose, roomy distinctive styles that make themcoats, easy to slip on. . stand out as unusual, wherever worn.
Come in and Verify These Claims —You Will Certainly
"Get Your NEXTOoercoat at Roosßros."They're English |Vf*rtfii* Get Them Here
CHRISTYS' HATS £}^L^l£L^£jmLmmm INDESTRUCTOSole Agents MARKET AND STOCKTON TRUNKS
SAN FRANCISCO
Sb worthsiSsS if wuKin
ie! knowingWhen you ;purchase the Pianola llt makes the whole literature ofPiano, you virtually become the ' - ,the ; piano r immediately available
.-pupil. of Paderewski, Bauer, -.'. % >'ouv
Not 'If-11'. or twenty
;Busoni. ; Dr. Richard Strauss, \ {Pjeces, but actually thousands of
Moszkowski, Chaminade. the late i "'.\u25a0••\u25a0»; ," - '\u0084 . i.t "
Edvard Grie ß . .nd.do.ens of >m pt^lop^t *&
others of- the world s; greatest ; player' construct ion . since ' themusicians. ;,..;,._•'. - Piano-player 'was.'first invented— \u25a0
\u25a0 These have all marked their in- unless you would sacrifice the'dividual interpretations on Pianola : . one :feature that xwill; make: T amusic-rolls, ;in the form of the Player-piano really enjoyable to
red, M^trostyle interpretation g^~.ifesfriS!line. * ,; c •;\u25a0 ...-\u25a0: •\u25a0 ola beyond all competitors" — •
This line teaches . you the " ' look for the Metrostyle and themusic—teaches it to you better ' red Metrostyle interpretation linethan the greatest musician ;could :on the music-rolls of the instru-teach you, "in any other way. ; . ment you buy.
The f. Metrostyle ;is not the only exclusive feature of the Pianola" Piano. There are others of Importance to the correct playing- of, piano music, such as the Themodist, the Graduated Accompani- -ment, the sustaining Pedal Device, etc. These are all fullyprotect-\u25a0 " ed by patent and are found on no jplayer-piano'whatsoever,; save; only the - -\u25a0--.-,. .' "'•."".' '".''' .Steinway, Weber, Steck, WheelocK and Stuyvesant Pianola Piano
\u25a0 .\u25a0\u25a0 A : genuine Pianola ; Piano \ equipped with the Metrontyle can be pur-: chased for *.">7o.jEa»>-, monthly payments Ifdesired. Liberal allow-
ance* on other pianos In exchange. -'\u25a0 ', \ ,
FROM THE SOLE AGENTS \u25a0
iAvy/i^ pianos rJV" AND PLAYER-PIANOS
26 O'FARRELL STREET. ' ' ' San Francisco -
And at "BACON BLDQ.." 373 12th St., OAKLAND
\u25a0- Back East ExcursionSale Dates
October 17, 18, 19Sample; Rates Return limit Oct. 31, 1911,
Chicago $72.50 except that- tickets sold onKansas C*.... 60 00 Oct. 17, IS, 19, will carry.nauSas t^;.. .. limit of VovJl5 1911 , *•*:tDenver .\u25a0••.-. *..... 55.00 tTo destinations marked*St. Loafs ...: . 70.00 f tickets will.also be sold onSt. Panl. ".';\u25a0:;:: /:. ; 78.50 October 12. 13 and 14.
Sew York ' 108.50 *To destinations markedRnetan ': 110 50 tickets will also be sold onBost ..:.-.-„.. 11U**°
Oct. 25, 26 and carry finalAnd other points. - limit November 15, 1911. .
JAS;B. DUFFY, G. A., 673 Market , St., San Francisco.\u25a0 - Phones 'Kearny 315, Home J3371.
- " J. J." WARNER." G. A., 1112 Broadway, Oakland. Phone*A4425, Oakland 425.
go Santa Fe