miss anglin makes antigone live...

1
SONOMA WOMEN PLAN CARNIVAL . Though .! the - 1 audience, which '. wit- nessed-<the" performance ;last;:night; at the Greek theater;did.not seem as large as that which. Maude .Adams, drew to her production of."As ! You v Like flt/'-'it was.in fact, of equal numerical strength. The further seats,- some of 'them, "were unoccupied, but the. bowl' of the amphi-" theater overflowed. ..The center was oc- cupied by a'silent throng, where scenery and actors flgured'in the Shakespearean production. 1 At. only a \u25a0; few., minutes after, the: ad r .vertised hour the. altar, of Dionysus was lighted and the j orchestra;; half Chidden from the 4 audiehce; broke Into the>Men- delssohn;score with}' a vigor and pre- cision, that told of many: rehearsals ; and of a sympathetic leader. / . idealization;; | fitting nicely with, the place'and; the play. That is -why there Is .-no- contradiction Ton ;.the. assertion fliat.V ' har' impersonation '"\u25a0' of " 'Antigone, was ; historically^ ' acciicate, yet g inti- mately' effective.* It '.iwas* as "though '^a statue had come to .life?. 'In;the'super- ficialities of "Jress.-deportment and en- vlronmerit" she.' was 1a~ Theban ma id^ ~1~ 1 n the essentials of :fact she',was a woman. Her. name 'was Antigone, but it might have been- Anni-. No Firework*J .\o Noise! > 3rd and 4th '. Quiet, - rest, seclusion, fun—away .in beautiful Baltimore canyon, 5 minutes' walk from Baltimore station.- -Bring your.lunch and .enjoy, the climate, scen- ery, water from; flowing springs; and stately woods /of .this:- very Important and rapidly? growing residential. center. Roomffo r all, but:positively; no Jcamp fires or tree cutting. W. L. Courtright, 830 Market ;\u25a0 street, or., Baltimore > sta- tion. . .! -: ,:\u25a0 . \u25a0 - :\u25a0.:. \u25a0 -\u25a0 :.-\u25a0 '. : \u25a0 /'• ' •,;\u25a0;.. BANKER . FIEES ' FATAL" SHOT Tahaluque. - 0k1a. . . June ;SO.; As . - the L-c result -of* an ;\u25a0; old \u25a0 " prudge, •; C. ' L. VPratt," v oasblor '\u25a0 of - the tBank \u25a0: of \u25a0*./, Kansas, at <. the;" town lof ,\u25a0; Kansas.' , O^la:: shot k and ; probably ? fatally "-, vrounded ? Robert * Terry, \u25a0 ;a 'former : United v 'States -deputy ftnai-sUal,' here - today- I \u25a0 , - ' oat on the Greek theater stage a mighty player, asking no consideration of friendliness or favor. She threw over a silent throng of 7,000 persons the magic of a real creation. . She brought Antigone, daughter of Oedipus, to the very center of our_consciousness and made, in spite of the "artificialities of simple Greek art, a vividcharacteri- zation of a woman who suffered and died before our civilization was even stirring in the scheme of the centuries. WOMAX IS REAL And it was not the might of Sophocles that was responsible last night for the realization of Antigone.. Neither was it the costumes nor. the pageant nor the music, line as all these,were, that kept the audience in the Greek theater.back of the university. It. was tlie.lprojec- tion of a personality, the materializa- tion of a soul that did it. It was Miss Anglin showing us how Antigone fought a king and won honor with death. It was, .in : short. Antigone, -the woman, who discovered the : kinship which art establishes between; the un- real and the real, and who 'made a modern audience thrill and listen as she went her woeful way. : ! Indeed, it seemed to me last night that I could see many evidences of Miss Anglin's successful struggles with archaeology, i-do-not think, "if the statement .may: be made without sug- gestion of rank heresj', that even the music Mendelssohn's' best-— no"r the an- cient chorus! commenting on the! action, nor the lighting: of; Dionysus' .altar, nor any other memorial of ancient,theatri- cals added much to the force of Miss Anglin's primitive appeal. At times she seemed to be struggling with a form which constricted the heroic utter- ances of her art.. \u0084;. The -elaborate simplicity of her sur- roundings, the artificial effort at nat- uralness which characterized the pro- duction of "Antigone" were forces not always consonant with Miss Anglin's direct, positive arid 'quite superb art. Tlie orchestra breathing : harmonies about her, the chorus "of Theban- elders standing stolidly to ' their work, the angular, and massive masonry that em- braced the scene, were not always quite responsive to.; the human . note, dominant in her performance. If there were a fault to be found, in her as- sumption of the ; role of Antigone it was this: Her "Antigone was - not a translation from the Greek. It. was a realization of 'an .individuality, a pre- sentation of an. entity which was not of any time but the ; present nor of any place but here. EXAGGERATED RHETORIC Let strangely", eribugh-r-and it seems like,a -contradiction /In; thought— Miss Anglin's Antigone; was. essentially Gre- cian. She was of> heroic 'mold, -noble voice, . exaggerated .. rhetoric Z arid :; high sounding - utterance. - "Har,-" conception- of,the part, was] pitched * in ! a ' high, and / Eome, v times* piercing; key.tr'lti was: an : to more or less deserving offspring comfortable comment; delightful If true. It took the perspective that 21 cen- turies spread on tlie oarpet of time to Cupply Mis>s Anglin with the aloofness, if one may use the word, which genius Heeds. It was in ' Sophocles* tragedy, "Antigone," that she found the medium to persuade us of her worth as actress fend tragedienne. L.ast night she stood MARGARET ANGLIN has developed into a great actress. She has made her progress upward past our very doers, and so, quite naturally, we have not observed it. We have been wont to regard her in a neighborly way. The illusions that distance and unfamiliarity lend have been absent from the relationships that have existed between the actress and her American family, and we have been complacent rather than appreciative. It is true that she has been to Australia, where she was accounted prcat, but we accepted the antipodean verdict as a mother or a lather accepts the flatteries addressed* : \u25a0 +- WALTER ANTHONY Superb Acting in Greek Play Places Actress Among Great Tragediennes of the Day {Special -Dispatih to The Call] SONOMA; Juno °30.—The laVlies of the Sonoma' valley*j women's", improvement ;club;;have planned: a carnival /of "na- tions for the opening days of July; to raise funds witlr which* to beautify vthe town plaza. A Bear flag , m'onuuient,' a rustic lake,: fountain and drinking fountain have ', already^foeen 'placed in the^historic plaza ,by the ladies, who /have 'still, more ambitious, schemes to ;carry out. .' : The celebration will open tomorrow 'evening at: 7 o'clock with a general entertainment. Saturday evening there •wiir.bela trades parade; in,which^young \u25a0women dressed to represent the various mercantile" and .industrial- establish- fments, of the city will be ;tha [feature? This' will be followed by/af dance) and confettiv battle. .Sunday/afternoon' will ibe;given' over to:' a- sacred concert' ;by 'the Sonoma brass band, .while on ;Mon-| day.'^the:. fourth, there \u25a0\u25a0.; will be : some- thing ydoing(eyeryrminute. ; ; - \u25a0; I vf At ithe different: booths refreshments : peculiar to " t the nation •represented' will *be .: served, also'^v ; typpical i costumes .worn. -Among' the various .booths '•\u25a0 and ;those"in ; ; charge. are::. . •' : X^^^^^?% "Japanese-— Miss Minnie Cooke. -'\u25a0' German— Mrs." Ryland. . .. ,-• Kngllah— Mrs. \u25a0: Bateman. French-^M'rs.'Breltenbaeh. - \u25a0/ \u25a0 .^Swiss-Italian— Mrs. Plnelli. .. ; . .\u25a0 ",:-\u25a0 '-Spanish— Mrs.' E. : M."; Tarran 'and : Mrs.: Marie Cutler.:;^ •"\u25a0\u25a0 ':: .- - , , : - . ..\u25a0\u25a0-:- v . : . ; -Dutch—Mrs. v Simmons.. » . ; . " 1 Plantation—^Mrs.vTcarl Hnnter. and ' Gipsy too ts— Mrs.' Dr. EastlamTand Mrs.;K. Kf-oupli.v; .\u25a0-. i .-;. - - . . . , t ;.'Aiuericnu--MisS: "Columbia,". MISS ANGLIN MAKES "ANTIGONE" LIVE AGAIN THREE SCENES FROM "ANTIGONE" AS 11 \WAS -GIVEN UN THE CREEK THEATER. /MISS ANCLIN IS THE CENTRAL FIGURE IN EACH SCENE POSTMASTER APPOlNTED— Wajthinpton, Jane HO. Hanron A. Bro-wnell was today appointed postmastpr at Vidc-1, San Bernardino county, II- Brownell. resigned. ; TWO j KILLED IN - AUTO -WRECK— Upper §53 <lnsky, 0.. June P.O. Roy. E.-Laskey nud Ralph . BeMler. a' merchant from Kostoria. ; were in- stantly- klllorl . today.- and 51. -A. Stonebiirncr ' aßdJaiups McCannell were probably fatally in- jured when their' automobile^ran into a'Uitch > near Fostoria. :.. - . > . ;. \u0084, WOMAN BRUTALLY BEATS SON— Mrs. Chrls- tena'Horath.was arrested yesterday on a war- < rant sworn to by R. C. Gore. 660 Edinburgh Htreet; eharjrins: her with brutally beating her ".v >n Peter,- 7 years of age. Woman's Wound Slight, but Assailant Drops Dead in His Tracks PORTLAND, -June 30.—S. T. Bolen pursued his divorced wife, Edna Adams, into the grill of the Hotel Portland to- night and shot her in the cheek, the wound' being > slight. Bolen then fired two bullets into his head, falling dead in his tracks. There were but few people in the grill at the time. " Bolen was a lineman in the employ of the telegraph department of the Oregon Railroad and Navigation com- pany. He and his wife were divorced about a month ago, and according'to the women he had repeatedly made threats to kill her. The couple came to Portland from Kansas. City. Fishermen Discover Body While Shoes Are Found on Bank With Pipe and Tobacco JEFFERSON CITY", Mo., June 30.— ,The body of Miss Anna. Wendler of Osage City, Mo., who disappeared Tues- day, was found in the Missouri river by fishermen tonight five miles west of Osage City. A heavy dent in the fore- head, evidently made by a blunt in- strument, strengthens the opinion that she was murdered. Miss Wendler left. her home to visit neighbors and had; apparently started on the way back when she -met death. Her- casket, shoes and parasol were found on" the river, bank with". a pipe and a package of tobacco: Farmers are searching for the mur- derer, who may. be lynched if caught. v " John •. Wendler, father of the girl, has offered a reward of $.100 for the appre- hension of the murderer. .. . SHOOTS DIVORCED WIFE AND HIMSELF GIRL KILLED AND THROWN IN RIVER prefaced his confession with the avowal that only shabby treatment at the hands of Attorney Thompson, whom he named as his accomplice, had brought the exposure. He said that he took two packages containing $15,000 in bills and con- cealed the others beneath the safe, be- cause his courage failed him the second day. He buried the first two packages in the rear of two residences in the neighborhood of his home. j When he was arrested he secured the service* of Attorney Thompson. Ac- cording to Altorre a demand was made for attorney fees, so he confided the location of the smaller of the amounts to Thompson to be used in the defense. Altorre says Thompson, accompanied by Mrs. Thompson, went to the cache and obtained the money. After this everything went smoothly until last September. Demand for Money It was during this month that Al- torre declares Thompson demanded more money, and that in response to this demand Altorre agreed to Inform his mother of- the hiding place of the money so that Bhe could be party to the recovery and thereafter pay out the necessary legal expenses. This was accepted, according to Al- torre, and the visit was made at night, the party including Mrs, "White and Thompson and his wife. Altorre says that Thompson dug the money up and, instead of handing it to Mrs. White, retained possession, saying that he would make judicious use of It to meet the expenses incidental to the trial. After the trial and conviction Altorre became angered at his attorney. Al- torre says that Thompson "threw him Inspector In Charge Hall, who has just returned from Los Angeles, said yesterday: "From what 'Altorre. told me it look"* as if Thompson believed Altorre's prison sentence and. his other pend- ig indictments would operate to shield him. His arrest in Reno ' came . as a complete surprise." Thompson left Los Anpreles over a week ago in his automobile on a trip to ;Berfo to see the Jeffries-Johnson fight. Detective Brown of Los Angeles, ac- companied by PostofSce ..Inspector MeConnell of San Francisco, will leave Los Angeles for Reno tomorrow to bring back Thompson. Brown and McConnell will stop in Sacramento to secure the papers necessary for Thompson's return to Los Angeles for trial. /\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0• WmuWWBKm LAWYER ACCUSED OF TAKING LOOT Attorney Charged With Digging Up Nearly $15,000 in ' Stolen Bills Continued From Page 1 THE -^SjiMl 01800 VAhL; FRIDAY, , J VhY - 1, 1910. See Page 8 for Pariiculars I THIS COUPON [AND 10 CENTS i When presented at the office of \u25a0^Tl-IE CALL Will be good for ANY OXE of the following Fine Art photogravures Or All Tfaree Pictures for Coupon and 30c Christ Before Pilate By Slunkacsy The Prairie Fire My Adjukleirfcz In the Hands of the Enemy By Hovenden Present coupon and 10 cents at either office of THE CALL. . Main office. Market and Third Streets, San Francisco. Branch office, 1651 Fillmore street. Ban Francisco. Oakland office, 468 Eleventh street (Bacon block), Oakland. If picture is to be mailed, price •will bY 16 Cents (6 cents additional to cover cost of mailing) OPEN EVENINGS Jv# 906 A MARKET ST., V* SAN FRANCISCO JEROME -ll. ' RBMICK & CO^ Proprietors i STORES FRO3I COAST TO COAST SHEET SVIUSIC SALE— POST CARD SALE \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'-\u25a0; •••-_;.;. VSTANDARD -CLASSICS . . ' STANDARD CLASSICS Dj-lncr Poet Gottschalk H?iSS5^3 iS*^ Princr Lmperlal Callop— Coote Flowr Sonc Lanp: . BK!ikHa3 H Thp Storm Weber Frolic of the FroKS ,\VrlUm ; » ffy| . XkJSf Second Mnxarkn Godard Gypsy IJanee I^ichner E&cS&Sr&hL. Sextette From Lacln Invitation to the Danee Weber . . BP B^^ ' . Silvery Wave^i Wyman I>a (iraoo Bohm •'-'• ••-, K£l rPT Tannhau.oer March Wagner l.oin Uu Bal Gillet - T^h imff Thine Own Langre Light Cavalry Overtnrc Yon Suppe Pnnu A\'arbllns» at Eve Richards 'iLove's»\Oia;Svieet Song— Molloy bUUV Valse-Bleue Margis '- La Sereneta Jaxone;. " - - «vi nDnriic ' Value la E flat Durand Old Black -.Joe Transcription Drumheller -;''. M A ll *i, oBo B 5 D , ELE L "•William Trll . Overt nre-^-Rosslnt Pearly Pevrrtrop— -Burbeck ' le . ATHA Wedding March —^Mendellsohn VA ". i."."'" \u25a0\u25a0" / ; VOCAL - . '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0R/rifScinP T>ri"DTTT"A "D Mary, You're a Bljc Girl >'oir Funny Face -Garden of Rose* -.JW-Ub 1 X \Jr\)LlA& DaUles Wont Tell— Santa Fe \u25a0\u25a0"By the ;Lljrhti of the Silvery Moon ROTirtCl fITt 1 When-the Dalslew Bloom- Put on YoVr Old Gray BoTnet ' „„ "^ IWont Bf Back -TillAu E a,t There** n Big. Cry Baby in the Jloon TTT"R T) AY You -Are the Ideal of My Dreami* Mandy, How -Do Yon. Do fv . AXIXiI^AX I'm oa-MrWiyto Reno . :Ha»« "Anybody? Here ? Seen I Kelly f- . \u25a0.-.. '\u25a0 :..,- '- The Mooullght, the Ro»e and \oa \u25ba'.What's the Matter With Father? cggSF! RiiiWIUJ /^^v IXSTRUMEVTAL I've dot Uinpn ou My Fliißern &&&& aPEUfiI S Chanticleer U»x (latest N. Y. success) I'm Goin' to Tell on You (new) §59' KBB! VL^bT Maxlne Waltzes Harlequin Intermezzo Keep Your Foot on the Soft Pedal SggS BB&WHBw Happy Xlshtw March Temptation lias: Tliot Lovins Melody Ilubenstcin Wrote &sja BiBS> J ' B Mr^ . Lily Eyes Waltzes The Wave Waltzes Tic Your Little Bull Outside PVa a^ai -Ibß ETmali Candy aud Kisses .Novelette Columbia I'll Make -a Riug Around Kosie ' ffißl rfflffff al -'» ' .°"— 'y* T Hi!Mff*rWJ^p w *aMfiTßßi Osi, You Blonily ClrlhlrJblii Bra- Barcnrolle From Tales of Hoffman j Honolulu ;RaK— Lonesome Land. "\u25a0 ."""'""\u25a0"*;. '*\* Baby, Blue Two Step—-fV wo Bills >larch Curly ; Head-i-I < r Crave You -..\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0 \u0084,„ V ftl jj.-- \u25a0 * . -Lilyof the XHe Waltaes* ' . . . - ,Mj' Southerns Rose— Lonesome V c^ii. « < Ketehup'Rac Mlna Patrol (new) "I Wonder .What* the Matter With the Moon f ' xc . 11 *-^ King Eilwanl VII Funeral Marth jI>OST;CARI)S;Sc perdoz; jFOST^ CARDS 5c per dpz: [POST CARDS 5c per doz.

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Page 1: MISS ANGLIN MAKES ANTIGONE LIVE AGAINchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85066387/1910-07-01/ed-1/seq-3.pdfoat on the Greek theater stage a mighty player, asking no consideration of

SONOMA WOMENPLAN CARNIVAL

. Though .!the-1audience, which '. wit-

nessed-<the" performance ;last;:night; atthe Greek theater;did.not seem as largeas that which. Maude .Adams, drew toher production of."As!YouvLikeflt/'-'itwas.in fact, of equal numerical strength.

The further seats,- some of 'them, "wereunoccupied, but the. bowl'of the amphi-"theater overflowed. ..The center was oc-cupied by a'silent throng, where scenery

and actors flgured'in the Shakespeareanproduction. 1

At.only a \u25a0; few.,minutes after, the: adr.vertised hour the.altar, ofDionysus waslighted and the jorchestra;; half Chiddenfrom the 4

audiehce; broke Into the>Men-delssohn;score with}'a vigor and •pre-cision, that told of many: rehearsals ;andof a sympathetic leader. /

.idealization;; |fitting nicely with, theplace'and; the play. That is -why thereIs .-no- contradiction Ton ;.the. assertionfliat.V '

har' impersonation '"\u25a0'

of"'Antigone,

was;historically^ 'acciicate, yet g inti-mately' effective.* It'.iwas* as "though '^astatue had come to.life?. 'In;the'super-ficialities of"Jress.-deportment and en-vlronmerit" she.' was 1a~ Theban ma id^ ~1~1nthe essentials of:fact she',was awoman.Her. name 'was Antigone, but itmighthave been- Anni-.

No Firework*J .\o Noise! > 3rd and 4th

'. Quiet,-rest, seclusion, fun—away .in

beautiful Baltimore canyon, 5 minutes'walk from Baltimore station.- -Bringyour.lunch and .enjoy, the climate, scen-ery, water from; flowing springs; andstately woods /of .this:- very Importantand rapidly? growing residential. center.Roomffo r all, but:positively; noJcampfires or tree cutting. W. L. Courtright,830 Market ;\u25a0 street, or., Baltimore > sta-tion. . .!-: ,:\u25a0 . \u25a0

-:\u25a0.:. \u25a0

-\u25a0 :.-\u25a0 '.: \u25a0 /'• '•,;\u25a0;..

BANKER .FIEES'FATAL"SHOT

—Tahaluque.

•-0k1a... June ;SO.;

—As .- the L-cresult -of*an ;\u25a0; old

\u25a0

" prudge, •; C.'L.VPratt,"voasblor '\u25a0 of-the tBank \u25a0: of\u25a0*./, Kansas, at <. the;" townlof,\u25a0; Kansas.' ,O^la:: • shot

kand ;probably ? fatally "-,vrounded ?Robert *Terry,\u25a0 ;a 'former :United v'States -deputy ftnai-sUal,' here- today- I \u25a0 ,

- '

oat on the Greek theater stage amighty player, asking no considerationof friendliness or favor. She threwover a silent throng of 7,000 personsthe magic of a real creation. . Shebrought Antigone, daughter of Oedipus,to the very center of our_consciousnessand made, in spite of the "artificialitiesof simple Greek art, a vividcharacteri-zation of a woman who suffered anddied before our civilization was evenstirring in the scheme of the centuries.WOMAX IS REAL

And it was not the might of Sophoclesthat was responsible last night for therealization of Antigone.. Neither wasit the costumes nor. the pageant nor themusic, line as all these,were, that keptthe audience in the Greek theater.backof the university. It.was tlie.lprojec-tion of a personality, the materializa-tion of a soul that did it. Itwas MissAnglin showing us how Antigonefought a king and won honor withdeath. Itwas, .in:short. Antigone, -thewoman, who discovered • the :kinshipwhich art establishes between; the un-real and the real, and who 'made amodern audience thrill and listen asshe went her woeful way.:!

Indeed, it seemed to me last nightthat Icould see many evidences of MissAnglin's successful struggles witharchaeology, i-do-not think, "if thestatement .may: be made without sug-gestion of rank heresj', that even themusic

—Mendelssohn's' best-— no"r the an-

cient chorus! commenting on the! action,nor the lighting: of;Dionysus' .altar, norany other memorial of ancient,theatri-cals added much to the force of MissAnglin's primitive appeal. At times sheseemed to be struggling with a formwhich constricted the heroic utter-ances of her art.. \u0084;.

The -elaborate simplicity of her sur-roundings, the artificial effort at nat-uralness which characterized the pro-duction of "Antigone" were forces notalways consonant with Miss Anglin'sdirect, positive arid 'quite superb art.Tlie orchestra breathing : harmoniesabout her, the chorus "of Theban- eldersstanding stolidly to

'their work, the

angular, and massive masonry that em-braced the scene, were not • alwaysquite responsive to.; the human .note,dominant in her performance. Iftherewere a fault to be found, in her as-sumption of the;role of Antigone itwas this: Her "Antigone was

-not a

translation from the Greek. It.was arealization of 'an .individuality, a•pre-sentation of an. entity which was notof any time but the;present nor of anyplace but here.EXAGGERATED RHETORIC

Let strangely", eribugh-r-and it seemslike,a -contradiction /In;thought—MissAnglin's Antigone; was. essentially Gre-cian. She was of>heroic 'mold, -noblevoice, .exaggerated ..rhetoric Zarid :;highsounding

-utterance. - "Har,-"conception-

of,the part,was]pitched *in!a 'high, and /

Eome,v times* piercing; key.tr'lti was: an:

to more or less deserving offspring—

comfortable comment; delightful Iftrue.

It took the perspective that 21 cen-turies spread on tlie oarpet of time toCupply Mis>s Anglin with the aloofness,

ifone may use the word, which genius

Heeds. It was in'Sophocles* tragedy,

"Antigone," that she found the mediumto persuade us of her worth as actressfend tragedienne. L.ast night she stood

MARGARET ANGLIN has developed into a great actress.She has made her progress upward past our very doers, and so,

quite naturally, we have not observed it. We have been wont to regardher in a neighborly way. The illusions that distance and unfamiliarity lendhave been absent from the relationships that have existed between theactress and her American family, and we have been complacent rather thanappreciative. It is true that she has been to Australia, where she wasaccounted prcat, but we accepted the antipodean verdict as a mother or alather accepts the flatteries addressed* : \u25a0

+-

WALTER ANTHONY

Superb Acting in Greek Play Places ActressAmong Great Tragediennes of the Day

{Special -Dispatih to The Call]SONOMA; •Juno °30.—The laVlies of the

Sonoma' valley*jwomen's", improvement;club;;have planned: a carnival /of"na-tions for the opening days of July; toraise funds witlrwhich* to beautify vthetown plaza. A Bear flag , m'onuuient,'a rustic lake,: fountain and drinkingfountain have ',already^foeen 'placed inthe^historic plaza ,by the ladies, who/have 'still, more ambitious, schemes to;carry out. .':The celebration will open tomorrow

'evening at: 7 o'clock with a generalentertainment. Saturday evening there•wiir.bela trades parade; in,which^young\u25a0women dressed to represent the variousmercantile" and .industrial- establish-

fments, of the city willbe ;tha [feature?This' will be followed by/afdance) andconfettiv battle. .Sunday/afternoon' willibe;given' over to:'a- sacred concert' ;by'the Sonoma brass band, .while on ;Mon-|day.'^the:. fourth, there \u25a0\u25a0.; will be :some-thing ydoing(eyeryrminute. ; ; -

\u25a0;

IvfAtithe different: booths refreshments:peculiar to"

tthe nation •represented' will*be .:served, •also'^v;typpical icostumes.worn.-Among' the various .booths '•\u25a0 and;those"in ;;charge. are::. .•':X^^^^^?%"Japanese-— Miss Minnie Cooke.

-'\u25a0' German— Mrs." Ryland. . .. ,-•Kngllah—Mrs. \u25a0: Bateman.French-^M'rs.'Breltenbaeh.

-\u25a0/ \u25a0

.^Swiss-Italian— Mrs. Plnelli. .. ;. .\u25a0 ",:-\u25a0'-Spanish— Mrs.' E.:M."; Tarran 'and:Mrs.: MarieCutler.:;^ •"\u25a0\u25a0 ':: .-

- , ,:- . ..\u25a0\u25a0-:- v. :.

;-Dutch—Mrs. v Simmons.. »• . ; . "

1 Plantation—^Mrs.vTcarl •Hnnter.and'

Gipsy too ts— Mrs.'Dr. EastlamTandMrs.;K. Kf-oupli.v;.\u25a0-. i .-;.- - . . . ,t

;.'Aiuericnu--MisS: "Columbia,".

MISS ANGLIN MAKES "ANTIGONE" LIVE AGAINTHREE SCENES FROM "ANTIGONE"AS 11\WAS-GIVENUN THE CREEK THEATER. /MISS ANCLINIS THE CENTRAL FIGURE INEACH SCENE

POSTMASTER APPOlNTED— Wajthinpton, JaneHO.

—Hanron A. Bro-wnell was today appointed

postmastpr at Vidc-1, San Bernardino county,II-Brownell. resigned. ;

TWO jKILLEDIN-AUTO-WRECK—Upper §53

<lnsky, 0.. June P.O.—

Roy. E.-Laskey nud Ralph. BeMler. a' merchant from Kostoria. ;were in-stantly- klllorl. today.- and 51. -A. Stonebiirncr'aßdJaiups McCannell were probably fatally in-jured when their' automobile^ran into a'Uitch

> near Fostoria. :..- . > . ;. \u0084,

WOMAN BRUTALLY BEATS SON—Mrs. Chrls-tena'Horath.was arrested yesterday on a war-

< rant sworn to by R. C. Gore. 660 EdinburghHtreet; eharjrins: her with brutally beating her

".v >n Peter,- 7 years of age.

Woman's Wound Slight, butAssailant Drops Dead in

His Tracks

PORTLAND,-June 30.—S. T. Bolenpursued his divorced wife,Edna Adams,into the grill of the Hotel Portland to-night and shot her in the cheek, thewound' being > slight. Bolen then firedtwo bullets into his head, falling deadin his tracks. There were but fewpeople in the grillat the time."

Bolen was a lineman in the employof the telegraph department of theOregon Railroad and Navigation com-pany. He and his wife were divorcedabout a month ago, and according'tothe women he had repeatedly madethreats to killher.

The couple came to Portland fromKansas. City.

Fishermen Discover Body WhileShoes Are Found on Bank

With Pipe and Tobacco

JEFFERSON CITY", Mo., June 30.—,The body of Miss Anna. Wendler ofOsage City, Mo., who disappeared Tues-day, was found in the Missouri riverby fishermen tonight five miles west ofOsage City. A heavy dent in the fore-head, evidently made by a blunt in-strument, strengthens the opinion thatshe was murdered.

Miss Wendler left.her home to visitneighbors and had; apparently startedon the way back when she -met death.Her- casket, shoes and parasol werefound on" the river, bank with".a pipeand a package of tobacco:

Farmers are searching for the mur-derer, who may. be lynched if caught. v"

John •.Wendler, father of the girl, hasoffered a reward of $.100 for the appre-hension of the murderer. .. . •

SHOOTS DIVORCEDWIFE ANDHIMSELF

GIRL KILLED ANDTHROWN INRIVER

prefaced his confession with the avowalthat only shabby treatment at thehands of Attorney Thompson, whom henamed as his accomplice, had broughtthe exposure.

He said that he took two packagescontaining $15,000 in bills and con-cealed the others beneath the safe, be-cause his courage failed him the secondday. He buried the first two packagesin the rear of two residences in theneighborhood of his home.

jWhen he was arrested he secured theservice* of Attorney Thompson. Ac-cording to Altorre a demand was madefor attorney fees, so he confided thelocation of the smaller of the amountsto Thompson to be used in the defense.Altorre says Thompson, accompaniedby Mrs. Thompson, went to the cacheand obtained the money. After thiseverything went smoothly until lastSeptember.

Demand for MoneyIt was during this month that Al-

torre declares Thompson demandedmore money, and that in response tothis demand Altorre agreed to Informhis mother of- the hiding place of themoney so that Bhe could be party tothe recovery and thereafter pay out thenecessary legal expenses.

This was accepted, according to Al-torre, and the visit was made at night,the party including Mrs, "White andThompson and his wife. Altorre saysthat Thompson dug the money up and,

instead of handing it to Mrs. White,retained possession, saying that hewould make judicious use of It to meetthe expenses incidental to the trial.

After the trial and conviction Altorrebecame angered at his attorney. Al-torre says that Thompson "threw him

Inspector In Charge Hall, who hasjust returned from Los Angeles, saidyesterday:

"From what 'Altorre. told me it look"*as if Thompson believed Altorre'sprison sentence and. his other pend-ig indictments would operate to shieldhim. His arrest in Reno

'came . as a

complete surprise."Thompson left Los Anpreles over a

week ago in his automobile on a tripto ;Berfo to see the Jeffries-Johnsonfight. •

Detective Brown of Los Angeles, ac-companied by PostofSce ..InspectorMeConnell of San Francisco, will leaveLos Angeles for Reno tomorrow tobring back Thompson. Brown andMcConnell will stop in Sacramento tosecure the papers necessary forThompson's return to Los Angeles fortrial. /\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0• WmuWWBKm

LAWYER ACCUSEDOF TAKING LOOT

Attorney Charged With DiggingUp Nearly $15,000 in

'

Stolen Bills

Continued From Page 1

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