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...GENTLEMEN FROM SAN FRANCISCO AND OTHER STORIES?I. A. Bunin?Seltzer ($1.50). The title story of this volume (translated from the Russian) relates the grim history of an American millionaire who has made his money and in company with his wife and daughter travels expensively all over the south of Europe. He has the best of service and accommodations; but the weather is always bad, and he doesn't find the expected enjoyment. At Capri he is stricken with mortal illness. At once the hotel manager loses his politeness, hustles the body into a cheap coffin, and it is carried...
...would approve the nomination of Ford, or even Bryan. His "hope" that a Progressive Democrat would be chosen to fill the vacant seat from Colorado may be a hit at the conservative Underwood. Possibly he means to support his son-in-law, whom he allowed to perish miserably at San Francisco when a turn of his thumb might have made him President McAdoo, after recommending another candidate to Governor Sweet, has also endorsed Mr. Wilson's choice, while Bryan backed up McAdoo's first selection...
...recalled in Grumpy, is to appear' as the much misunderstood Mark Sabre. David Belasco's production of The Merchant of Venice, with David Warfield as Shylock, is to be produced ii- London. The Music Box Revue is also about to be offered to the London public. The San Francisco Theatre Guild has disagreed amongst itself and disbanded. In the course of its existence it produced six plays: Miss Lulu Bett, The Truth About Blayds, Heartbreak House, S. S. Tenacity, Enter Madame, A Doll's House. Seventy performances in all were given. One of the recent personal triumphs...
...Post Office was situated in the monastery of San Silvestro de Capi- te, which was built in 761 by Pope Paul I on the site of his own house in honor of a piece of the skull of St. John the Baptist, preserved there...
...worth, and she is aunt to the children of William Rose Benet, the poet. Her life has been a varied one, and it shows in her keen understanding of women's hearts and minds, and in her unfailing observation of detail. About to be a debutante in San Francisco, the death of her father and mother, and a reversal of family fortune, made her seek independence. She tried various occupations-with a hardware house, as a librarian, as a reporter. At twentythree, however, she had made her first successful effort as a writer. She sold a story. From then...