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Show I Miss May Howard. We arc soon to have at our Thea-! Thea-! tre this beautiful woman and dashing actress, who having won the hearts of our friends of San Francisco, is coming com-ing here flushed with the prestige of a most successful engagement, and ripe in the maturity of great dramatic dram-atic success. We understand she will early preclude r'Tho Now M;tgilulenr'V the play that has fronv-it3Lemotional. storjr interested the world at large. It is now being played throughout England and America, to most enormous enor-mous houses, and with, marked ap-prob'--n The direction here will mount Miss Howard's plays In a manner commensurate with their merit, and Vinson and Ey tinge have united their forces with "solid men to the front" as old experienced managers man-agers should. Miss Howard's ."engagement must be successful from many causes. She has a new repertoire, new wardrobe costing $2o,000 at Paris, and is thoroughly endorsed by critical audiences.' au-diences.' She is most able managed, mana-ged, and will produce novelty in rapid rap-id succession. We wish the gifted lady every success. . |