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HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SfiNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1895. 21 s itself “a periodical of at Cambridge, Mass., to see the evident ap- hich the people on the coast view the s of THE CALL tomake anewspaper nota standing monu- ment of reproach to the city in which it is published.” The Smithsonian Institution at Wash- ington has awarded its prize of $10,000 to rd Rayleigh and Professor Ramsay of on, England, for their discovery of new elementary constituent of ere. This remarkable discov- preciation w L argon, t} | of a great city. ! | seemed an eteraity, the old man and the |8 | its dealing with a theme entirely new in English literature. Despite its satire, its merciless exposure of fraud and h gocrisy its humorous raillery at Jewish foibles and | weaknesses, and its realistic pictures | of unalleviated poverty, the keynote of | the book is sympathy. Zangwill may not have meant to act as an_interpreter for his people to the world at large, but, unques- tionably, this is what he has dcne, and he has given us a picture so full of humanity, so lightened g sterling manhood and womanhood, nng the spirit of devotion, of loyalty and earnestness that is human, rather than racial, that humanity, of whatever race, must be moved upon by it. ‘We have had the Jew in literature, but it s Shylock, or Fagin who has generally stood for us as the literary race-type. But Zangwill, out of the fullness of knowledge, has given us_ Reb Shemuel, learned, shrewd, bigoted, inflexible. tender Reb Shemuel, stickling, with maddening in- sistence, for the letter of a ridiculous law, spreading & broad mantle of charity over offenders other than himself and his household. There is no scene in modern diterature fuller of pathos, more intensely dramatic than that where Reb Shemuel, having waited in vain for the presence of his only son at the Seder ceremonial, goes forth at last, full of fatherly anxiety, to seek his boy, and finds him, not sick, as he deemed he must be to bave neglected Beder, but issuing from a public restaurant, where he has been violating the passover, in company with a vanety actress of an alien race, the “‘strange woman” of the Proverbs, for whom the faithful Jew has an hereditary hatred. “His-son—his, Reb Shemuel’'s! He, the servant of the Most High, the teacher of the Faith to reverential thousands, had brought a son into the world to profane the Name! Verily his gray hairs would now go down with sorrow to a speedy grave! And the sin was half his own. He had weakly abandoned his boy in the midst Forone awful instant, that young faced each other across the chasm that divided their lives.” Then the boy uts his companion into a cab, springs in imself, and the scene is over. “Who was that, Leonard?" satd Miss ne, curiously. *Nobody; only an old Jew who supplies me with cash.” Gladys la. cal laugh. To the p numerous re: c el merrily, a rippling musi- She knew the sort of person. sent edition, at the request of ers, Zangwiil has added, he fesses reluctantly, a glossary of ““Yid- 4 ords & phrases, ba: on ong d the American e on by to John B. Tabb. another hand. This he does “to please those_who_share Mr. Andrew Lang’s and Miss Rosa Dartle’s desire for information,’ ery is the subject of a fifteen-page article in the present number of Current History, iving in detail the history of the investi- ions and the chemical, physical and spectroscopic properties of argon so far as known, and illustrated with photographs of the discoverers, cuts of apparatus and photographs of spectra. “Gustave Flaubert, as Seen in His Works and Correspondence,” by John Charles Tarver, is the title of an important w which is to be published shortly. It furnishes both a critical biography and, in a sense, an autobiography, for the letters permit a more intimate acquaintance with the spirit and aims of the great realist. The interesting personages who appear here and there in these pages and the au- thor's associations increase the value of the biography. “The Dignity of the Teacher” is the sub- ject of an essay in the Critic of August 24— an article filling the first two and a half pages of a special educational number of Robert Cameron Rogexrs. “Gyp” (La Comtesse Martel). the paper. It is a serious plea for a truer conception of the part played by the pro- fessional educator in the progress of the world. The editors of tae Critic,amazed at the inferior quality of the poetic effusions thus far inspired by the bicycle, offer $25 for the best original poem that shall reach them not Jater than September 30, 1895, on the subject of bicycling or the bicycle. Dr. A. Conan Doyle’s new romance, “The Stark Munro Letters,” is to be pub- lished shortly by D. Appleton & Co. THE HEBREW IN LITERATURE. In response to a popular demand we have, at last, a one-volume edition of and he adds: “It will be seen that most of these despised words are pure Hebrew, a language which never died off the lips of men, and which is the medium in which books are written all the world over, even unto this day.” [Macmiilan & Co. For sale by Doxey, San Francisco. Another book of Zangwill’s, now just coming to the front, although published some months since, is * The King of Schnorrers.” This is in some respects a continuation of the Ghstto pictures. The author wisely disclaims veracity for the efiisodes related by him, and declares that he has merely amused himself and at- tempted to amuse idlers by incarnating the floating traditions of the Jewish Schnorrer, who is as unique among beg- ars as Israel is among the nations, The chnorrer is a Jewish geggn, and in the King of Bchnorrers, whose name is Manas- seh Bueno Barzillai Azevedo da Costa, we have a figure as unique in his way as is Don Quixote or Gil Blas or Hajii Baba. He schnorrs for pleasure and because it is his profession, He has a nerve that would ut a modern interviewer to blush. Heis earned in law and the Jewish traditions, and heisof all things pious. In one o the earlier scenes we see him buying sal- mon in the fishmarket, paying two guineas for a single fish, when he encounters the rich patron who has given him the two guinefls in charity, The latter reproaches im: “How can you have the face to go and spend two guineas—two whole guineas, all you had in the world, on a mere luxury like salmon?’ Manasseh elevated his arched eyebrows. “If Ido not buy salmon when I have two guineas,”’ he answered, quietly, “when shall I buy salmon! As you say, it is a luxury, very dear. It is only on rare occasions like this that my means run to it.” *There was a dignified Enthol about the rebuke that mollified the magnate. He felt that there was reason in the beggar's point of view, though it was a point to which he woula never himself have risen unaided.” And thus, from first to last, Manasseh permits others to_obtain mercy through charity to him. His adventures are rare and glorious, and the narrative leaves him at & point where, in a fit of generosity, he has donated £100 to the synagogue and “The Children of the Ghetto,” issued by Macmillan & Co., and selling at $1 50. This is good news. When, four or five years ago, Zangwill’s- wonderful “Study of a Peculiar People” went begging for a publisher, it was finally brought out in this country by the Jewish Publication Society of America (a concern which an- nually sends forth acmirable books) in two volumes, a shape both awkward and expen- sive. As a consequence the book had few readers. It has taken several years to bring it into the public esteem, which it so richly merits, as one of the greatest books of the last Tmfler-century. *The Children of the Ghetto” owes its power to something more than the fact of successfully schnorrs from its members the necessary sums to make up the amount. All his performances are on the same mlqmficent scale as these, and from first to last he is s wheedling, dirty, bhaughty, specious and thoro: y lov: rascal, with a saving sense of humor that does him in the stead of that grace which less godly men find n to the con- duact of life. [Macmillan & Co. For sale at Beach’s bookstore, San Francisco.] CONVERSATIONS WITH AN UNCLE. Readers of the Pall Mall Magazine will recognize many of these clever, half- whimsical little essays as having lYpomd in its pages. They are noticeably good stuff bfin sprung from that source. The Pall Mall does not usually condescend to be entertaining, and W.G. Wells, the author of ‘‘Select Conversations,” is un- questionably so. In fact the *‘Uncle” upon whom his conversational humors are sad- dled is rather too g?‘lp.bly brilliant, a sort of conversational firework, as it were, who occasionally explodes in a perfect fusillade of witty sayings that would be intolerable, but for the brevity of each sitting with his note-taking nephew. “On Conversation and Fashion” is one of the most.entertain- ing discourses in the book. In the course of his remarks the unclethus traces the rise and fall of conversafional fad-words: “First the fashionable get the apt phrase, and bandy it about in inapt connections until even the novelty of its discordance has ceased to charm, and thereafter it sinks down, down, down. Fin de siecle and cliché have, for instance, passed down- ward from the courts of the fashionable among journalists into the wuns) able depths below. Soon, if not already, de siecle vin and onions and haddocks will be for sale in the Whitechapel road, and Harriet will be calling Billy & ‘cliché- faced swine.’ ¥ ¥ ¥ There has of late been & fashion in originality. The com- monplace has turned, as it were, upon it- self and denied its identity.” A delightful skit at the quasi-artistic s of the day a cook of whom Mr. ‘ells tells us, who embodied his literary impressions in culinary symphonies, He read Poe and undertook some cookery studies in the bizarre. ‘‘Some curious ar- rangements in pork and strawberries, with a sauce containing beer,” but they did not go down with his employer, who feared for his digestion. *“Then I qo- duced some Nocturnes in imitation of Mr. ‘Whistler, with mushrooms, truffles, grilled meat, pickled walnuts, black pudding, French plams, porter, a dinner in soft, velvety black, eaten in a starlight of small scattered candles. That, too, led to a resignation: Art will ever demand its martyrs.” The book bears the London imtrint of John Lane. [New Yor The Merriam Company. For sale at the Popular Bookstore, San Francisco.] A GROUP OF NEW POETS, THe CALL publishes this week vortraits of several stars just arising in the sky of poesy. Father Tabb is the author of a volume of poems that, published just be- fore Christmas, is now in its third edition. He is about 50 years old, and comes of an old Virginia family. For some years he has occupied the chair of English in St. Charles College, Ellicott City, Md., but he still holds, with his sister, the old home- stead in Virginia, where he spends his va- cations. Robert Cameron Rogers, whose book, “The Wind in the Clearings, and Richard Le Gallienne. Other Poems,” is just now having some vogue, is a young man who woos & some- what erratic muse. Like mostof our mod- ern poets Mr. Rogers harks back to classic sources for hisinspiration, and laments the gods that are no more seen of men, but he strikes a human note now and then that is full of promise. He is a Buffalo boy, a son of Sherman S. Rogers, one of the feuding lawyers of fhe Empire State, and was, him- self, designed for the bar. He gave up the legal profession, however, aftera year or two of practice, and is devoting himself wholly to literature. Richard Le Gallienne, who is better known as “the poet of decadence,”’ is con- templating a lecturing tour in America this fall, when he will visit Canada on be- half of those interested in securing a bet- ter copyright understanding between that country and England. His first book, “Volumes in Folio,” was the first book to receive the imprint of the now famous Bodley Head. He recently issued another volume of poems so frankly personal, not to say domestic, in tone, as to call from Israel Zangwill the thyming comment: We sl figure proudly In Richard’s latest chants, And 0 do his sisters and his cousins and his aunts. Dodd, Mead & Co. will be the American Stanley J. Weyman. [Reproduced from a portrait drml!w “Chips " by James Breevort Cox. E:xbllshm of Mr. Le Gallienne’s forthcom* g volume, *“A Literary Log.” BORIBNER'S FOR SEPTEMBER, A new departure in illustration is made in the September Secribner’s by Alexander Black, who illustrates a short story by a series of photographs. The author is pleased to call this sort of thing “realism,”’ and he carries the thing to the point of in- troducing Mr. Depew as one of the charac- ters, with an appropriate illustration of “the only Chauncey” actual hoto- graphed at bis desk in the Inugm}v, told of in the story, It is difficult to coneceive of a magazine like Scribner’s, with a repu- tation to maintain as a conservator of ?ha arts, lending lgiggu to 8o ant an of- {fense as this a, st the art of illustration. The representation of real individuals in fictitious scenes is no more illustration than would be the introduction of piggins and pails as pictorial embellishment to the Tale of a Tub. President Andrews’ **His- tory of the Last &l:.rhr-conmry" is re- sumed, covers the period of the thira- term contest of President Grant, the clash between Conkling and Garfield, the star route and the whisky ring frands. This historical serial increases in interest, and ‘| one must take the time to study it and President Anderson has managed to ren- der it much more readable than much of the fiction that passes muster in the maga- zines, : ‘ CHOICE OF BOOKS. Cbarles F. Richardson’s volume entitled *‘Choice of Books” has been, issued in at- tractive form. That it consists principally | of gquotations from other authors of more or?ess note does not_detract from its in- trinsic worth, for it certainly presents| many exeellent suggestions. In “Love’s Labor’s Lost” the Bard of Avon declared that Small have continual Ylodden ever won, Save base authorities from other books. | Yet Richardson has made the best use possible of these authorities. The author is generally opposed to the use of note- bo(fi(a and cites the remarks of W. A. Hovey, editor of the Boston Evenin Transeript, who, in one of his “Causerie’ papers, says: “The brain isthe best and most reliable memorandum-book; it is al- ways at hand, use enlarges its capacity ang increases its usefulness and reliagility, and no one can read it but its owner.” Published by Lovell, Coryell & Co., 310 ixth avenue, New York. For sale by Doxey; cloth, 75 cen SATURDAY A BIG DAY, Large Attendance at the Me- chanics’ Industrial Ex- position. Two Fine Concerts—A Visit to the Art Gallery—Country Peo- ple Present, The Mechbanics’ Fair was visited by an- other large crowd yesterday and Scheel’s superb band received more deserved ova- tions. A noticeable feature of the attendance in the afternoon was the large number of strangers and country people present. It was estimated that 10,000 people attended last evening. The mining machinery, which is always a leading feature of a California fair, at- tracts more than usual notice. Other arti- cles of home manufacture continue to elicit expressions of praise and admiration, while the special attractions are always be- sieged by a crowd of deeply interested spectators. The art gallery, as usual, was a favored resort, and many spent the en- tire time studying and admiring the paint- ings and photographic displays. The collection is doubtless the most val- uzble ever seen at a Mechanics’ Fair, and, of course, it is the most interesting, more especially to those who take an interest in ari matters. The pictures have all been arranged so as to receive the very best effects of lizht and shade, and the photo- graphic displays especially present a very attractive appearance. A’ visiting artist observed as he gazed upon the display of Bushnell last night: *To thoroughly ap- preciate such a display as this, for instance, visit the gallery again and again.” In my estimation this is one of the most artistic exhibitions that was ever made anywhere. A man who can design this can make a sitting, to be sure. The work is beautiful and there is harmony in its arrangement. The booth is a work of art, the colors are excellent, saying nothing of the masterly whotographic k. 1 have traveled e tensively and visited all the big exposi- tions, and this display of Mr. Bushnell's far exceeds all.”! There is one thing that the thousands who admire the art work of Mr. Bushnell at the fair may net know, and that is he is the author of all' the work. When thi known 1t will add new interest to the dis- | play, forthere is an impression that many | of the splendid portraits in such displn)‘sl are too often imported from other cities. Mr. Bushnell deserves credit from still another standpoint. He is the first photo- grapher in 8an Francisco to make a success of a ground floor gallery. But few ifany galleries in the worid make such a display on the street as his on Market. It is said his windows require some five hundred Paris panel portraits for a dressing. The fact that his gallery ison the ground floor coupled with his success in making chil- dren’s photographs has given Mr. Bush- nell an enviable reputation with the women. Fair-fioers desiring toinspect this original ground floor gallery will bear in mind it is situated just around the corner on Market street, a few doors east of Ninth, NEW TO-DAY. « MERITED REWARD. _ SALES OF LYDIA E. PINKHAMNS VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Dnequalled In the History of Nodicine. Honesty, Excellence, Faithfulness Fitly Bowarded. [SPECIAL TO OUR LADY READERS.] Never in the history of medicine has the demand for one particular remedy for female diseases California, from the Gulf to ths St. Lawrence, come the glad tidings of woman’'s suffering relieved by it ; and thousands upon thou- sands of letters are pouring in from grateful women, saying that it WILL and does positively cure those painful Ailments of Women. It will cure the worst forms of female complaints, all ovarian troubles, inflam- mation and ulceration, falling and dis- placements of the womb, and consequent spinal weakness, and s peculiarly adapted to the change of life. Every time it will cure Backache. It has cured more cases of leucorrhoea Ly removing the canse, than any remedy he world has ever knownj; it is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and axpels tumors from the uterns in an early stage of development, and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver Pills work in unison with the Compound, and are a sure cure for constipation and sick- headache. *Mrs. Pinkham's Sanative Wash is frequently found of great value for local application. Correspondence is freely solicited by the Lydia E. Pink- ham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., and the strictest confidence assured. All drug- gists sell the Pinkham’s remedies. The Vegetable Compound in three forms, 7 Liquid, Pills, and Lozenges. LABOR DAY CELEBRATION. MONDAY EVENING, SEFTEMBER 2, METROPOLITAN TEMPLE. Good Speakers. MRS. 8. J. TULLY, Society’s Favorite Soprano. MR. MARTIN PACHE, The Tivoli’s Leading Tenor (by permission of Mrs. Kreling). Fine Singing. SPEAKERS—— J. TAYLOR ROGERS, GEO. W. MONTEITH and WM. MACARTHUR. Everybody invited. No hat. N Diagy R SoeitTy Seats free. The throngs who hang over the railing and press one another to get a glimpse of | the me!al-!}i’innin [ illustrated P, § Barker on the north side of the Pavilion, appear to enjoy im- | mensely watching every' feature of the work. ~This bifi display interests men, women and children alike. It isimpos- sible to enumerate all that is there to be seen, but it comprises the :;)inning of silyer | goblets, dishes and bowls in copper, 5 o’ciock teas, chafing dishes, ete., and m brass cuspidors, parts of chanaeliers, such as burners, regulators and other fixtures. All these articles are from a flat disk of metal spun over the required form, which is termed a chuck. It is a production worth hours of inspection and study, and the longer it is looked at the more there | appears to be seen and the more one is ' imgresued with the character of the work. | It has been suggested that this branch of mechanics should be re; gnsenud in our industrial schools by such an exponent as | Mr. Barker. i In the northeast corner of the Pavilion is located one of the most interesting features of the whole exposition. It con- sists of an eight-room dollhouse lighted by electricity, dressing-cases and a patent folding-couch. The latter article marks the greatest departure from what one is accus- tomed to see. It does not take hours to understand its workings, but 1t must have taken hours to have conceived the idea of its construction. 1t is a bed, and not a bed- lounge, but a couch. A. V. Hinko, who is a manufacturer of furniture, upholstery, spring and hair mattresses at 2116 Fillmore street, is the inventer. The dressing-cases and well-furnished dollhouse of this booth Teceive a good share of attention from the feminine element, both young and old. No visitor to the fair should zo away with- out seeing the exhibit of Mr. Henko. SAVE YOUR FACE! Age, Sickness, overwork® trouble—those de“y ene~ f woman’s dearest treasure—her beauty and “%pifam complexion—are rendered well-nigh powerless by LOLA MONTEZ CREME A fren sclentific discovery, afood for the #kin, replacing wasted tissue, filling out inkles, causing the skin te throw off what is unhealthy and discoloring and o assume the beautiful transparency and velvety o8s of youth and health. P‘oct,'lutllgfilm-onlhl- 750, All drug- glsts. TO GET RID OF GRAY HAIR. in all its branches, as | _ A l;gx of individual experiences. and rambling Bl . rvations of all classes, by Wm, H. Cham: . _With over 50 copperplates and Photo- Engravings, includin, society sketches by ‘Laara E. Foster, and 6 caricatures by Julins Jahn, illustrating the 'difference between real respect. ability and vulgar pretension, urious foundation and ridiculons make-t of alleged high society, rour CHAMBLISS & COMPANY, Publishers, Pulitzer Building, New Yorks ™ Books published for authors.. NEW TO-DAY—AMUSEMENTS. MECHANICS’ FAIR. Ci the al —the so-called ** NOW OPEN! MECHANICS FAIR! GREATER THAN EVER! ADaISSION: DAY—ADULTS 3¢, CHILDREN 180 EYERING—ADULTS 60c, CHILDREN 28¢. BUSH STREET THEATER. " First Production of THE ROMANTIC HISTORICAL OPERA, CAPTAIN COOK LIBRETTO BY MUSIC BY SANDS W. FORMAN. NOAH BRANDT, COMMENCING MONDAY, contin for One Week, Allany laay or mag has 1o 4o 810 uan my won SEPT. 2 *tjaiaiagie B ing o directions, No stickinees: womré prevent | gale of Seats Dally from 10A. M. to SUPERFLUOUS HAIR, Moles, Warts, Red Nose, tings, Powder-marks, Birth Freckles, etc., destroyed forever wishout pain, scar or injury, by 5P. M.at the mw-.mn.l‘lo- POPULAR PRICES POPULAR PRICES $1, 75¢, 50c, 85¢, 25c. the g i b —— ELECTRIC NEEDLE. |0, FORNIA THEATER TRIAL POT, iz szt TR GRS ST MRS. NETTIE HARRISON, BEAUTY DOCTOR, 40 and 49 Geary Street, 3an Francisco, " TO-NIGHT {————TO-NIGHT! An Ebsborate Production of the Grand Opers, “LA TRAVIATAM THE—— GIUSEPPLYERDI PRILEARNORIC SOCIETY - Diroction et Signor A. SPADINA. NEW TO-DAY—AMUSEMENTS. SAN FRANCISCO. WITH Az ONOPOLY | cyAUDEVILLE 94 /.enesentnG *A-WeW-SHOW- eace weex - oy e DRESROR e&’i&%'fl DENVER BLSWEN 887, 0 COL. ESTA Weelx Commencing Monday, Sept. 2, GRAND OPENING OF THE FALL AND WINTER SEASON! A MAGNIFICENT NEW COMPARY ! 16—-CELEBRATED ARTISTS!-16 THE FARBIANU TROUPE, Celebrated Russian Singers and Dancers, Direct from St. Pelersburg. MORELAND, T Af 1In Solo, Duet and Trio Stnging, and HOMPSON ARD BUSH, MINNIE MAY an Original Dancing Speclalty by Miss Thompson, IRVIN T. MONS. CEBALLOS, Wire Performer and Equilibrist. WRICHT AND O’'BRIEN, Ectentri¢ Comedians and Mimics. HUCH EMIMETT, The Wonderful Ventriloquist. And Ketained for One Moro Week, THE MARTINETTIS JOHNNIE CARROLL MATINEE TO-DAY (SUNDAY), SEPT. 1. Parquet, any seat, 25¢; Balcony, any seat, 10c; Chiidren, 10c, any part of the house. = MOST STUPENDOUS EVENT In the Amusement Annals of the Pacific Coast is the Advent of the GREAT WALLACE SHOW Now the Leading Circus and Menagerieo of the Western Hemisphere. The Best Equipped Circus in the World, with the Finest Horses of Any Show on Earth. CAPITAL $3,060,000! 10 ACRES OF CANVAS! SEATING CAPACITY 20,000! 4 TRAINS! 1000 PEOPLE AND HORSES! Positively the First Big Show to come across the Rocky Mountains with its Entire Equipment, and also the first to charge the same prices West and East: ADMISSION, 50 CENTS; CHILDREN, 25 CENTS. ‘Will show the principal cities of California in August and September. SAN FRANCISCO NINE DAYS! COMMENCING SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 7. AND Co, NGORP'D PROPS. & MAYMAN T0-HORROW NIGHT TEIRD AND LAST WERRK BUT ONE®E JOHN DREW Monday, Tuesday and Wednezday Evenings, —Saturday Matinee— Thu reday,griday an Saturday Evenings— “THE MASKED BALL” “THE BUTTERFLIES” MONDAY, SEPT. Sth—Last Week of Mr. Drew’s Engagement. ‘CHRISTOPHER JR AND OTHER COMEDIES. COLUMBIA FRIEDLANDER, GOTTLOB & CO.. THEATER. . Lessees and Managers THE LAST NIGHT OF MASIES AND FACES (Peg Woffington), A most delightful production—the beautiful Minuet, THE STOCKWELL COOMPANY OF PLAYERS, Including Henry E, Dixey, Maurice Barrymore, L. R. Stockwell, William G. Beach and Miss Rose Coghlan, TO-WMORROW NIGHT, A MOST IMPORTANT EVENT, ¥irst production in San Francisco of OSCAR WILDE'S Great Society Drama, “A WOMAN OF NO IMPORT4NCE” Praceded by the amusing one-act curtain-raiser, “PTEE MAIJOR'S APPOINTMENT.”” Reappearance of Mr. Henry E. Dixey. MOROSCO’S GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. WALTER MOROSCO. TO-MORROW EVENING....... First Production in this City of Peton & Alfrien ... Sole Lessee and Manager -MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, Big Spectacular Drama, ACROSS THE POTOMAC, ACKNOWLEDGED THE BEST WAR PLAY EVER WRITTEN. 8 GRBAT AOTS, 7 GREAT SCENES, —— INCLUDING —— A SEE}| The Realistic Battle. General The Virginia Mansion. FULL COMPANY FROM THIRD REGIMENT, N. G. C. ath’s Headquarters. The Beautiful Allegorical Picture. A PRODUCTION COMPLETE IN EVERY DETAIL’ THE BALDWIN--TO-NIGHT. | TIVOLI OPERA-HOUSE CONRIED'S GERMAN COMEDY CO. From the Irving Place Theater, N. Y. A DOUBLE BILL! SEDAN CELEBRATION. Moser & Schoenthan’s Screaming Comedy, KRIEG IM FRIEDEN. A Feast of Laughter! Original Caste Box-office open to-dny at 11 4. 3. Next Sunday—Last night but two, MAUEBBLUEMCHEN, & ATTRACTIVES EXHIBITS Tiburon Ferry, foot of Market Mps. ERNESTINE KRELING Proprieter & Manager ~——LAST NIGHT OF —— Millocker's Martial Opera, “THE BEACK HUSSAR !” ——TO-MORROW NIGHT— Scenic Revival of Gounod's Immortal Opers, FAUST! First Appearance of IDA VALERGA—WILLIAM WALSHE, Popular Prices—26c and 50c. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. FAMOUS TORBETT GRAND CONCERT COMPANY, MISS OLLIE TORBETT, Violinist; BARONESS VON TERSMEDEN, Pianist, and THE LUTTEMAN SEXTET OF STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN, AT METROPOLITAN TEMPLE, Evenings of September 6, 7 and 9, THE GRANDEST MUSICAL ORGAN- IZATION TRAVELING THIS 1 BEASON. Reserved Seats. Seats on sale at Sherman, Clay & m e?mxumwuonw EL CAMPO. THE POPULAR BAY RESORT, NOW OPEN EVERY SUNDAY DURING Muste, Dancing, Bowiing, Boting, Fishing snd Other Amusements. Refreshmonts 4t City Prices. Fare, round_trip, 26¢; children, 16¢, ncluding admiasion to; THE UKIAH :30 A, El at »