Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NOVEMBER 9, 1895 T1VOLT OPFRA-H Crrnrvy—T AUCTI ¥ LAYMANCE--S mber 9, Real Estute, 8t Stoc ay)—Furnish- ge Joachimsen 1 ornaments e Lieuten- | it | ascheid, | aiation | 0on &t the Me- | hworth, igned to | v 1s fair, with | Y tempefature the water front | ber of vessels track Schnitz, Abi P, e Board of Su- oilin he 1give ex- 1 when the n at Fort s on ofie run over . prox t0 build withou osition to garbage charg 0 in the upreme Court, was re- ce to fourteen years lecture last | bit from the | oung Men’s Christian vered ed before the Supreme 1. investigat- ctor Me- s men ten hours, con-| vindicated in_the dis- Wallace of the in- | Towing out of a contro- | rie rving a life sentence f her husband, uring for | f the Goethe-Schil- 1 to close the affair on | evening. A per- | | bank, each with an entirely d | ject-matter, but both tending i boy, while | ing the validity of the act | ent Election Commission | WILL THE LAW STAD The Election Commission Act in the Supreme Court, ORAL ARGUMENTS MADE. The Fee Bill Case Before Judge Seawell of the Superior Court. ITS VALIDITY IN QUESTION. How the Decision in the Cases Will Affect the Status of San Francisco. Two suits were argued yesterday, one in the Superior Court before Judge Seawell, the other before the Suprem toward a tion as to the exact nding of the City and County of San settlement of the qu 1c n Francisco is to all intents and pur- poses a city, but the government is two- fold—that of a municipal corporation, and that of a county—and the great question, of which the cases sterday are but a part, is whether the county legislation ap- plies to San Francisco, or if it can be :d only by legislation for corpora- In this question is included the ¢ the Board of Supervisors to ap- t Charles S. Young a Superintendent | of Schools; the same question comes in also to the application of the fee bills, par- ticuiarly the last one of 1895; it appears again in the application of the county government bill, or that clause of it which provides that officers elected sha hold office for four yean and it is once more present when, as was the case yesterday before the Supreme Court, the existence of the present Election Commission and the n ¥ hod of its appoin t is under dis- All these measures apply to coun- ties except, perhaps, the last; bu San Francisco is decided to be not a county, but a municipal corporation, they have no | force within these City limits. The case before the Supreme Court, en- titled Denman vs. Broderick, is on a writ of mandate applied for by Denman to | | compel the delends wditor of the | City, to audit his salary warrant. Broc | ick had refused to audi crourd that the comm le | ret W. McEnerney, counsel for Broderick, | 1aws which prohibit the selling of liquors ned the argument. | within _a ~ certain distance of the | g the appointment of | State University and certain other | DE inicitins TARd 5 es. Thercfore the section of the r 150,000 inhabi titntion referred to has no | provides that the Mayor shall appoint two | ing on the question. We submit: | men from each of the leading political par- t the act of 1895 must be considered as | Ues of the State, the appointments to be | establishing a general rule as to fees—to | ratified by the § ntral committees of | be paid in the State generally—subject, | the parties fiom which the commissioners | however, to the exception previously and | selected. McEnerney contended that idly created by the act of 1866. There- i1s act is unconstit voted an hour to e | This_act, he said, i it 0 only. ational, ana he d plaining ' his position. is special and local. intended for rancisco:is a San he first class under the Legisiativ city of t classific which sa of over 100,000 pecple class. The constitution cities can be c! ed for s that citie: that provides general purposes only. If acity bein the first class in ap- plying the provisions of one law it must remain in that class for the application of all laws. By makin applicable to cities and counties of over | 150,000, McEnerney claimed the bill, in e! fect, created a_new class, and was special | legislation and unconstitutional, cEnerney claimed further that the ac as invalid, because it prescribed a pa qualification for the office of Election Con oner and that it delegates a portion of the governmental function to the State of the State. The courts, he said, do not recognize the different political parties and will not discriminate between them, as was shown by the decision that no party what- ever could have a heading upon the ballot, as to allow only those which had polled at least 3 per cent of the votes at the last elec- ourt of Appeals Judge Hanford, | , charged with sur’ habeas corpus. i oner yacht for missionary work as been completed and is -street whari. £t W. Logan. n H. Allen was sued | t for the return of | ugh his carelessness In | lank check. i tho robbed a woman on Morton | > vaiuables she possessed, was | vears in the State e yesterda: | oard of Health visited | Ay on an inspecting tour. | eney’s report was fully | & new She has | | uture he will of the or- Supervisors | r. Bourjade saved nis but & wagon-load of wine was | employment agent, convicted in e1l's court a few days ago bna | ing money by false pretenses, | e of $100 or 100 days in jail lub at its meeting last night cation of C. A. Hughes for a | . And subscribed | blican Couven- 0 toward the Natlonal R fund. andt and others have brought | 108 18 from the Joost in- was loaned in different 1d real estate were given rnes has been paid a fee of $2000 1 the Joshua Hendy will case. | ready been paid $3000, makiug re compensation. Judge Coffey tixed the fe W. H. Seaton gave as an_excuse for not pay- ing alimony that he was out of work and could The opposing counsel ing wood, and he t. estate burean, for the dissemination mation relating to California, for the »f possib] migrants, is to be started 1t Committee. It asks 0-operste. t Tmprovement Company is tof mandamus to have Mayor countersign the Warrant done by them on Twenty- een Sanchez and Noe. Several new papers were filed in the Lux es- B s yesterday. Among them was he execuiors to a petition for rer . They say they are doing as well as th ondition of the estate allows. Rev. Father Edmund, 8 Franciscan mission- 10 China, now sojourning in shis Gity, says s willing’ to_undertake_ the work of build- ing up a Catholic mission in Chinatown, it so sis superiors, who are now consid- tter. m0; ie o ar tug Fearless arrived from y afternoon with the British This is the longest r mude on the Pacific Coast by a tug- boatl. 7The Sharpshooter was dismantléd in the Gulfof California. The application of R. B. Tappen, a Napa ,» to have his former associate, R. K. n, disbarred because of some trouble over a fee has been dismissed by the Supreme Court, but without prejudice to an action in the Superior Court. just to those which had not secured tnat number of votes. In this law, he said, the | same question arose—the discrimination in favor of the two leading parties as agains all others. Again, he said, the act de- | mands that the Election Commissioners be ireeholders, and this jn the face of the provision that there shall be no property qualification for holding office. Asto the political act prescribed, Me- Enerny held that if the law can provide that each Commissioner shall belong to one of twoit can demand that all the « ners shall belong to one party, and if the Legislature can dictate a man's politics while, office it can dictate his relizgion. Furtt the munici pality is entitled to govern itself, and it is | not Teasonable to allow any State politi- cally par late on its ai- fairs—a delegate f Norte or Colusa county helping it to conduet its elections for S chool Directors and Judg .. In conclusion McEnerney claimed that if it be held that the partisan character of the board unconstitutional, then the whole act is uncon: titutional, for itsaim 1s to create a bi-partisan organization. Mr. Delmas of the firm of Delmas & Shortridge appeared on behalf of the Board of Election Commissioners. - In answering he said he had been notified of but three of the opnosing counsel’s points. e would answer them, he said, and, by permission of the court, file briefs upon the others. He then proceeded to argue on the first three points introduced by McEnerney. He commenced his argument by citing article 4 of section 25, which says that the Legislature may not pass any special or local laws creating any ofiice in any county, city and county, city, township or school district. If it prescribe that elec- tions in all cities and counties shall be according to a certain manner, or by a cer- tain machinery, it would not be special, because a special class would be made by the classification ‘*'city and county.” So lone as the law applied to all cities and counties this could not be special. A city and county,”” he continued, ‘s a twofold legislative bddy which differs from ordinary cities and from ordinary counties. I it be not unconstitutional for Supervisors of a county to canvassthe vote —if it_be not unconstitutional for a Com- mon Council to canvass the vote of the city—it is then not unconstitutional and not special legislation to enact that in cities and counties the vcte shall be can- vassed by a sepaate body. Difference in population is the basis of classification, and an election in a place like San Fran. cisco is surrounded by safeguards entirely superfluous in the city of Gilroy—not only superfluous but ridiculous. “Laws relating to cities and counties in California, whatever their action, can be applied only in one place. No matter how many plurals there may be in the act, the object is single and singular. It would be constitutional if it said the act should ap- ply to all counties, cities, and the one city and connty in the State, for there is but one, and the law must be tested not by what may come with the future, but by the conditions present. The Legislature g the act in question | central committees of the leading parties | tion would be special *legislation and un- | | es, and for the one cit; entirely different mocle."y Spawn Passing to the second point, Mr. Delmas said that if in the selection of officers from the two main_political parties the law is declared invalid, it will be very far reach- ing, forthe sections of the Political Code regarding elections uniformly prescribe these qualifications, and elections have been held under these provisions for many years. . The provision requiring that the selec- tion of commissioners be made equally from the two dominant parti Mr. Delmas urged, was philosophically reasonable and politically just. There will always be two dominant political par- ties and there have always been two, and it is not strange that the Legislature sought, by relying upon the watchfulness of one over the other, to insure u fair election. _He spoke then of fications, the proper the educational quali- ons, | ty qualifications and a certain time ‘of residence demanded for election officers. They must be men of property to make them responsible; they must require a residence tounderstand the politics of their locality, and they must belong to different parties because it has been seen that wisdom suggests the plac- ineof the election machinery in charge of those whose diflerences will insure fair- nes; If the political qualification be declared unconstitutional, then the whole election system of this State has for years been invalid. He cited also the practice of drawing juries in/ Federal courts by bi- party boards, and also of the bi-party and | consequently non-partisan scheme which runs all through the Federal system. As to the third point, that it gives over the appointments to the acting power of the State Central Committee, §1r. Delmas | said that granting that the law was in this | particular open to objection, the power of veto had not been exercised, and hence 1n this case the point would not be consid- ered. The court would not therefore take cognizance of that claim. This finished Mr. Delmas’ oral argu- ment, a~d as the questions were of great public importance he asked and was given permission to file a brief. Then McEnerney closed the argument. While the fate of the election was being argued pro and con in the Supreme Court the fee bill was before Judge Seawell. There was much contention as to whether or not the fee bill of 1895 repealed the fee biil of 3866 and as to_the constitutionality of the bill 0f 1895. The case was on the de- murrer of C. F. Curry, County Clerk, to the complaint of W. H. Murphy. Frank 8. Kingwell represented Murphy and W. H. L. Barnes and Mr. Adams rep- resented the County Clerk. Mastick and lastick appeared amicus curim. The | statements of the case were not fully gone | into, but will be in briefs filed later on. The v case as presented yesterd is med up, however, in the concluding graph of the Masticks’ brief, which is | as follo e, we understand, is somehow governed by the provision that municipal charters are subject to and controlled by { general laws. That has no application to this case because the act of 1866 is not, either in form or in substance, any part of | the charter of San Francisco. It does not | purport to be an amendment or addition to the consolidation act, nor is the subject | with which it deals a matter of municipal | lv pro- government at all. The act sim | vides what fees shall be paid h_\-l | in the courts of the te and in | prosecuted within a certain locality. municipal corporation without in any way ting that act. | fore the act of 1366 is now in force, and regulates the fees of County Clerk in San Francisco. There is another question involyed, how- ever. The fee bill of 1895 is ent itled “An act to establish the fees of county, town- ship and other officers, and of jurors and | witnesses is State.” Under this in this & the question again arises, Is San Francisco, so far as legislative acts go,a city or a county? If San Francisco is a county, in which this fee bill can be applied, the county government act, which provides for the election of officers for four years, { will apply here. Ii thisisa city the county | government act does not apply. So it is | with Mr. Young's position as School Su- perintendent—he must depend for his | place, as does the Election Commission | for its existence, on what the courts shall decide this dual government to be. PRESIDIO IMPROVEMENT Residents of the Helghts Discuss Plans for E£nhancing the Value of Their Property. There wasan enthusiastic meeting of the | Presidio Heights Improvement Club at Kinzel's Hall, Washington street, last evening. In the absence of President George Sanderson 0. D. Baldwin presided. A motion passed at the previous meeting to have a committee appointed to agitate | the matter of having all the streets in the district improved with bituminous rock | was rescinded, the improvement not being deemed feasible at the present time. | Tt was reported that California street, from Central avenue to First, was in such 2 bad state of repair asto be almost im- | passable. The car tracks were said to be so high that one could searcely drive a buggy jover them. A committee consisting of James Dever, F. H. Allen and Peter Me- Hugh was appointed to wait on the Board of Supervisors to request that California | street be macadamized from Central ave- i nue to Flirst. | The same committee was also authorized to ask for the improvment of Walnut, Locust, Laurel, Sprue, Maple and Cherry streets from Clay to California. C# A communication was received from L. H. Nagel calling attention to the condi- | tion of the sewer on Clay street from Cherry to First avenue. Thereis no out- let to the sewer in that block and as a con- | sequence the sewage is being forced to the | surface. A contract was let two weeks ago for completing the sewer, and the sec. retary was_ instructed to ask the Street Superintendent why the matter has not been attended to. The matter of making a boulevard of First avenue from the Presidio to Golden Gate Park was discusse at length. It was the unanimous opinion of the meeting that the work should be done as soon as possible, but that it was too much of an improvement. The following were named as such com- mittee: O. D. Baldwin, T. Bickle, A. Sbarbaro, J. H. Mendittio and George San- derson. The secretary was instructed to inform the Board of Supervisors of the sense of the clubon the proposition and the committee appointed to see the prop- erty-owners was requested to wait on the board and explain the matter to them. The club adjourned to meet in four weeks. A CHILD PIANISTE. Successful Debut of Clever Elsa von Manderscheid. A remarkably gifted little pianiste is Miss Elsa von Manderscheid, who was tendered a benefit by the Pianists’ Club last night in the Association Auditorium. Although still a child. she has acquired wonderful technique and expression, and’ she shows an understanding of the works of great composers of which an adult artist might be proud. , Lastnight Miss von Manderscheid played a prelude and sarabande by Bach, and Bach’s “My Heart Ever Faithful,” ar- ranged by Lavignac. She also played a Beethoven sonata, a Schumann novelette and Chopin’s waltz in A flat major, op.42, In all her work the young girl showed a skill and taste that snrprisef her hearers, Andrew Bogart assisted at the concert by singing several selections. can prescribe the mode of election in cities, counties and cities and counties, and it can prescribe one mode for counties and The musicale was given with the object of sending Miss von Manderscheid to study in Europe. That locality might or might not be a | It is precisely like the | | | did because they felt so sure of success. KATE FIELD ON SUFFRAGE Thinks Women Do Not Show Yet That They Really Want It. TO HAWAII AS CORRESPONDENT, She Is Going Down to the Islands for the Chicago Times- Herald. Kate Field, who arrived here late Thurs- day night, will sail on Thursday next by the Mariposa for the Hawaiian Islands, where she is going for.three or four months for her health. She said yesterday that six months ago she broke -down just as things began to look bright ror her paper in Washington, and she was compelled to give it up. *“When Mr. Kohlsaat of the Times-Herald learned that I had quit he telegraphed me | to meet him in Chicago, and then asked | me to help him clean out the place,” she | said yesterday. ‘‘But I wasnot able to do | the track. Bourjade jumped just as the Hotel has asked permission of the Board of Supervisors to be aliowed to change the method of heating the hotel from steam to that of Los Angeles crude oil. The intentjon is to place an iron storage tank in the rear of both the hotel and theater in a brick area outside of both buildings and below the level of the sidewalk, and pump from the tank into the boilers in conformity with City regulations and the most recent improvements that have been made in Los Angeles, where Mr. Warfield has been for some dnf’; investigating the meth- ods of using crude oil. SMASHED BY CARS., C. Bourjade Loses His Wagon and Wine on Townsend Street, but Saves His Life. A backing engine caused another acci- dent at the Sixth and Towndsend streets crossing yesterday shortly after noon. It was only through the merest chance that there were not fatal results. The damaged party this time was C. Bourjade, a wine- dealer residing at 1411 Pacific street. Mr. Bourjade was driving over the cross- ing when a number of freightcars backed by a switch engine bore down on him. He heard no warning, and when h®saw the cars they were s0-close that he became confused. He yelled at his horse and struck him. This made the animal, wnich was blind, unmanageable. Not heing able to see where the danger lay, the horse rushed to one side and be- came fast in a switch with the wagon across first car struck the wagon and thus saved his_liie. The vehicle was smashed to splinters, and its load, which consisted of demijohns of wine, was, of course, de- EKATE FIELD. |Sketched from life yesterday by a “Call” artist.] anything of the sort, and when I told him | of my intended trip to the islands he asked | me to go for the Times-Herald. I expect to be gone about three months.” Miss Field was to have started some time ago, but has been delayed by the cholera reports. Before leaving Chicago she rescued the fort of John Brown, which had been brought from Harpers Ferry to | that city by some speculators, secured land near its original site and provided for its | transportation and raised $1000 to cover the expense of putting it up. ““There is about $§500 more required, and | 1 may ask it of some of the good people of this City,” she said. Miss Field was in Utah during the late political campaign. “The Democrats deserved -to be beaten,” she said, “for breaking up the Liberal party, which theg was long opposed to the admission of | Utah, but there is one very hopeful sign, and that is the way in which the young | Mormons assert their independence ‘of the | church in politics. That spectacle is most | hopeful for the future of the State. There | is a very bitter feeling between the Demo- | cratic and Republican Mormons. In fact | it is as bitter as was that between the Mormons and Gentiles formerly.” | Miss Field does nnt believe that women | are showing a great desire for the suf- | frage. “I do not see why they should be iven it until they show that they want i %’ou can see_by the returns how inactive they were in Massachusetts in the late eleetions. Only 26,000 women voted and vet there are 60,000 more women than men in that State and they could run the whoie State government if they chose. * “Women are not sufficiently enlight- | ened on the subject to want suifrage, and I | am not so sure that it is wise to give any- | body anything unless they show -a desire for 1t. 'E‘ney would be just like deadheads who alwaysgrowl. They never appreciate what they get, while those who pay their way sit out the show, and generally like it. 1 betievein the justice of women’s suffrage. I believe they have as much rigkt to it as men, and I do net agree with Bishop Doane’s article in the North American Review that everything will go to the ‘demnition bow-wows.’ don’t find that women in Wyoming and Colorado are a bit different from women in the States where they have no suffrage. “In Utah there was an amazing amount of consideration shown to women in the late campaign. There was taffy all over the place until the Supreme Court decided that they could not vote until Utah be- came a State. So I don’t anticipate any horrible results when it comes, nor do I | expect it to bring about the millennium. ‘‘Women want some mental dissipation. They want to get away from the hum- drum existence they lead. Men bave their clubs and political meetings and such things to give spice to their lives, but do not appreciate the narrowness of the circle in which women move. When women have such serious things as politics to interest them they will drop a great deal that is trifling. If anything in the world could reduce the number of hours women devote to shopping what a blessing it would be! There are no gadders on earth like American women. If they gadded to some purpose—if they took up hne cooking or esthetic dressing, for in- stance, it wouid be different. “No, 1 don’t think woman’s suffrage can doany harm, and yet, as I said, it will not bring on the millennium. “Women are not_saints, and will make mistakes, but politics will be a good educa- tion for them. They will be developed and improved.” To Burn Oil at the California. Colonel R. H. Warfield of the California | at this and the other crossings on Towns- stroyed. The horse, being blind, remained quiet and was uninjured. : Del B. Bowley, city agent‘of the Fire- man’s Fund Tnsurance Company, wit- nessed the accident. He says an attempt was made to keep Bourjade back. “The flagman at the crossing tried to warn the driver of his perilous position,” said Mr. Bowley, “but Bourjade appar- ently did not seé the approaching cars and drove right on, not knowing what the flag- man meant until it was too late.” Several similar accidents have occurred end street. The railroad company has no gates here as they have at the Howard- street and Mission-street crossings and the drivers go into danger unawares. WOMEN IN THESE CASES, Conductors Betrayed‘ by Female Detectives for Carrying Ladies. Another Woman Who Attempted to Travel on a Scalped Ticket Cleverly Caught. The passenger department of the South- ern Pacific Company has for some weeks been largely engaged in settling side issues incidental to its daily routine and now re- sults are beginning to show themselves in more ways than one from day to day. Shortly after the arrival of C. P, Hunt- ington in this City overland passenger irains on the Southern Pacific were placed under surveillance. It had been suspeeted that in several instances women were al- lowed by conductors to ride free over vari- ous distances. The railway company com- pared its tickets with those of the Pullman Company and foand to its dismay that there were lady passengers who had paid for Pullman berths but had no railroad tickets. With this knowledge in its pos- session the railroad company placed womerk detectives on the Central Pacific trains between Oakland and Ogden. Nine cenductors were caught giving free rides to women and were promptly dismissed. A woman tried to travel as far as Red- lands in Southern California on the Los Angeles train Thursday night with a “scalped”ticket. The ticket read ‘**Red- lands via the Santa Fe to Chicago, and return over the Central Pacific via San Francisco and Los Angeles.” But the lady’s signature did not correspond with thet on the ticket, aithough she persisted they were both identical. To convince the conductor she exposed her baggage- check, the number of which was noted. Upon examination of the bafignge the name of Mrs. Young was upon her trunk. When Mrs. Young heard her name men- tioned she collapsed, whereupon she was invited to step off the train at the grain sheds. S Miss Hollis Returns. Lorraine Hollis has returned from her tour in the south. She met with considerable sue- cess, but after a few weeks on tune road her bookings brought her in the rear of Wallace's circus*and her manager arrived at the con- clusion that it would not be practicable to give the drama immediately after a circus exhibi- tion. For this reason the tour was abandoned and the young actress returned home. Miss Hollis’ menager intends to let her star in Eng- land next season. 1 BAKING PSWDER. Biscuit, cake, pot pies and buns, Dumplings, puddings, Sally Luns,. Muffins, waffles, griddle cakes The very best it always ma Kes WORK GF NEAT SCHOOLS Educational Exhibit Now Place at the Y. M. C. A. Building, in George B. Hodge Delivers an Instructive Lecture on the Subject—An Invitation. A very important and excellent educa- tional exhibit from the evening classes of the associations in various parts of North America is now in place at the Association building, corner of Mason and Ellis streets. The importance of this comparatively new educational movement will be under- stood when it is realized that in twenty- five cities where the work is now aggres- sively carried forward there are more young men in their night schools than are found in the public day high schools of those cities. The exhibit emphasizes industrial and science work, and each drawing-piece of | A CO | | | | wood or iron work is precisely as it left the | pupil’s hand, and when executed was not | Next Monday, 3 expected to be publicly seen; hence does not partake of those characteristics usually beionging to work especially prepared for showing. It shows the actual kind of class | work done in these schools. The average age of the 22,800 young men in these 350 association night schools is 23 years. They are young men of ster- ling character, commendable energy, and are making most helpiul use of the asso- ciation’s privileges to increase their capital and wage-earning ability. They are young men who have been de- nied the privileges of an early education, ho are busy during the day earning their livelihood : and thus cannot take ad- vantace of the grand public day school facilities. From startling facts at hand it was shown by Secretary Hodge last night that but five young men in every 100 through- out the continent were prepared by educa- tion for their occupations and business— ninety-five were not. The international committee of Young Men’s Christian associations, under whose auspices this exhibit 18 here, are encour- aging special effort given along industrial and scientific lines because of the much greater need of help for young men in that direction. 5 There are three times as many positions in the industrial field of Jabor waiting for men of ability and training as ¢here are men prepared for them, while onthe other hand there are three times as many people fitted for commercial positions as there are positions to fill. The exhibit shows fifty of the seventy- five different lines of definite work oper- ated, and comes from fifty or more associa- tions in Norlh America. Its object is to encourage each associa- tion to make more efficient its work in this direction and extend the same as aggres- sively as possible along industrial and sci- entific lines. The international committee regard this City as the metropolis of the Pacific Coast and realize that definite efforts put fortn for the 65,000 young men within its borders mean veryv much for not only the coast but for North America. Every citizen is requested to inspect the exhibit before Saturday. night at10 o’clock, at which time it will be taken down. Ad- mission entirely free and all welcome. e S He Signed the Pledge. Thomas Williams, employed in the whole- sale house of Foulders & Co., appeared before Judge Campbell yesterday on a petty larceny charge. Williams was accused of stealing a washpoard from a corner grocery. He neither denied nor aamitted the charge, exvlaining that he was drunk at the time and therefore not responsible for hisactions. The defendant’s aged mother appeared in court and asked that the charge be dismissed on the ground that he was her sole support. Judge Campbell agreed to do this provided young Williams would take a pledge not to touch whisky in any form for a period of twelve months. This Willlams eagerly agreed to do, the oath being adminis- tered in open court. NEW TO-DAY—AMUSEMENTS. MECHANICS’ PAVILION. A FIVE DAYS’ CELEBRATION. From Tuesday Nov. 5, to Saturday Nov, 9. MATINEE SATURDAY AFTERNOON. Gogthe - Schiller ~ Fostiral, Under the auspicesof the LADIES OF THE GOETHE-SCHILLER MONUMENT ASSOCIATION, Alded by ALL THE GERMAN SOCIETIES Of San Francisco and vicinity. MAGNIFICENT AND ARTISTIO REP- RESENTATIONS From the work of these GREAT CLASSICAL GERMAN POETS. CHANGE OF PROGRAMME EVERY NIGHT. ADMISSION, ADULTS, 50 CENTS. CHILDREN, 25 CENTS. GOOD MORNING! HAVE YOU SHOT THE CHUTES ? HAIGHT STREET, One Block East of the Park. OPEN FROM 2 TO 10 P. M. SUNDAYS FROM 11 TO 2, ADMISSION, TEN CENTS, Concert Afternoon and Evening. BASEBALL—-CENTRAL PARK. San Francisco vs. Qakiand. turday, Sundav, Wednesd: e Y Novemper 0, 10,18 117 T nursday Saturday, 3:30 P. M.’ Sunday, 2:00 P. M. | | | | WE NEW TO-DAY—AMUSEMENT! Lhwbio § ki, ke, FRICOLANDLR.GOTTLOD & Co- L3523 ANDMANAGERS -+ FAREWELL SAY I TO-DAY THIS AFTERNOON AND TO-NIGHT, ‘.‘ROBiN EOooy”’ TO-MORROW AFTERNOON, HAVERLY Reserved S fim {A‘ e b I’ A~ Co, RL fi‘ificc:?'fl % HEATRE Y ProPs. LAST THREE PERFORMANCES. MATINEE ‘To-night and EOY Latest Satirical Co: NTENTED WOM as! NDAY Night. @ DE WOLF HOPPER AN 17 8 L oy ov. 11 bera Comping in W ALIFORNIA V% THEATRE | ~ors ENJOY A LAUGH WHILE YOU CAN ONLY 3 TIMES MORE. MATINEE CHARLEY’S s mnrg AUNT! ——AND—— | By Brandon mas. SUNDAY NIGHT ! | & Next Week the Big Melodran THE WAR OF WEA By the Author of “IN OLD & ut Chas. Frohman GROVER’S ALCAZAR. SATURDAY MATINEE TO-DAY. To-Night and To-Norrow, with Sonday ¥atinee, Last Times of Byron and Sothern’s Comedy, “THE CRUSHED TRAGEDIAN I” LEOXARD GROVER and LEORARD GROYER Jr. Prices—10g, 15c, 25¢, 3 Matinee Prices—10 Telephone Bla T WEEK— PRIVATE SECRETARY and OPEN GATE. TIVOLI'OPERA-HOUSE MBS ERNKSTINE KAKpINe Propriecor & Manages ¥ ie) ——THIS EVENING—— BRILLIANT SUCCESS Of Oftenbach’s Sparkling Opera Comique, “MADAME FAVART” ENELIE NELVILLE—FERRIS ILARTHAN In the Cast. A PERFECT PRODUCTION IN EVERY DETAIL. NEXT OPERA - - - « CARMEN.” Popular Prices—25c and 50c. MOROSCO’S GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. The Handsomest Family Theaterin America. WALTER MOROSCO. ...Sole Lesseo and Managss THIS EVENING AT EIGHT. IRST TIME IN THIS CITY—— Scott Marbie s Thrilling Story, “THE DIAMOND-BREAKER” See the Sensational Madhouse Scene! SeetheGiant Crasher. With Its Massive Machin- ery in Fuil Operation! EVENING PRICES—25¢ and 502 Famlly Circle and Gallerv, 10c. Usual Matinees Saturd and Sunday. ORPHEUM. O’Farrell Street, Between Stockion and Powall MATINEE TO-DAY (SATURDAY), NOV. 9. Parquet, any seat, 25¢; Balcony, any seat, 1003 Children, any pars, 10c. THE ORRIN TRIO, THE LENTON BROS. —AND OUR— GREAT SPECIALTY COT1PANY. - HORSEMEN ! Take notice that Entries to the SECOND ANNUAL HORSE SHOW of the Pa- cific Coast WILL POSI- TIVELY CLOSE ON THE Oth INST. I RUNKING & RUNNING RACES! RACES CALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUB RACES, FALL MEETING! BAY DISTRICT TRACK. Races Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday— Rain or Shing. Five or more races each day. Racesstartat 3:03 P. M. sharp. McAllister and Geary street Cars pass the gate. i FOOTBALL. CALIFORNIA vs. OLYMPICS, CENTRAL PARK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2 P. M,, Rain or Shine. Admission S5O Cents. THERE WILL BE A GREAT COURS=~ ING MEETING On Thanksgiving and following Sunday at Kerri- gan’s Park, opp.Cypress Lawn Cemetery : $100 and silver cup will be added to the stakes; entrance, $2 50. Address all communications (0 M. W, KERRIGAN, Ocean View.