The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 22, 1897, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, AMUSEMENTS, 1N THEATER.—In Gay New York.™ 1 Opera to-mor- s OrERA-HOUSE- The Great Diamond | 7AR THEATER.— “Incog oLT OPERA Hig Hovsg. — -The Geisha" Ox Va Ons tUTR nd_Performanoas. 1HE CHUTES AND CHUTES FREE THEATER— Great Vaudeville Company, every afiernoon and HEUM BATHS. OAKLAND RACE TRACK morrow. AUCTION SALE | Ly G. H. UMBSEN & Co.—Tt H 22 s eal Estate, at 14 LAYNG & Co.—This evening, No- Hors ycedental Horse Ex- x November 23, 11 o'cleck November 26, 30 v M CRACK COURSERS 0UT FOR DOLLARS A Day of Lively Sport on the Ingleside Sward, Running Strong and Many Escape the Hounds, Hares b ea Santa Clara e trick again | 5o oiten done not a Curtis same litter, and quite 17 months | et ran through the Saturday and yesterday and last| winper over such cracks as yball and others. the t no the d ting Py as ye Theron, had things to | but not at all times. In the | Royal Stag, at 1 to 5, gotout | over Beau Brummel, and | 1owing ones shuddered. Again re was a preceptible shiver when on ran away from Rosette. Flash- dropped 'em a bit by bowling ort, and, with 2, 8 day of true About 5000 peopie were in aitend- The running in detail was as fol- port. ance. , M. Tiernan’s | 5d Sloan, Lar- | nshlight ran a beat Joy B kyball, Theron Flash hitney’s Theron beat M. Tier- n stake. Co tion w's Rag Baby | %3 Cn S. E. Portal’s | elwood beal " 's Oakwood beat D. Hooper's Koolawn beal of Frisco. 1 wood beat Rag Baby, Fire- | Oakwoed beat’ Koo- man be t Laurelwood, Oak- an beat I. Cohen’s | the stake. | nd- Donahue of Crip- v ( & ve decided to leave their [ ks here in truining and will 2 more for the meeting L ebr y will havea try | s Jo G e Challenge cup. In an ew last even Mr, Simmons , ““and let | he recention and treat- rded us by vour leashmen have n without a flaw, Pleased? You bet bave been pleased. We bave not a | piaint.”’ Y is week there will be three days' | an ali-age, of AWD 10-IOTIOW €vening For this it is expected that ail the AT ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, Father Rumm Preaches “Pleasing God.” . a special stake being scheduied ks of the coast wiil be entered. Rev. Father Ramm spoke at St. Mary's | t Thursaay (Thank S s Iev. on C nedral last night on “Doing Good Work and Pleasing God.”” He said in | pari: | Doing good work and trying to please God is | 10 grow in knowledgeof him. to know the innermost thoug person sou make yourselr pleast and try in every way 10 pleese him. Ho moré, then, shouid westrive to pieas r only by doing so can we have know. and faith, is promised us as a for fidelity to his commands. Many say they can have no faith; it is not ot a lack of inteliect but because of a morality. Evillife and immorality are | uly obstacles but they cause & loss of | Tt uts ol g 10 peop Lecau luck ¢ ot ¢ NEW TO-DAY. SLEEP SKIN-TORTURED BABIES And rest for tired mothers in & warm bath with CoTicurA Soap,and asingleapplication of CUTICURA (ointment), the great skin cure. CUTIOURA REMEDIES afford instant relief, and point toa speedy cure of torturing, dis- figuring, humiliating, itching, burning, bleed- ing, crusted, scaly skin and scalp bumors, with 1oss of hair, when all eise fails. Sold throughoutthe world. Porres DEVG ANDCEEM. Conr., Sale Props., Boston, o ire Skin-Tortured Babies,” free. ow 10 N SGM.P sod Bl Beautited by CUTICURA 80, { two pounds to W { The Orpheus | cians | c1sco is what the Orpheus Club was organ- | are doing so conclusively. | allowed to join, and only the first-class the only | | He said in part: { tions too terrible sometimes to be believed by NOT ORIGINAL BILLY SHITH It Was Another Member of the Smith Family That McCoy Whipped. The Australian Seeking a For- tune in the Frozen North With Slavin, The Meeting Between George Green and Tommy Ryan Creates Interest. In the telegraphic reports of the McCoy- Smith fight East, in ich Bmith was knocked out in the second round, the statement was made that the defeated man was “Australian Billy” Smith, well known in this city as a hard-hitting, gamey pugilist. f The Smith that McCoy floored so easily is not “*Australian Billy,”” but some other member of the numerous Smith family. ‘“‘Australian Billy” Smith is seeking his fortune in the frozen regions of the North on the Yukon. He wasoneof the *Pacdy” Stavin party that wert to Alaska when the first reports of the rich finds in the Klon- dike reached this city. When last heard from “Paddy” and “Billy” were trudging over the Chilcoot Pass. The announcement, published exclu- sively in yesterday’'s CALL, that Tommy Ryan and George Green, the local welier- | weight, would meet n the roped arena in this city in the latter part of January or the first part of February next aroused much interest in local sporting circles, It and plucky Catcher Smith’s knockont on | the diamond yesterday afternoon at Rec- reation Park were the principal topics of conversation in the sporting resoris last night. Notwithstanding Green’s defeatar the hands of Joe Walcott and the Green-Z»ig- ler fiasco, in which Green possibly hud no part, the local man’s announcement ihat he wou!ld meet the heavy-hitting Ryan made him many friends. Ryan, so faras ring achievements go, is the greatest welter-weight in the world He was defeated by middle- “Kid” McCoy in a stubborn bat Subsequently the men met again, tle. Ryan having the betier of the contest | when it was stopped by the police. The Walcott-Lavigne battle will be a card. In the third meeting between these doughty ring generals Luvigne concedes t, the men to weigh 3 o'clock on the day of ghts sky of O’Rourke’s n't knock Walcott Good judges of Le twenty rounds. the game contend that Walcott can lick the sailor on his merits. | challenge that out in 10 SHOW THEIR ABILITY Give | Club to Some Symphony Con- certs. Afternoons of Music Will Be the Feature at the Columbia Theater. the best musi- the United States in San Fran- That there are some of in ized in this city to demonstrate, and they This club was organized about last Feb- 1uary, and sinee that time has been pros- pering, until now it is the principal musi- cal organization in this city. They are very exclusive about the people that are musical men s for mem bersh To show San Francisco that they have talent in this city to be proud of they have decided to give ajseries of symphony concerts, the first to be on the 9th of De- cember at the Columbia Theater, at 3 in the afternoon, so as to enable the business men to have a chance to be present. Fritz Scheel has volunteered his ser- vices s director, as have all the members ol the orchestra, of whom there are to rictly speaking are eligible ‘Rustic Wedding,” a piece which cheel played at one of his sym- phony concerts and a piece he has often been requested to repeat, will be heard at this initial concert. E. E. Schmitz, the leader of the Colum- bia Theater orchestra, is president of the Orphens Club and one of the prime mov- ers in this undertaking. ~ mrol s SELF-SUPPORTING WOMEN. A Brave Fight by Working Girls in This City. At the Howard-street Methodist Epis- copal Church, popularly known as the Strangers’ Sabbatn Home, after the unigue praise service of sacred songs to popular airs, ihe pastor, John A. B. Wat- sou D.D., preac.ed 1o self-supporting women from the text: ‘“Help those| women that labor with me in the gospel.” The bravest fight ever made was not by Leonidas is three hundred Spartans at Thermopyle, nor by Miltindes and his Atheu- ns at Marathon, nor by Epaminondas and nis ban followers,nor by Horatius ai the bridge, )t by Arnold von Winckelreid, the Swiss patriot wio broke the Ausirian line and made room througn the breach for liberty, nor by Washington and his bleeding, bare-footed mpatriots, nor by Gran: at Vicksburg, Dou- sldson and Appomatiox. The bravest fight the eys ot God ever looked down upon is the fignt of the working girl in San Francisco to eat bread in the sweat of her own honest toil end at the same time 10 maintain her own im- maculaie purity. The warr.ors of the world strove, suffered and died in the eyes of nations, knowing themselves to be enshrined in the hearts of their grateful countrymen aud that history would do them justice, But these women fight in obscurity, in surroundings without romance and make the fizht which if univers- ally unmade would ruin the world, Paul plesded for help for the women of his time because they heiped him in the gospel. I plead for these womeun becsuse they help me and every miuister. We preach and they practice. “We proclaim the power of God to keep; they exemplify that power under condi- 1hose Who are sheltered in the strong arms of busbands and fathers and brothers and sons. We who are st for the defense of the gospel wouid eccomplish but little without the sup- plementary help of others, and one of the mightiest auxiliaries is the help of women; and I1don’t refer 1o those who are evangelists and public teachers only, but to the quiet women of the homes who are there meeting their womanly obligations to the world. Aye, and to the army of women who, under the ialse, unnetural conditions of modern society, are thrust out to win bread with all the snrinking modesty of womanhood rather than eat the bread of idleness ana sin. They go forth to employments open to thew, and they can be scen on the streets and in the public marts of business, living pure lives, having small pay, sometimes hard work and brutal treatment, but like gold coming fortn brighter from the erueible. potmeet LR L To Cure a Coid in One Day Take Laxative Eromo Quinine Tablots. All drug- gists retund the money if It fuils tocure. 20C. The geuuine has L. B. Q. on each tablet. SAILORS MAKE THINGS LIVELY An Attempt to Stay Men From Shipping Causes Excitement. The Bark Imperator Sent to Angel Island to Be Quarantined. Oaptain Dunlevy’s War Upon Water- Front “ Bunko-Steerers "—An Attempted Suicide, The water front, usually so quiet on Sundays, except for the brazen-lunged | shouts of quack noscrum venders, was dis- turbed by a ripple of excitement yester- day which for a time threatened to in- crease 1n size until it became a full-fledged wave of war. It all arose over the ship- ping of sailors on the Santa Clara. The prompt action of Officer Castor prevented any greater trouble than a strife of words, but a large crowd had gathered in expect- ation of seeing a *'scrap,” so dear to the beart of the water-front lounger. Fourteen non-union sailors had been se- cured to embarx on the vessel, and they were just about to depart for her from Peterson’s boathouse when a delegation from the Sailors’ Union and some of the boarding-houses arrived on the scena. These tried to dissuade the men from { shipping because they had signed for less than union wages, and a futile endeavor was made to coax the boatmen to refuse to take the men off to the ship where she v in the stream. The union men offered no violence and only laid hold of the men to hold them whils trying the various artifices of per- suasion, but one of the sailors became angered at their persistence and jumped from a boat with the assertion that he would do something in & manner pugi istic. Officer Castor came up at that juncture, “fired” the angry man back into his boat, made the coaxing cease and the affair was over. At yesterday the bark Impera- tor, which is declared by the quarantine officials, both State and Federal, to have hree casas of yellow fever on board, was towed over to Angel Island. She will be kept in quarantine for at least a week or ten days, as the authorities do not intend to take the least chancesof the disease spreading_here, climate or no climate. Captain Myers, the pilot, who boarded her, was taken along also. He may be released in a few days, but wiil get more fumigation in that time than he prob- ably ever had before in all his life. Some time ago Cap'ain Dunlevy of the Harbor Police issued his ukase thatthe confidence men of the water front would haveto go. Several of them went at that time. The rasher ones staved, and irom time to time Detectives E'lis and Shaw bave gathered in the “bunko’” men under the protecting roof of the Harbor Police station. Their latest addition to the fold was made yesterday in the person of C. Me- Cormick, said to be an old-time offender. Violent hands were laid on him near the branch rec:iving hospital on East street, and he was locked up on 2 charge of va- grancy, where his mind can be broueht arouna to that state of cool reflection where he will realize that even “bunko’ shoes do not reiieve one from the torments of treading the thorny pathway of sin. On McCormick’s person were found a sp rious check for §$1700, an old Confederate bi'l for $10, a fillei-gold watch and four or five pairs of gold-rimmed spectacles. His presence around the hospital is explained by the fact that a schooner is there pre- paring for an expedition to Copper River. A marine fireman named Robert John- son, living at 315 Tolsom street, was biought inio the Branch Receiving Hos- pital yesterday in a state of arunkenness ug on delirium iremens. He had a shallow cut on the back of the left wrisi, which be explained had been inflicted by himself with a razor. He would give no reason for Li« action, and when told that he conid make a sure case of it by cutting himself on the front of the wrist became infuriated and made an attempt to fight his captors, but was speedily sub- d ued, treated and sent to the Harbor Po- lice Station. Ben Pinkham, aged 72 years, the oidest boatman en the front, started out in his toat for the bark Bundaieer, which lies in the siream, yesterday, and the tide was so strong that it carried bim almost around to Meiggs whar! before he realized it. The old fellow sorrowfully explains that thinys are d fferent now from the time he brought Admiral Farragut “down from Vallejo in a whitehall 1n 1852 in one hour and forty-five minutes.” PLANING MILL ROBBERY, Geoge R. libbetts, an Engineer, Loses His Gold Coin, Watch and Chain. George R. Tibbetts, engineer at Thomp- son’s planing mill, Mission and Fremont streets, was robbed of $50in goid and his gold watch and chain yesterday morning. He went to the mill to make some re- pairs to the boiler, being assisted by Ernest Luckhardt and Jobn Laneon, mechanics, Before commencing work he put his coat and vest in a locker in a small room off the engine room, and in his vest were ten §5 goid pieces, $8 in sil- ver and ago!d waich and chain. After working for a short time he had occasion to go to the locker, and on ex- amining the pockets of his vest he missed the $50 in gald and his watch and chain. No one was in the building except 1 betts, Luckbardt ana Laneon, and T b- bett’s suspicions fellupon Luackhardt, He accused him of the theft and Luckhardt stoutly denied it. Then Titbetts notified the police, and Policeman McDowell was sent to investigate. He brought the trio to the police station, and Luckhardt and Laneon were searched, but nothing was found upon them. Detective Ryan was called in and he went back to the mill with the thre: men. He made a careful searcih for the money and watch, thinking they might have been secreted somewhere, but ne coald not find them. It was suggested to Tibbetts that some outsider miight have sneaked into the mill and committed the thelt, but be versisted in putting the blame upon Luckberdt and-said that he would swear out a warrant for his arrest this morning. e Asphyxiated in Bed. Mary ‘A. Vesey, an old lady aged 75 years and an inmate of the Crocker Home on Pine and Pierce sirects, was found dead in bed ves- terday morning by ihe attendunts of the home. Superintendent McKelvey notified the Coroner's office and Deputy j. G. Tyrrell ro- sponded 1o tho summons. ~After making an investigation of the 700m where the woman slept, he came to the conclusion (hatdeath was accideatal, as the gasjet had been partly wurned oft. The body was jermitted to remain where found. The deceased was & widow and a native of Connecticut. She had been an in- mate of the home for a number of years. She was happy and contented with her surround- ings. e The serew of an Atlantic liner revolves something itke 630,00 times between Liv. erpool and New York, SUDDEN DEATH OF DR. 0'TO0LE The Eminent Oculist Ex- pired at the Baldwin Last Night, He Had Been Suffering From Pneumonia but Four Days. The Deceased Was Well Known in Irish Society Oircles and Through- out the State Dr. Michsel C. O'Toole, the eminent oculist. died in his temporary apartments at the Baldwin at 11 o’clock last night from pneumonia. He had been ill but four days and his death came as a great surprise to his family. Dr. 0'Toole was born in Wexford, Ire- | land, sixty-five years ago. He studied in the leading universities, graduating with | high honars, his studies being devoted to the ear, nose and eves, and he became noted for his great ability in that line. The doctor has been practicing his pro- fession in California for twenty years and had an office in the St. Anns building. He leaves a widow and seven children, who reside in Berkeley. Dr. O'Toole was a prominent member of the Celtic societies of the city and was an active worker for all that tended to the bettsrment of the Irish people both here and at home. Dr. Fottreli attended him during his short illness. His family were hurriedly notified of his danger and were at his bed- | side when he died SEEK TO SAVE DURRANT. The Theosophists Are Now Pre- paring a Petition to the Governor, They Are Opposed to Capital Punish- ment and Wish the Death Sentence Commuted. The Theosophists of San Francisco are just now taking a very aclive interest in the fate of Murderer Durrant. It is a tenet of their faith that capital punish- ment is wrong, and they are getting up a vetition pray ng Governor Buda to stay the execution of the belfry fiend and to | sommute his sentence 1o life imprison- ment. Not only Durrant but all of the | convicted murderers in the State will re- ceive the efforts ot the Theosophists to | save tbem from hanging. | The petition was prepared by Dr. Ja-i rome A. Anderons, president of the San Francisco Theosophical Society, and was introduced at the Saturday night meeting of the Tnternational Brotuerhood League, where it received forty-seven signatures. Dr. Anderson now has the paperat h:s | office and expects to obtain a number of additional signatures before he forwards it 1o the Governor. He will no!d the pe- tition for a week, and calculates that he will have 100 signatures by that time—all Theosophists. Tue grounds on which the petition is founded are humanitarian arguments that capital punishment is 8 barbarism. It is maintained that the execution of murder- ers is not punishment but revenge, and tbat the correct method wouid be a life sentence, whereby the culprit would be both punished and reformed. It is a" bellef of Theosophists that the spirits of executed muiderers become when thus released from tueir bodies by human violence far more dangerous to so- ciety than they ever could be when em- bodied, but this argument was not pre- sented in the poatition, which only makes | such appeals as are supposed to be appre- ciated by bumanitarians who are not The- osophlsts. The Theosophists were addressed Sun- day afternoon at the Academy of Sciences by J. Oettle on the subject of “The Silent Witness.”” He said that consciousness is independent of matter, and that mind is | the instrument by which a silent witness, | which is a ray from universul soul, gains | experience on the physical plane, Sl nen AS BAD AS A HOG TRAIN, Complaint of a Pussenger on the Oregon Short-Line Railroad. M. J. Richards, a commercial traveler of Balt Lake, reached the city yesterday over the Oregon Snort Line, and is at the In. ternational. He was indignant at his treatment on the train on the way West when he arrived, and he said the accom- modations given by the ra:lroad were worse than those provided on a hog train. “I was a second-cluss passenger,” he said, “and the car my licket calied for was crowded. There was no smoking compartment provided for the passengers and no provision made for the comfort of the ladies. Men smoked in the car, and all during the trip, that lasted ino days, the iourists were not even given a chance to wash their faces. The car was close and stuffy, and ventilation was an impos- siulity. The train officers were uncivil and did all they conld to make a miserable trip more miserable.” s g Fought in & Saloon. J. K. Lynch, a painter, living at 25l Sixth street, and C. Martin quarre ed in a saloon at sixth and Mission streets yesterday afternoon and grappled with each other. They fell through a glass door and Lynch was eut on the forehead. Martin was ¢nt onthe hand and he aileges that Lynch cut him with a pen- knife. Both were taken to the Recatving Hos. pital and after their wounds wero dresssd Lynch was booked at the City Prison ona charge of assault with a aeadiy weapon, .——— “Oar Own Ghost,”” Rev. Peter C. Yorke wlill deliver the sixth and last lecture in the series on “Ghosts” for the bencfit of the Catholic Truth Soctety this evening in Metropolitan Tample at 8 o’clock. The subject of the evening will b2 “OQur Own Ghost.”” John J, Barrett will presid.. Tickets are on sale at the society headquarters, room 429, Emporium building; Monitor office, 527 Clay stre nd the box-office of Metropolitan Temple the evening of the lecture. NEW TO-DAY. $20002°° A lady says: “ My biscuits | have a clean smell and taste, since I began to use Schilling’s Best baking powder.” She is one of many. A Schilling & C “San Francisco | TELEPHONE. BONDS OF SYMPATHY Women tell Mrs. Pinkham the whole tiuth about themselves and that is the reason she is able to help them. ing I be are sick to write to you. time, also falling of the womb, trembling our Vegetable Compound, Blood Pur u to feel better, and have been gaining very fast eversince. 1 thank you for what y life and may Heaven bless you.—Mrs. CHARLES D. WEEDEN, 258 Northampton St., Holyoke, Mass. addressis Lynn, Mass. & NEW TO-DAY. treatment Inth a bond pletely ) get no relief. W could hardlysit up, and hearted ellsand di erand Li ine: or Pills. 1 have done for me. Perfect reliance on the sacredness of the confidential relations with Mrs. Pinkham, coupled with the feeling that they are telling their story to a woman, leads women to tell to her the whole truth, thus enabling her to give most intelligent counsel. A woman best understands a woman’s ills. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound A Woman’s Remedy for Woman’s ills. R 557575 Nearly every woman suffers or has suffered from some trouble of the delicate organism that makes her a woman. The gratitude of those who have been relievéd of back- ache,rackingpainsor serious displacement, is boundless. From grateful women health. Many wasted years in almost constant agony, spent money freely in finally learning of Mrs. Pink- ham’s great knowledge, have written to her and secured without cost advice that helped them back to health. ever-widening circle. Wherever women meet, theytalk about the greatvir- tue of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Mrs. WEEDEN Saysg « Mrs. Pinkham Saved My Life.”” DEAR Mgs. PingnAy:—When I wrote to you two or three months ago about my poor ferent kinds of medicine, been to anumber of doctors. A friend of mine advi write to you, and I didso. Ihad a great deal of trouble with my stomach, could not eat hardly any solid food, and even broths distressed me. and losing strength every day. Had backache and headache most of the After receiving yourletter, I began tak- T had taken them but a few days before I shall advise all my friends who 1 ST everywhere come to Mrs. 7 Pinkham most earnest £% words of thankfulness for (& vanished pain and-restored 7 women have and travel,« and is way thereis formed of sympathy with an. ealth, I was com- I had tried dif- and had but could ised me to discouraged. 1 was growing poor I was so weak that I was very nervous and down- You have certainly saved my Mrs. Pinkham’s Cluff Brothers, (rocers, Send for Catalogue. STORES. 40 and 42 Fourth Street, 9 and 11 Montgomery AV, | 401 Hayes street. KLONDIKE! KLONDIKE! Whether you go by way of § away, Dyea or by St. Hichaels we are Main 182 Main 1800. Mine 425, 'in a position to supply you with the [Vest Gools at Lewest Prices and | properly packed for transportation. Al goods guaranteed as repre- sented. cked and delivered free. THIS WEEK: NEW FINNAN HADDIEN, per Ih,, 12%¢ New Thanksgiving goods of su- perior quility just arrived. EASTERN PRIGES WILL HEREAFTER APPLY TO CHAMPAGNE PALACE HOTEL Pints, $2. Quarts, $3.90 | Week Commencing Monday, Nov. 22, NEW TO-DAY AMUSEMENTS. BALDWIN THEATER. AL HAYMAN & Co. (Incorporated)........iessess Second Week Klaw and Erlanger's BURLESQUE EXTRAVAGANZA, he Show of All Shaws, Wher- one sees aud h -ais 50 much that is best in BUKLESQUE, FXIRAVAGANZ\. FARCE | COMEDY, OPEKA AND VAUDEVILLE. BIG SERVAIS LE R Y. illus'onist and Magician, HARRY EDSON and his Dog “Doc.” ELEANOR MuNTANA, lLescripuve Vocalist. MU, 8 PONE he talk of th THL BIOGRAPH, New Sensatioal Views. AN, Ven- trilcquise, YPOLDI Aerial Artiste. COOK & CLINT Shooting Stars. Reserved ~eats, 20¢; #a.cony, 3UC: Opera Chalrs and Box Seats, By Special Mat. Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 25 CALIFORNIA THEATER. Beginning Monday, November 22, FOURTH AND LAST WEEK. ITALIAN GRAND OPERA CO. REPERTOIRE TO-NIGHT, | FIRST TIME HERE. y E t. Wednesduy and | An 2 Sawurany evenings. | MANON L .SCAULT, By Puccini, comp ser of “La Boheme.” Tuesday. £ OF DESTINY.” | A saturday matinee— UST.” Prices 50¢, 75c. 81 and $1.50. ALCAZAR Frev Bruasco .. Manager TONIGHLT and Ba'ance of Week. MATINEE THANKSGIVING DAY, The Merr Farce, by Mrs. Romualdo Pacheco, INCOG. Produced under thy direction of CHARLES LICKSON, PrI0OR-cuoineisoonansoreass 15¢, 25¢, 35¢, 50¢. i-phone Main 254. RAC!NG! RACING! RACING! —CALIFORNIA JOUCKEY CLUB— Winter Meeting, 1897-94, beginning MONDAY, November 15 o November 27, inclusive. OAKLAND RACETRACK. Racing Mouan{‘. Tuesday, Wednesday, ‘ahursday, Friday and Saturday. FIVE OR MORE RACES BEACH DAY. ——Races Start at 2:15 P. M. Sharp— Ferry-Boats leave San Francisco at 13 i aai 30,100, , 2:00, 2:30 and 3 p. M.. connect- + ing with® trains stopping ac the entrance (o track. Buy your ferry tickeis Lo Shell Mound. Heturning—Trains leave the '[racs at 4:15aal 4745 P. . and immediately after the Jas: race. THOMAS H. WILLIAMS JK, ¥residens R. B. MILROY, Secretary. = |ASH 3 :“BIITERS BETTER THAN PILLS. 1 OBERON. GRAND CONCERT EVERY EVENING BY STARK’S .+, VIENMA .:, ORCHENTRA ! | 3, PRICDLANIER.GOTTLOD LPOPULAR PRIC oGhili & (p* LLSE3 A7 HANAGLRY "+ Beginn'ng THIS MONDAY IN OLD KENTUCKY'! Coming—The Prince of Players, LOUIS JAMES. BEAT ¢ GLV N HERE. TIVOLI OPERA-HOUSE MRS, ERNESTINE KRE Proprietor & Manage: THIS EVENING AT 8. LAST NIGHTS OF The Charming Japapese Comedy, “THE GEISHA!” SUPERB CAST! Beautiful Scenery -Magnificent Costumes INT S R Planquette’s Opera Com que. RIP VAN WINKLE MOR0SCO’S GRAND OPERA-HOUSE WALTEK MOROSCU . .~ole Lessee nnd Ma The Eminent Eatern Actor, WM. EX. PASCO®R In the Greit ~ensational Melodrama. “THE GREATD OND RUBi ERY." Thanksgiving Day Matinee. B cerery, . ustumes and 1 e pie! RO NCE=CUMEDY—SPECIALLL Evening Prices—iuc. and_50 Matinee kvery Saturday and Sunday. SUTRO BATHS. Same Graded Temperature ali the year. Open Daily from 7 4. M. to 6 ¥. M. During *he Winter Season ADMIS>ION 100 CHI. Bathing. with admission, 25¢; Special W THE CHUTES AND FREE THEATER Every_ Afternoon and Evening. RAIN OR SHINE Last Week of ADGI - AND Sunday-WEDDING IN the L10X i 1o all loe. © d REGISTRATION OF VOTERS EGISTRATION FOR THE SPECIAL ELEC- 101 to be Leld December 27, 1897, will com- mence ay the office of the Regisirar, in the City Hall, on November 27 and continue uil December 11, inclusive. ‘I e fo lowing persons are entl lod to register: First—All persons not registered at the last gen- eral election, but w ho were entitled thereto. Second— All persons who were re: moving oat ot the r “special Kiecti or otherwise, have 103 Luels right Lo Vote. Third—A/l native male citzers not registered and all natora) have become such prior 10 sep: and are otherwise qualified ac-ord Al qualified electors who wore I Iast general election. and who will buve continved 10 reside within the!r respective “Special Eiection Preciness,” suali be entiticd (o voie withou: addle g Lo law. siered at the pen from 8 A. M. to 10 P M. er of Board of I ection Commi:sioners. oill By ord W. M, HINTON, Kegistrar of Voiers

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