Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCI OVEMBER 20, 1898. 29 A2 X XS R RS2 2 X2 2 2 2 2 R -2 ES RUSH FOR MARKED DOWN 000000600666 06080000 8600000000008 030000000000000000000000606 Anything for a sensation in the show business these days. During the past week the Alcazar and Morosco’s have | attracted breathless attention by not announcing their forthcoming produc- tions of “Cyrano de Berge: Apart from the value of silent advertising at such a time, Morosco is holding ba I suppose, until “Cyrano’’ posters aphs are a drug on the market lithogr Over in Mission street they nev on a masterpiece u the T illustrations go with i I suppose the Alcazar is temporarily speechless b cause it has tired of the sound of i own promises. Whenever you hear the Alcazar promising a first production a play that is difficult and different distinguished j make up ¥ that you are guing to 1t other theater. The Alcazar is t est promiser and the slowest ¢ in the business. They threatened I at the Alcazar months and months 28 and he never came. They threatened Rostand. They gave 1o me and to other honest ser the public pre that scenery and proboscis were the process of construction the week before I had Wr would believe the Alcazar when 1 saw it. I Thall about it the other nig Really, we want to do ‘C I told him that that nee that would do it badl right. But he sald it wa orried him. Heghad s tice of the smallness of the 1ge, and the difficulties in doing justice to the scer Rostand! Out of all the ,ard 1dd s play Mans fence get not suffic our old sp derson, ready to do up week's notice. Mr. He agerial specialty used to n of electric lights rician his name ramatic histo t will as readily poetry and probe ins to be seen full of hope and called the other mor d n e insisted that I H Mr. cou age those present at the ope night. I told him I was b Bal to see wha the critics and his ¥ of Wales play ever > are going to i it’s your ght and | wear and thc es and the he theater, un- d at the picture ke some of my col- myself and see both b E But one f thing without hav nperament, wh I can project my playhouse at a time Ir. Henderson again that was made and that I would t at no matter what personal h elf So “CYRANO DE By Ashton Stevens. loss, and that T was confident his pro- duction would last until Tuesday night, when I would surely be there. future is full of marked-down Cyrano.” A week from to-morrow night the comic opera company at the | Tivolli will have & try at him, and the Orpheum and the other houses are yet be heard from. The Tivoll is as' | he serious about the matter as Mr. Hen- derson is. And the Tivoll is not serious without cause. Edwin Stevens is t> be the over-nosed hero. I promise you that he will play the part with gravity and reverence. Gravity and reverence Q 'J CSS WD G AT THE ORPHEUM « o 7 | | |are the signal attributes of comedi- ans who play “Hamlet” and the like. Willlam H. Crane in romantic | gilks and passionate love-making was one of the most serious things that ever happened in this city. Nat Good- | win’s David Garrick would not be recognized by his own mother. 0000000090009 00 0009000009900 906009000 | self into the throbbing role of Roxane. | mend me to the comedians every time. | With them it is not an affectation put We 'on for the hour; suffer and enjoy the full measure of its frown and importance. It is, perhaps, too early to commence to compare the Comedy and the Tivoli productions. There will be considerable unique diver- sion in each. The Henderson interpre- tation will be thoroughly original; as neither Mr. Bell nor Mr. Henderson has ever seen a performance of “Cy- and it will not be made stereo- BERGERAC.” rano,” typed by over-rehearsal. It will be a daring impressionistic performance | prises. The Tivoli production, on the ERORORCRCRCRCR R R X have wept over Ed Stevens in the old legitimate days when he played “The Mayor’s Appointment,” but that will be as nothing compared to the gloom and circumstance of his Cyrano. Even in his comicality Mr. Stevens is versatile, but as the Bergerac he will be reborn. And you may expect some very solemn moments from Elvia Crox, who will T Ly AT ALCAZAR, -5, [[~oELE_BELGARDE AT MOROSCO'S « liberate. George Lask and ‘Doc” Leahy have just returned from the East, where they spent several weeks watching Mansfleld and Daly. The Tivoli will combine the virtues of Mans- field's and Daly's presentations with certain carefully thought out ideas of its own. Music will be composed by the burn her tights and spangles behind her and forget all about :r kittenish galety girl days when she throws her- For real graveyard seriousness com- they live it, feel it, from start to finish, and full of sur- | other hand, will be cautious and de- | T Tivoli's leader, and seventeenth cen- | tury scenery and clothing by the| Tivoli’s painters and costumers. And I | suppose the Tivoli chorus girls will re- habilitate as the dangerous gang of Gascon Cadets. Anyway we will have | “Cyrano de Bergerac” to burn for some | time to come, and when Mansfield ar- | rives we shall be able to give him pointers on the eccentricities of the ‘plece. Of course, it is all rather hard | |on Edmond Rostand, who wrote this | | masterpiece in simple good faith, but | managers will be thrifty and the pub- | | lic will have its fun. ASHTON STEVENS. ‘ ) AN/ R THE AT THE COLUMBIA The Baldwin. / The most talked about and from all accounts the best of American plays will be presented at the Baldwin to-morrow night, when William Gillette will appear | in the leading role of his war drama, “Secret Service.” The time is during the Civil War, the scene is beleaguered Rich- | almost, one might say, | rulfy hangs upon the auda- cious attempt of a young agent of the Union secret service to Fel control of the Confederate telegraph lines in order to send out a false dispatch which will make a gap In the line of defense throughwhich | the Northern forces may capture the city. | Of how the intrepid and quick-witted young man attains his purpose and them| gives it up through his love for a Rich-| mond girl is the pith of the plot. Other | melodramas have depicted the noise side of war; in this one the actual war is heard, not seen; it is merely the exciting background for a drama of human emo- tions. ‘Willilam Archer, the Ibsen translator, and the most distinguished of the now | active London dramatic critics, had thls‘ to say after the first night in London:| “In dealing with ‘Secret Service’ we mus get rid from the outset of adelphi stand- ards. To call it the best play we have seen at the Adelphi 'for many years would be to assign it to a wrong class. It is simply the best thing of its kind, the best drama of adventure and situa- tion, written within my recoilection in the English language. Mr. Gillette shows throughout a gift of invention tnat would do Sardou no discredit; he piles situation mond. The stor; | on situation with almost lavish ingenuity, and he writes with such sobriety, deli-| cacy and fecling as to transpose what | would otherwise be crude enough military | melodrama into the key of literature, of poetry. | Mr. Gillette's acting—it can hardly be | calied acting, so different is it from most goes by that name—is said to find its | superlative in the part of the hero spy. ther good names in the cast are: Sara | Perry, Hope Ross, Ida Waterman, Alice Leigh'and Dallas Tyler, Campbell Gollan Walter Thomas, Joseph Brennan, H. James, M. L. Alsop and Charles Crosby. New Gomedy. In the production of “Cyrano de Ber- | gerac” at the Comedy Theater to-morrow | night, Edward Bell will play the title part, | | and Adelaide Fitz Allen the heroine, Rox- | ane. There are some twenty-five speaking parts in Mr. Henderson's arrangement, and more than that number of auxillary | people. The story of the play has been | printed in The Call. This is it in brief: Cyrano, poet, fighter and philosopher, loves the beautiful Roxane; but he has a grotesque mose which, he’ believes, wiil prevent any woman from loving him. ‘When Roxane gives him an appointment | at the fashionable pastry-cook’s he s | overwhelmed with surprise and delight; | but he is still more surprised and less de- | lighted when he finds that she meets him only to ask him to take care of Christian, whom she loves, and who is going to the wars with him.” However, Cyrano loves Roxane so purely and unselfishly that he is content to be her friend, since he can- not be her lover, In a moonlight balcony scene, which re- calls that of “Romeo and Juliet,” Cyrano | wooes and wins Roxane for Christian, ar- ranges their hasty marriage, and then starts with the bridegroom on a military campaign. By flood and fleld Cyrano watches over Christian; writes two love letters a day to Roxane, pouring forth his own soul, and signing Christian's name, and, when the wicked Spanfards kil Christian, avenges him most gallantly. Upon _hearing the news of Christian’s death, Roxane retires to a convent, and there Cyrano visits her daily for fourteen years, talking to her about Christian, and reading to her the letters that he has written in Christian’s name. One day the sunlight fades as he Is reading a letter, but he goes on reading just the same. Then it suddenly occurs to Roxane—after | fourteen years!—that he must have writ- ten the letter or he would not know it b heart. As suddenly she realizes that she | loves Cyrano—that she has always loved him. But alas! this discovery comes too late for happiness, Cyrano has been mor- ally wounded on his way to visit her, | he falls dead at her foet. i The Golumbia, Smith and Campbell, who were at the Orpheum several years ago, come to the Columbia to-morrow night in Mathews and Bulger's old success, “At Gay Coney Island.” " It was the memory of the cley- erness of this farce-comedy that made | the Sad Sea Waves” seem 8o fright- | sad when Mathews and Bulger gave it here recently. Of course new song: jokes and sensations are promised, also | several pretty girls. | The Galifornia. The California is on the wave of popu- larity with its low priced productions. At present Willlam Calder and his com- pany are appearing in Harkins and Bar- bour’s romantic mfilitary drama, “North- ern Lights,” and the judgment of the management in arranging for a two weeks' engagement has been fully justi- fled by the immense demand for seats. The Alcazar. | “Imagination,” a farce by Sydney Ros- enfeldt, is the new bill for the Alcazar, | The story tells of an over-domesticate gentleman with a woman’s rights wife. | He is carefully locked up one night when she goes off to the club, but several of the boys release him and he goes on a | large jolly time, to be duly discovered | and duly penitent in the last act. All the | THEATER. GOTTLOB, THE RECORD MAKER! A M. MILLEE snd W. W. FREEMAN Presen AGAY GONEY ISLAND 25—New York's Brightest Boys, Gayest Girls—25 Under Command of the Gallant Leaders of Every Important Battie of Laughter SMITH AND CAMPBELL AMUSEMENTS. MARX & CO., Lessees and Mgrs. -~ MONDAY NIGHT -- SPECIAL HOLIDAY MATINEE THURSDAY I AUSPICIOUS THANKSGIVING CELEBRATION! THE GREAT MAGICIAN! | KELLA THE RECORD BREAKER! t the All-Burpassing Masiesl Comedy Trinmph ‘1 HOPE YOU CHOKE”) THE FUNNY SHOW\ THE MONEY SHOW A SCENIC EQUIPMENT OF RA| THE GIR THE EARLY SHOW ‘l THE DANCY SHOW r 28th - - - “GAYEST MANHATTAN.” LY SHOW THE SINGY SHOW RE BEAUTY AND M ovembe GOTTLOB, MARX & CO., Lessees and Mgrs. Two Wecks, Beginning ..MONDAY NIGHT... Special Matinee Thanksgiving Day, Mr. Charles Frohman Announces an En- gagement of the Pre-eminent Suc- cess of the Period Secret Service WITH William Gillette And 1dentically the Same Splendid Cast | Seen During the Triumphs in New York and London. CALIFORN] GOTTLOB, MARX & CO., Lessees and Mgrs. POPULAR WITH THE PEOPLE! COMMENCING TO-NIGHT! LAST WEEK! SPECIAL HOLIDAY MATINEE THURSDAY. Prices 1b6e¢, 26¢, 85¢ and 50e. WM. CALDER and Company In NorthernLights The Best Romantic Play Seen in Months. “Northern Lights'’ Is & good, strong play.— abounds in sparkling dia- situations.—xaminer. d interestin b ortt Should have a successful “Northern Lights’ run.—Call. Coming—“A Boy Wanted,” Etc. o e L e R TIVOLI OPERA-HOUSE. Proprietor and Megr. ENING, > The Laughing Success! Oscar Weil's Comedy Suzette A GREAT CAST. A PERFECT ENSEMBLE. MATINEE SATURDAY AT 2 P. M. | 70 COMMENCE MONDAY EVENING, NO- VEMBER %—Grand Scenic Production of Ros- | tand’s Romantic Comedy, CYRANO DE BERGERAC. | WITH APPROPRIATE MUSIC. 1 Beats on Sale TO-MORROW MORNING. 25c and m | Popular Prices. A Regerved Seat for the . Our Telephone, Bush AMUSFMENTS. San Francisco, Cal., Estab. 1887 Los Angeles, Cal., Estab. 1894 Sacramento, Cal., Estab. 1897 Kansas City, Mo., Estab. 1897 WALTER ORPHEUM CO., Proprietors. WEEK COMMENCING MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21. Comedy and Novelties Combined in an Unparalleled Thanksgiving Vaudeville Feast. MISS LILLIE WESTERN Vaudeville's Premiere Musical Artiste. e WILSON FMY MAUD COURTNEY ovel Impersonators of High-Class Oolored Comedy. Who Sings ‘‘The Qld Songs.” Most Pronounced Success of the Legitimate Comedy Stars MR. HARRY LACY conex MPANY In Mr. Lacy’s Comedy Concelt, “BOB RACKETT'S PAJAMAS."” FLO IRWIN »» WALTER HAWLEY 'THE GAY MISS CON"—With New Bongs. HERBERT'S DOGS | JAMES CULLEN Most Wonderfal Canine Aot Ever in the Orpheum. FRANK & DON | THE BROTHERS FLOOD Comedy A!hle\k‘n. A:mbuni’lfllrlders. N SPECIAL THANKSGIVING DAY MATINEE, {4325 Great Bill 9: Legitimate Comedy Stax-jrgxln{ Novelties. MATINEE TO-DAY (Sunday), Nov. 20th, Perosctany seeh 5c; Baicony 10e: AL CAZAR HR0SCOS GRAND 5ovs: HOUSE. THEATER. WALTER MOROSCO....Lessee and Proprietor T AR on Telephone—Green 861 - 2 To-day and To-night, Last Performances, “‘A TO NIGH _FORTUNE! MIDNIGHT TRUST.' MONDAY EVENING, | NOV, 21, 1868, Special Eng: ent of the Beau- | tiful and Accomplished Actress, MISS ADELE BELGARDE, Who Will Appear as the Ad- venturess (““The Panther’’) in Sutton Vane's Best Melodrama, “IN SIGHT OF ST. PAUL'S!” ™ Good Comedy. All New Scenery. Striking Situations. Played Seven Weeks at the Bow- doin Square Theater, Boston, and Five Weeks at the American Theater, . New York. See Blackfriars Bridge. The Interior of St. Paul's Cathedral. The Garden of St. Paul's and a Panoramic View of London. Grand Hollday Matinee Thursday, Thanksgiving Day. Regu- lar Matinees Saturday and Sunday. Evening Prices, 10¢, 25c and 50c. Matinee Prices, 10¢, 15¢ and 2c. Seats on Sale at Box Office and Maln Floor Emporium. SHERMAN, CLAY & CO.’S HALL. TUESDAY EVENING, NOV. 22. FIRSET PIANO RECITAL IN AMERICA. S L RAFAEL MEANY, Late Director Gufibm&l‘ a Conservatory of usic. Reserved Seats, 75c. On Sale at Sherman, Clay & Co.'s, Monday Morning, November 21. TO-MORROW—MONDAY, First Time Here, SPECIAL HOLIDAY BILLI Bidney Rosenfeld's Comedy, MAGINATION! NOTHING FUNNIER ON THE STAGE. EXTRA MATINEE... THANKSGIVING DAY. Beats by 'Phone—Main 2. 15¢, 2e, 36c, Sc to MARK THALL. E D SHARKEY CONTEST AN- NOUNCED BETWEEN ACTS. RECREATION Baseballl 5ick. TO-DAY AT 2:15 P. M. SANTA CRUZ V:. ATHLETICS. IN THIS CITY ‘The Relgn! CYRANO DE SOME OF THE PLAYERS: Edward M. Bell, Adelaide Fitzallen, Russell Bassett, Asa Lee Willard, Charles Fleming, Kingsley Benedict, Jean de Lacy, Harry F. Adams, Bartlett Cushing, D. Jones, Willard Spencer, Olive Madison. SPECIAL MATINEE T MATINEE TO-DAY—and TO-NIGHT—. ynpkish T, By THE HENDERSO Under the personal direction of MR. DAVID HENDERSON, Edmond Rostand’s Great Comedy Drama. SUPERB NEW S.ENES, COSTUMES AND ACCESSORIES. Ev’gs—25¢, 35¢, 50¢, 75¢, $1.00. Mats.—25¢, 50¢, 75¢ the Popular Bush. es E DOME.” FIRST TIME | To-Morrow (Monday) Evening at 8, ing Dramatic Sensation of New York, aris and London, N COMPANY, BERGERAC. : : EIGHTY PEOPLE ON THE STAGE. HANKSGIVING DAY. OLYMPIA, c.r 9 Cor. Mason. The Most Beautiful Music Hall in America. Greatest Free Show (5. World! NOTE THE BIG ATTRACTIONS. | THE WONDERFUL FRED4@, ‘World-Famous Twiiling Dancer. OMNE, Only Japanese Lady Juggler in the World. MAI TUNISON, Return of the Favorite Soprano. KELLY AND VIOLETTE, Latest ‘“‘Coon’ Songs. AND TEN ALL-STAR ACTS. MATINEE SUNDAY. ADMISSION FREE. CHUTES AND 700! EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. WAS DARWIN RIGHT? —SEE— “CONGO,” the Gorilla Man. *JOE STORMS JR.,” Orang-Outang, and “SALLY,” Chimpanzee For the Answer! GREAT BILL in the FREE THEATER ANGAROOS and DINGOES from Austra- lla; “GREELEY,” the MAN-EATING POLAR BEAR; "“BEAUTY,” Handsomest Horse ‘on Earth, 'and ATTRACTIONS WITHOUT END! AMATEUR NIGHT EVERY THURSDAY. 10c, including Zoo and Theater; Children, 5c; Sundays and Holidays, 10c. INGLESIDE COURSING PARK. ~ TO-DAY. TO-DAY. MERCED CONSOLATION STAKE and OPEN STAKE! Entrance $2.50. November %—OPEN STAKE. Entrance, $. November 26 and 27—NON-WINNERS' STAKE AND SAPLING STAKE. Take a Mission st. car and it will land you at the gates. ADMISSION 25c... ..LADIES FREE Grand Performance, Sunday, Nov. 2. Commencing at 1:30 p. 4 Marveious Lion Act by tht cele- brated lion tamer, Madame Scheil, Professor Raymous _the Hawaiian human fiying fish. Evan and Burns in a thriliing trapaze performance, Blackened glove contest by Murpay and Ellis, the grotesque boxers, Cornet duet tessors Fabris and Allen. Grand concert hv the Glen Park Band. Plenty of swings, see-saws, may fiying Dutchman, travelling rin; rro Castle full of ‘~teresting animals, seal lakes, donkey riding, etc. Ad- misston n under veorm<an= - QP | the races. | night the most a Alcazar favorites are in the cast, Wallace Shaw playing the erring husband and Miss Marie Howe the opinionated wife. As a special favor to the sporting public the result of the Corbett-Sharkey boxing match will be announced by rounds from the stage Tuesday night. That night, by the way, will be a benefit for Mark Thall and the crowd will be large and friendly. The Tivoli. Oscar Well's “Suzette,” a charming lit- tle comlc opera, will run another week at the Tivoli. The performance is much evener now than It was the opening night and unless “Cyrano’” and ‘‘Secret Service” crowd out everything else ‘‘Suzette’ ought to be good for another week of good business. The Tivoll's Cyrano’ production is being prepared day and night and will be ready a week from to- morrow. Morosco's. Morosco’'s offers a new Sutton Vane melodrama by the name of “In Sight of St. Paul's.”” It will be a big scenic pro- duction, revealing Blackfriars bridge, the Thames embankment, the garden of St. Paul's Cathedral, the Golden Gallery of St. Paul's and. under the dome of St. Paul's. The story tells of a young Eng- lish officer who falls into the clutches of a notorlous woman who is called “The Panther.” Adele Belgarde, who is well known here, has been speciaily engaged for the part of “The Panther,” Maria ‘Winston, who made a favorable impres- | sion last week, has been retained for the soubrette role. James M. Brophy and Lorena Atwood play the hero and hero- ine. The Ojfi\e\um The Orpheum's new features include Miss Lillie Western, ¢he musical artiste, who scored a success when here some two years ago; Miss Maud Courtney, a pleasing vocalist, who makes a specialty of the real old-time songs, and the Wil- son family, a collection of genuine colored people, in songs, buck, wing and planta- tlon dances. From last week there have been retained Harry Lacy and company, | Miss Flo Irwin and Walter Hawley, Her- bert’s wonderful dogs, Frgnk and don, and the Flood brothers. The Ghutes. Reynard, a clever English ventriloquist, with his walking and talking figures, will be new at the Chutes Free Theater next week, as will also the Jackson ‘‘ebony hued laugh-makers ” in “Hen Roost In- spectors,” and Conchita, an old-time San Francisco favorite. The Olympia The Olympia Music Hall claims to have a great attraction in Freda, the dancer who recently made a hit in Dawson Ci and returned a few days ago loaded with nuggets, fame and experience. Meany Recital Rafael Meany, a Guatemalan, who stud- ied in Italy for four years, will give a piano recital at the Sherman & Clay Hall next Tuesday evening, November 22. His rogramme will include works by Beet- oven, Chopin, Liszt, Moszkowski and Wagner and Meany. SR Anna's press agent never sleeps. Lis- ten to this: “Anna Held is fighting mad again. On Wednesday night she was justifiably wroth because she was sued for a paltry $60, which it was claimed had been ad- vanced in San Francisco to charter a lo- comotive to take the little Parisienne to Sixty dollars isn't much money to one whose salary is $1000 a week; but Miss Held says the number is pursuing her, and she thinks it is a hoo- doo. On her return to her hotel on the aav she was sued she discovered that 60 was the number of her room. She changed room immediately. On Thursday, to consternation, she learned that there were just sixty people in ‘The French Maid" company. She refused to appear until the management had temporarily laid off 2 member of the company. Last geravating thing of all ‘When iss Held reached ..er om at the Park Theater she found ’ in_large figures chalked upon the door. She indignantly ordered it rubbed out before she would enter the room. When this was finally done, she walked into her theatrical boudoir, to ve met by the awful ‘60’ everywhere. It was written on the walls in Roman numerals and Arabic characters. It was daubed on the ceiling and painted on the wainscot. Little tags with ‘60’ on them were pinned to all the garments hanging in the dress- ing-room, and staring her in the face from the big pier glass were the same aggra- vating figures as high and as big as her- self. Some jealous chorus girl had done the work, and the culprit has not yet been occurred. dressin | found. Reports of disaster still drip from the organization which called itself the Del Conte Opera Company in this city. Hil- lary Bell has taken the matter to pen. He thinks that possibly it was its unseason- able gloom that destroyed the Royal Ital- fan Opera Company. - The singers were vocally as well as dramatically gifted. Even in Mr. Grau’'s revival of “I Pag- liacci” we shall not hear a finer tenor than Signor Collenz, and the new prima donna introduced last week was a so- prano of uncommon passion and melody. Vet in spite of their abilities trouble has overtaken the Tuscan troubadours, and now in place of the high sounding titles given to them in the programme their eneric and general name is Dennis. This fitic organization, like its orchestral comrade from Italy, the Banda Rossa, has found a fortune out of keeping with its quality. Composed of artists of local repute in-Milan, it teft the sheitering nest of La Scala and voyaged far countries for to see, arriving eighteen months ago in the City of Mexico. At first it was known as the Del Conte Company, then as the Bagetto Company, and @pally as the Royal Italian, changing its title with its territory, and becoming, so to speak, & mugwump opera company. It had vieis- situdes In finances as well as in nomen- clature, and report says that its last angel had his wings clipped to the extent of 5,000. The principal male singer had a glass eye, which may have been an evil eve for the organization. Although *‘Cyrana has proved that an abnormal nose may not Pe devoid of sentiment, a one-eyed tenor is not to everybody’s taste. A writer In Freund's new publication, “Musical America,” suggests that the erities half squelch the ‘“‘encore fiend” by ignoring all encores in their critieisms. ‘his is the most brilliant ye RACING from Monday, Nov. 14, to Saturday, Nov, 26, inclusive. Five or More Running Races Daily, Rain or Shine. Beautiful_Grounds. Superior Accommodations. CE AT 2 P. M. 8. P. R. R. Trains, 12:45 and 1:15 . m. ly. Leave Third-street Eiation, stopping at Valencia street Returning immediately after . the races. Round-trip ticket. 25c. BELECTRIC CAR LINES. Kearny-street and Mission-street cars every three minutes, direct to track without change. Fillmore- street cars transfer each way. ADMISSION TO THE TRACK, $1.00. 8. N. ANDROUS, President. F. H, GREEN, Secretary. QQQMQOOO?) SUTRO BATHS. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, AT 2:30 P. M,, Swimming Races for Valuable Prizes. AND MUSIC BY THE GAULOISE BAND. ADMISSION, 10c. CHILDREN, 5e. OPEN DAILY FROM 7 A. M. to 6 P. M. BATHING FROM 7 A. M. TO » P. M. ROSENTHAL. METROPOLITAN TEMPLE, EVENING DEC. % & AFTERNOON DEC. 1. L2 000922 0 : 8 o a