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FRACTURES HIS BUT PLAYS HIS PART " e 0 RN IS WILLIAM work! ing upo ed y Mr. B On edlate] went imn Parrell, Bramw then has been 1 the sub it t last me o act stage. T mysel? up and drop ‘ @EONONIONIO B U0 8 ONORIORIOTION O MO0 5 0 R0 3 DIORONONO%G i BURGLARS MAKE A GOOD HAUL IN THE VALLEY ADVERTISEMENTS. ECZEMA ON NOS For 8 Years Cured by CUTICURA In a Short Time After Five Doctors Failed. ¥ have suffored for aine years with sores in my nose. 1 ¢o be told me wway. 1h in the worst form, and I & od three times & week. m 1o get avy relie?, 2o my busband sent for me 10 come bome. Whilel was home Crricvna Rexeprzs. I got CURA (olntmest), and T was surprised to & short time when my nose wae AN POSTRAND, W ods, Bay Shore, L. L. HEAD A SOLID SORE From a very small girl T bad a bresking out on. ad every 5, which would become & scati, Fiaslly my father procared » box of CUTioTaA (ol a oake of Covzicuna BosP, and a boutle of uxt. I have Dever been ¢ since. BAH B, HANNA, Apri 33, 1805 M. Vernon, Ark. CUTICURA Begins with the Blood end Ends with The Skin and Scaip. 7 it puridies the biood and clren. Huaok Grrys, and thus removes - with CUTICURA s with UTTICURA (olnt- t ekin cures, cleanse ‘Thut i %o ma It de 8511 througtiout the word. Soie Frope., Boston, * How'd SAVE YOUR HARR ¥ ‘ure Every Mumor,” free. whrm ¢har: with Citictra Roar v I will guarantee thet my Rheumatisin Cure will relieve Jum- bago, pciatica and all theumatic pains in two or three hours, and cure in a few deys. MUNYON. At all - droggists, 25¢c. 4 vial Gaide to Health and medi- cal advice free, 1505 Arch st., Phila. and comfort and thousans cally CURED by DR Magnetic Elastic Truss office or write for New No. 1 BAGNETIC ELASTIC TRUSS co,, €20 Murkel #t., opp. Palace Hotel, San Francises. PILES at Pamphiet Painless treatment. manent cure. Entire time de- vated to rectal d ent against great odds. 2 D. swnC.Ooxra | KNEE, BRAMWELL. the many who have visited the Alhambra aware that Willlam Bramwell, Miss Mr. ohn Oxon In “A Lady of Quality ng under great difficulttes. o right knee a is taken forelh ed in t £0 by n his right knee In such a m He fell face downward on ramwell was on his back his arrival in San Fran ¥ to the Palace Hotel, wh n constant attendance. Mr. clock each evening and returns at 11:30. Dr. Farrell and after the performance removes the. plaster the knée in position while Mr. Bramwell 1s on the stage. night Mr. Bramwel! sald: ut. ped twice during the play | fWem Seen Carrying Off Their Plun- | der, but Escaped—Supposed to | Be 0ld Housebreakers. i £¥ Two daring burglars e dence of Job Street, last premises spc firs: in weeks were al at the weut &b rwe in the ge tha likely to be disturbed at thelr x { task.. The burglars effected {to the house by pr) door with a jimmy. i lights In' the the fr parior. . before operations {" ‘After brenking into ew drawer in th bedre able throwin, rs. p secured ‘acvera When they compléted t the hot portio £ th | e ng friend to her home at once and: foy ttered with articles which did not think worth while and two prise Mrs office and Brandell ited Chief 1 bold this the policemen have jons to keep a_-sharp 1ookout 11 suspicions looking characters seen loltering around _the vicinity, to-night- present a most pearance, the occaston at pany. D, First Re; Cross Cadets, of Sgered A limited number of inv fssued and those fortunate n-them from the memb. assured itteo” having Licutenant V. J Su porai Private B, ——————— Pjerced His Under Lip. Foley. Special. Officer Ralph of Bank met with a peculiar night. He was cles Fallowing “the water slipped on the wet | sharp p | hix under ifp, He | ptial for his inju to w. at the ° street Fifteenth | streets last night 4 celving Hospl for-a broken le, He spent Sunday after- and dressed his knee before the performance that It is my third serious one on the »d two years ago in Rochester, N. Y., when I stabbed ." The wound was cloge to the heart and second was two weeks ago in Denver when & crop, giving me a regular knock-out blow near s$ for a long time. The crop is loaded for stage Mrs. Bur- her novel as the Instrument with which Clorinda con- SACKED THE RESIDENCE OF JOHN BRANDELL. They piit.o use from. the kitchen the' floc n the closet d ine suits of their 1 1 catting off. As soon as she récovered from her sur- { immediately del ctives: on the —_—— A Military Ball, Native: 8ons' Hall on Mason street will beirig the grand military ‘ball under the ausp!. ciment, League of ‘the Heart tions have been s of the com- d.of an enjoyable time. charge sists of Lieutenant B Carroll, i J. T. Donohue, Corporai F. Kiesel, ing out a sewe { the front of the bank for the purpoce o drain off. pavement t of the bropm’ hs Was treate £ RORINCRO Blair's Bramwell » iss an commencin, ery cl > wa She went the floors the: thicves lady frie reported t tractive ap- of Com- Parish. ugh to ob- of the George H. Gor- the Hibernia accldent last He and * the wndle plerced d at the hos- ——————— Fell and Broke Her Leg. A woman who gave her name as Mrs, Lynch and her resldence the Hotel Grenada was picked up in the middle of and Wl removeéd to the Re- where she was treated Mission ——— | Locked Up on Suspicion. Billy MeGuinnes was arrested last night by Officer -1 tective Crockett *“tanks” pending under suspicion - of burglary. and d"‘n'- ?ot true,” replied. the gnantly. for a man who figh; band."—Chicago having ' committed tte at the request of De- placed Investigation. in He s 1 — e — Not Technically Correct. *“They all sald you went abroad to look | for a husband.” sald the blonde. ‘brunette, In- “'I merely went abroad to look e into & hus | was stolen by the man who she claimed STOLEN JEWELS FOUND ON HER MANGLED BODY Delia Tracy's Hus- band Is Missing. SAID TO BE A BOLD BURGLAR B HIS PAL NOW AN INMATE OF FOLSOM PRISON. —_— Charged With Breaking Into a House | on Oak Street — Detectives Anxious to Apprehend Him. e The detectives are satisfled that the va- rious articles of jewelry which were found | on the body of Delia Tracy, who was | foully murdered in a Turk street lodging | house last week, did not rightfully come | into her possession. They claim with con- siderable positiveness that the jewelry | was her husband. The jewel is now in the hands of the police and they are making every effort to find the owner of the property. According to the detectives who are working on the case, Tracy and a former pal named Mason, who is now serving a | ve-year term in Folsom, some time ago | robbed the safe in the Louvre at the in- tersection _of and r 3 e ferry him providing he gave them | vent to the ferry and was | v & stranger, who whispered to him | he had the stolen documents. tor vt the Louvre foolishly gave anger the amount asked for and 5. After r his place of business he noti- | e of his transaction and two | were at once sent to the ferry nd’ the mysierious stranger. r a-diligent search they failed to find wnded over the paper: to The detectives also clalm that Tr: was with- Mas n the latter br °t and got away ¥ v. As they were house” one of the gccupants on them, but failed to stop Masor room of >armalee Honse and sto) dollars’ worth. of jew- 1imed that Tracv was Wwith time, but -did not enter the | berequently Mason was arreste 1 with burglary. He was con- in the rior Court 1 T five years sriunate woman had by . Hill in the everal hundred It 18 ¢ °n living acy for some time;, and it is he was familiar: with his nefa- & Th fi g of the s on her body aracter, and n mar Tc dov fort. s yrehending ible thelr ef- | th s in apy | BRICKLAYER INJURED. ! J. E. Matthews Falls a Distance of Thirty-Six Feet. aver, who lives from a three- he was wor! ow workmen a plece 1, where McGettigan njuri Late last night a y Wor: t in and the sur- ir somewhat of Matthews' very SEEING WITH THEIR FINGERS. { The Great Skill of Mint Employes in | : Detecting Spurious Coins. 'n hears it sald that the blina | with their finger tips,” re- learn a 6ld- mint.-emplo; “ 118 comple Saeshep gt e ""‘],‘ ‘:‘,’Z"‘“‘:‘:‘ he fortress, and it communicatlon with PRINTING. not as far fetched ‘as might b e s by a sha vhich de- : 3 { the upper air is by a shaft whi o S PRINTE] The extent to. which the senee | geends into \assage. E C HUGHES, o1 cansome st7s. ¥ a developed 1s | P mint. we have employes who_can detect counter- | the moment they lay hands. on | b how they do it le 6. give an | €xplanation. thing | sav it that 1t ‘fe wrong.’ | rts never make a mistake and | spurious piece when the most adjusted mechanical “coln re- s K. They will know | 1 after the inscrip- worn_ off by feit, old or new. thrown out. Of course use thelr s as well as th the work, their | placed in thefr fin them over-a pi £ money casi v: pushing aside a bad plece, well worth a -trip to the mint. In . m younger years the facult t it to some | one grows old the tibly and the toach | nsitive. ] Know that ex- old will affect the hands for several davs at a *d to bo a’ young man in who was cele- for 1sh [ distingn counterfelts n - that he found ited by playing f which he was ans Times-Democ me on touch pins, a —New Exe te Birds That Dance. In Southern Brazil is'a lttle bird that | comes as near to holding a regular *“hoe- | down,” a minstrel song and dan as it poseible for bIrds to do. It is-ealleq the | to the rebels In a ‘ma disease pesttivedy cmrad by e oiiest € | ‘dancing bird"” by the res. o< -t AW t!a W o iy the j‘ dancing bird” by th fves. Tt Is o tiny | 8 n, -Had the insurgents moved Bpstatioc cnthe Conit.* Bok- g6 yolis evenings the little follows Sornings and | ¢ on. the capital » OR. JORDAN—PRIVATE DISEASES § | D OF & SOOTS OF.8 Bather .in 8| Jeen - flung open | Cénwultation free and strictly privase y | group of a sc TS0 on A smooth, sandy i I i il 1 Toyument personally or by Telter. A u Frec Trom Erass or mas'” a,apot tht | O ent Mary was saved hy her.queenty | B o et et 10 of the males fies 1o SCHon: | courage. - Riding boldly- to-‘the Guildhail | Aok FRILOSUPRY or ) | hrr:- overhead and begins 3;.3"?.;? she appealed. 'with n‘:nfln'e; voice,” to the valable book fof men) e | liest fib-jog vofce imazinable; | ’:':,:‘f,}( o8 .l,‘r;e fhe - Bouthw “honm\‘\(fi“’z !n.‘J RANS SO on Narxatine 8. ¥: € | e with ihe irds begim to step to | {ERE was Bec shied . on . - { mpaniment, and, more than thor | Up the B sl s ey et | Corner Fourth and s thel 8 1 - A | back on London .an as finally defeated thelr wings in time with the music | PRok 08 LOTERGACE ot “Femple’ Bar ol Market, §F. Try el S il b L il daance | have kept fouch " he ericd at the: gate, S reaaL peew | on the floor at a time. The bird is kpown | DUt his adherents within were unable to Ovércoats and | s_the rupicola_or'cock of the rock—ale trazilian bird. el » the little blue. bird, it selects a . hard floor as its daneing place. A there must be plenty of bushes about. or it does' not seem 10 like Speathtore: About this kind ef platform’ the hirds gather, some on the ground and some . on the bush. Then all sing, axcept one. who gets into the center of the floor, and there leaps and gyrates fn o most comienl fash fon until exhausted. then he stazgers off: but another instantly takes his place and repeats his. performance.—Boston Tran- seript. —— The Kashmir railway is to he construet- ed over 18t.miles in the most mountainous part of India. Tt wil] be dperated by eles tricity, ‘water-power being used. This per- mits of a much lighter motor for drawing the same load and also permits of grades which a -steam-engine: could not climb without recourse to the rack system. 040+ 0404 WJOOQO$O¢006000OOO&O#OQO‘OQOOO*WO&OQOQb THIEVES TUNNEL | been stealing wheat on a Mare interesting “than these relics. are numbers of cannon balls of stone and of | fron which were found ‘in the excavation. | Some of the iron balls have marks on | them. One has been found marked with | |'ships in the river or from-the other side lany real doubt that & Roman fortress ex- THE SAN FRANCISCO OCALL, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17. 1899, ? DENOUNCES SLANDERS ON g THE AMERICAN SOLDIERS ¢ Chaplain McKinnon Defends General Funston and Declares That Churches Were Desecrated by Filipinos and No One Else. ANTA CLARA, Nov. 16.—Rev. Father Willlam D. McKinnon deliversd here on Wednesday night a lecture that in many respects possesses national interest and importance. The reverend gentleman's words should ‘seéttle once and for all the malicious slanders and venom- ous clatter of the yellow journals against the conduct of American soldiers in the Philippines. There is no one better qualified to know than Father McKinnon what has been the conduct of American troops in reference to churches in the Philippines. There is no one more deeply con- cerned In telling the true story of what has happened than he, and last night he declared with solemn emphasis that the American troops have not looted churches, nor stolen vestments and precious relics, nor desecrated the sanctuaries they encountered in their campaign. Father McKinnon delfvered his lecture to a large and appreciative audi- ence in Santa Clara College Hall. Considerable incidental interest was given to the affalr, as the reverend speaker has recently been appointed by Presi- dent McKinley a chaplain in the regular army, and, after a splendid service with the First California Regiment, will return to the scene of the war. The address last night was profusely fllustrated and was given for the benefit of the Young Men's Sodality Club. As already Indicated Father McKinnon emphatically denled that Amer- fcan soldlers had looted or desecrated churches. He asked no one to under- stand him to say that churches had not been looted. He said they had been desecrated and robbed of thelr costly vestments and valuable ornaments, but in every Instance he declared the outrages had been committed by the insurgents. Further than this, he said, no falser charge could be made than to accuse General Funston of having stripped vestments from a statue to adorn his wife. This charge, the reverend speaker said, is absolutely false as are all others with which unscrupulous newspapers seek to malign and dishonor American soldiers. Father McKinnon deseribed General Funston as a brave, liberal-minded man and a brave general, who was more strict, perhaps, than any other general of the Eighth Army Corps in regard to the desecration of sacred places. In conclusion the reverend gentleman paid an eloguent tribute to the soldlers with whom he has served and to whom he has served when death was to close the scene of the battlefield. + + O+0 4040404+ THO 404 OO 404040 4040+0 4040 4040+ 040404540 isted on the site of the tower; tradition | has been constant to that effect. The Homan wall of London touched the O+0+ 040+ 0+0+ 0+ 0+ 040+ O+ O+ 04 0+ O+0 404 0+0 + 04 040+ 040 river at the point where the tower | stands, the Roman masonry undoubtedly | | lies_al the base of some of the existing | mediaeval walls. The discovery of tnese | Roman remains close to the white tower | is interesting, as showing that it was | there probably that one of the princiial | | dwellings of the Roman garrison. stood. Much Wheat Has Been \hdffl’h‘ of a er of the fifteenth cen- | lur)k;‘ of {bi: type wrhlvh has a lobe on | a each side of the guard. Stolen in Stockton. | s e RS These relics inspected, the passage and dungeon were next visited. ~Mr. May's | workmen having lighted the Interior with | candies, some idea could be formed of its size and aspect. The bottom of the sub- terranean passage is seventeen feet be- STOCKTON, Nov. 16.—The other day a | neath_the level of the ground, and tue large tier of wheat in one of the water | shaft by which access to it is gained, and front warehouses suddenly collapsed and | bY which, nu doubt, the prisoner who 1 upon investigation it was found that the | doomed to suffer in it was lowered, : de- warehouse had been undermined from | *po 8 WATECT U0 Uk Laceage was clasea ! Stockton channel and that thieves had | py g strong iron grilie firmly imbedded in large scale. | thie masonry; at {ts other end is the dun- | a horrible black cell, oval in shape, Ily vaulted, and measuring about | across. When the opening of as closed no ray of light penetrate into this terrible prison | which came—if, indeed, even | come—from the opening far | away in the moat. The exploration of the passage has revealed the fact that | another subterranean passage leads into | it at right angles from the Traitors’ Gate, | so that it s probable that a prisoner | brought into the tower by water through | ate could have been put nto the | Special Dispatch to The Call. During the summer and autumn, when so t much wheat s left upon the wharves, there is always some 1ois by petty thiev- | se ing, and it was known that niow and then | a sack or two had been taken, but no one 1 any ldea that such extensive opera- | were contemplated. work had been cleverly done. The warehouse stands back some distance the channel and the thieves had the wharf and run a tunnel to the warehouse and through the brick foundation of the bullding, - A hole was save that could t then cut in the floor of the warehouse, | that sacks cut open and the grain run d¢ passage without setting foot on - the chute into a boat and taki ound. However this may be, {t 1s cer- not .knu\\ n ~'X)"' tly how much w tain that no man condemned to the oubli- been con- ust have ette of the tower—for such this dungeon : packs collapsed the | was—could have ltved long. The damp, was discovered. °T® | darkness and the rats mus v and the matter kept quiet, in ¥ O I must have imnCe din e thikehs, ¢ they | Short work of him.—1.ondon Graphie. attempt any more operations. It o DIRECTORY IN LONDON'S TOWER. OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. Catalogues and Price Lists Malled on Application. Some Curious and Interesting Discov- | eries Made. | of the new guard-room in | ondon | The buildin| the inner bailey of the tower of has led to a strange and interest very, and enhanced the mys HBOOKS AND STATIONERY, ance which have gatnerec | Mround its gray walis and vattie- THE SAN FRANCISCO NEWS COMPANY, ments. The T guar ce 3¢5 0350 Géaty Eivest. Above Fewall: the space between the bloody PERIODICALS, BOOKS AND STATIONERY. the white tower upon tne right as 3 enter the inner ward, and i COAY. Ok AND Pin 1ok its foundation a subterr 900 Battery Street. *» Telephone Main 1864, COPPERSMITH, J. C. WILSON & C0. was wscovered (or, to be red, for its ex extending fri k j0at near the | homas' traitors’ gate be £ tower, in the direction of southwest lilnblll" 'Ij JOSEPH FOX, g:rl P]:!fib?rf‘mzfv Mgr. hite tower. ze is line A p nbing, _Stéamboat e e N asconsy soa| O W: SHITR, codindo orkes svecaticsss el or. It was evident at once, and 18 Washington st. Telephone Main 5641, € ‘ore, that it was not a drain or cul- | vert, for in that case it would have had | a rounded bottom; and it became a mat- | ter of interest to follow it both ways, FRESH AND SALT MEATS. JAS. BOYES & CO-, &1 %, "Siatarinnd™ Main 1234, toward the moat and toward the white : tower, for the purpose of ascertaining | FURS. whether it communicated directly with | J N LGFSTAD 14 Kearny ot upstars Latest interior of the white tower, forming | & Ne v styles, lowest prices, remodeling. n outlet to the noat from the lower portion of the keep where the dungeons | situated. IRON FOUNDERS. ) Morton H It seemed most likely that this should | WESTERN FOUNDRY, Foron & Hedler, be t ation has been dis-| s “Castings of Every Description Made fo Py The passage does, indeed, 1ead | Order. Tel. Black 1606. to a dungeon, and & m¢ b s but there is no -commun PAPER DEALERS. white tower. It runs straight from the moat into the dungeon, but the dungeon y ated from all parts of AND PAPER CO., 722 Montgomery ‘st | WILLAMETTE: *°** n-of the office of work: representative of the Daily Graphic allowed to descend the shaft and jr STATIONER AND PRINTER. e passage and the d 0 de he | Telegraphic 306 - California Eafanes? S WEHERANGE fs) T PARTRIDGE ™ works. Arriving wer and e- | = e e e e oE AT RS, WHITE ASH STEAM COAL. 35555, B2 ‘ CO., at its GREEN the Hest Coal in the ds—450 Main street. that gentleman first exhibited to his visi- | H1AMOND COAL MINI tor In the little yard behind his office the | RICER COLLIERIE: objects discovered _in cledring out the o shaft and passag f masses of g A as common throughout t several broken hrown jugs, known as pel= larmines, and pieces of colored delft and Fulham ware—ali, f miarket. no -doubt, ments | of the broken utensils of the rison, | I thrown down the shaft after the dungeor | had ceased to be used in Elizabethan times and late the letter “R.”. To others pleces of bone and timber. are still adhering. It is be- | lleved, with great probability, that some | at least of these round shot were fired at | the tower by the Protestant sl tmder Sir Thomas Wyatt. The “R" mark on | ne-of the balls may be that of the ad or by mall. All letters confidential. senal ‘at Rochester, to which the Tebels | 1 had ss before marching on . London. 7381 Market St., San Franelsco. Wyatt, as is well known, headed a re- i x of Kentish men when - the fear spread that the Spaniards were coming to conquer the realm after the Queen had set her heart on the marriage with Phillp of | S| by wis:iy DR. JORDAN'S crear KUSEUM OF ANATOMY 1001 MAREET ST tet. 2T, S.F.Ce, The Larges: Anatomical Museom in the Worid ~ Weaknesses or any contracted The stirring tale is briefly tol ships in the Thames submitted to zed by the insurgents. A party of train bands of London, who marched riolk’ again be s the under the Duke of M make. the promised diversion in his favor., and Wyatt was sent to the tower and be- headed. 3 Tt seems probable fhat the cannon balis now discovered. were fired either by the CONCERTS AND RESORTS. CHUTES AND ZOO. EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING, MAJOR MITE, SmallestActor on -Earth, ADGIE. ami HER LIONS, High :Diver, by the artillery. which Wvatt had with him on his march. But the tower, even on its most. vulnerable -side, the river front, was impregnable t6 any. force of foot or artillery which Wyatt conld bring against it The bones which adhére to | AE A 1T A0 AONROW | SATURDAT) some of the eem to tell of N1G v e 9 some execution done—ghastly NIGHT! Reproduction: of the Last Round of the CORBETT-FITZSIMMONS' Fight in ‘con- junction. with the JEFFRIES-FITZSIMMONS and PALMER-McGOVERN roritests. 3 “Phone for Sets—Park 23, relics, may- be, of some of -the garrison who fell %nl the bombardment. One. of the most.interesting finds was a magss of Roman cement in which was. fm- bedded three of the well-known tiles with which the Roman:architects banded-their walls. The cement I8 as usual, of ‘extreme hardness. With this were portions of the fines of hypocaust and a broken vessel of Roman _éarthenware.. There never was SHERMAN=CLAY HALL. 5. _Afternson, at 3:: it s""'{fl'lfh:;rhi'olfi.&m, = - Chamber Music Goncert (fourth season). Re- served’ seats, T6c; admission, 50c. Tickets on sale at Sherman & Clay's Music Store,. - - 1 gtaan reameng “"‘"""fifl'm“‘, iy it T vwifll<| T Mo ! i 51.30 We have been waiting a long time for these hats, but here they are, 1200 strong—ready to be worn by and give satisfac- tion to those who are used to paying $2.50 for a hat. The shapes are the very latest in hatdom—soft and stiff with a number of different styles in each. See our windows, Stiet colors—brown, cedar and black. Soft colors—pear!, cedar, brown and black. Every so-cent Golf Cap In our store now goss for 45c. 718 MARKET ST Out-of-town orders filled—write us for our new illustrated catalogue No. 2. Eddy and Jonss Sts. Phone SOUTH 770, AMUSEMENTS. AMUSEMENTS. THIRD ANNUAL MODEL THE PEOPLE'S PLAYHOUSE. LAST TIMES. TO-NIGHT AND TO-MORROW NIGHT, MATINEE TO-MORROW. EUGENIE BLAIR, A Lady of Quality SUNDAY NIGHT-—-The Greatest JACOB LITT’S BI “IN OLD KENTUCKY. ter Success, from New Yorl SHOW'! To be held In the DOCTORS' DAUGHTERS, To be held in the MAPLE ROOM of the PALACE HOTEL FRIDAY and SATURDAY, Nov. 17 and 18, 1899, $1.00-BOX SEATS—$1.00. PRICES—16e, 2%c, 3c, Sic and Tse. Matinee—i5c, 2S¢, 35 and Soe. of Them All! SUCCESS, THE LOCAL FAVORITE, EEATS NOW READY. ACKNOWLEDGED THE BEST RYAN AND RICHFIELD, Man"'; CHERIDAH SIMPSON, “The American Beauty’'; BURTON'S ACROBATIC COMEDY DOGS; #olofst GOGGIN AND DAVIS, AMERICAN BIO- GRAPH. The famous Parisian Beanuty, CORNILLE. Reserved Seaf Chairs and Box Seats, 5. Matinees Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday. Open from 10 & m. to 10 p. m. ADMISSION, 0o, CHILDREN, %o COLUMBIA 5 CAN YOU DO GOOD BAD COOKING? ALL THIS And WEEK! BILL OF THE SEASON. in “A Headless INIE DE WITT, cornet and vocal ; JEROME AND ALEXIS, LEO CARLE, 25c: Balcony, 10c; Opera TIVOLI OPERA-HOUSE. GRAND AND ENGLISH OPERA SEASON, TO-NIGHT! SPECIAL MATINEE TO-MORROW AT 2. The Delixhtful Opera Which Attracts Thou- sands! THE MASKED POPULAR PRICES. Next Week—CLOSE OF THE GRAND OPERA SEASON Farewell to Signars PRICES (EVENINGS) ... MATINEE SATURDAY Coming—The Greater * COLUMBIA THEATER. ——ANNUAL ENTERTAINMENT—— Of Golden Gate Lodge No. & B. P. OF ELKS, SUNDAY, November 19, at 3 P. M. A Programme of Rare Excellence by Profes- sionals and Others. . Soe. CALIFORNIA THEATER g PLEASE REMEMBER ONLY 4 TIMES MORE or HARRY CORSON CLARKE TO-NIGHT! TO-NIGHT! “PATIENCE.” The Season's Greatest Triumph, Verdl's Superb Grand Ope: e, ("UN BALLO IN MASCHERA. Saturfay and Sunday Evenin Admission, Including Reserved S cents 3 v...25 8D Telephone for Seats, Bush 8. ** “‘Otheilo," gliacel,” ~*Atd e Salassa and Avenado. ALCAZAR THEATER. MATINEE TO-MORROW, (UNDAY. THE FUNNIEST FARCE IN TCWN. My Friend From India. WESTERN TURF ASSOCIATION TANFORAN PARK. JONES, WHAT HAPPENED TO OPULAR—Evening . 3 RICES. Matines Return of 1 NEXT SUNDAY NIGHT, NOVEMBER 2 y and Sunday, CORD BREAKER. “YON YONSON With the Best Company Ever Seen in This play, headed by the Premier Dialect Comedian, R’ ARTHUR DONAL LL REMEMBER T 3 The Funny h Wi Agent: The Lumbermen’ { tet; The Breaking of the Lox Jam. T———— Lumber Camp in the English and Swedish lang GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. TELEPHONE MAIN 532 MATINEE TO-MORRGW. LAST THREE NIGHTS Ot Francis Wilsos THE MERRY MONARCH, The Funniest Performance in the City. Special engagement of L. R. STOCKWELL. MR. INCORPORATED. Memtier American Turt Congress. South $an Francisco, San Mateo Co. Next Week — Colossal, Sumptuous, Elaborate Main Otfice, - Parlor A,Palace Hotel, S. F. and Costly Production of Rice's Beau- W. J. MARTIN. F. H. GREEN, tiful Extravaganz First meetivg from Nov. 4 to- Nov. 18, 1899, Six Fieh-class Tunning races every weekday, ming at 1:30 p. m. B autiful country scenery, sunshine aad fresh alr. unexeelled . accommedations. TRAIN SERVICE; Southern Pactfic Co. Local trains leave at ial race: trains at 12:40, 123 Etp:ucr:lnl immediately after ¢ TIN, President. Seo. and Manager. FIRST WINTER SEASON. C“EVANGELINE.” POPULAR PRICES, i0c, 3¢, 3¢, I5c and 10e. A good reserved seat at Saturday matinee, 25 cents. Branch Ticket Office, inclusive. Last race at 4 p. m. Emportum LAUGHTER IS KING =—=AT THE— STEEPLECHASE, A model racetrick. superb grandstand and ¢Third-street Station.) . 30:40-dnd 11:30 &. m. 12350 and 1:25. p. m. he last race and 4 . M. SeaN Sole AND WAY STATIONSArrive at CENTRAL PARK. B £ 1245 p. m. - Leave San B £35S 5 Pl JENAM AN & | CONEY ISLAND IS HERE AT LAST. oD seop. alrecst rnat. . Race |- T ¢ ROMAN CAROUSA :.’:%.. (Jop. directly -at. the . entrasce & - the Bovelt T IEFFRIER FITZS MM aaplete the Last cars of all trains reserved for women ‘and their escorts, - No smoking. : RATES, entire 11 . rounds. . The RAZZLE-DAZZL) con’t hold the crowd. All the attractions olt famous CONEY ISLAND. gl fl-{:fimmnwg':‘;tg;;xgg_?mn-;fl rearn | SATURDAY ! SATURDAY! SATURDAY! i o e Ay | 950 —DOLLARS—250 pon ticket, limited to thirty days; upon presen- | Will Be Thrown From the High Wire by Pro- tation of bad at Third: or Valencia street fesgor Hill to the Crowd Balow. stations for §3 ADMISSION. loe—Includes & ride om the all ‘complaints. without deiay with | horses. ts to m«mdml Open Every Afternoon and