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Our line of high-class colored more complete and as attractive as attention to the many unique designs been specially imported for the fi ALL WOOL Satin Prunelia French Poplin French Henrictta Granite Svilings Bird’s Eye Granile Prunella Jacquard Satin Whip Cord In all (he leadiag shades and black. $1.00 a yard Waists and House Gcwns. ln desizns, a yard and black, at a yard Send Orders by Dress Fabrics and black Dress Fabrics were never oliday Season. Specimen Values A NOVELTY JUST OPENED. SILK AND WOOL PERSIAN STRIPES, SPECIAL. ALL WOOL MELROSE SUlTlNGS in a!l the leadmgshades 75'c CITY OF PARIS DRY GOODS COMPANY, £E. Corner Geary and Stockton Strests, Unin Squire PARIS] Company. at present and we beg to direct your and exceedingly good st\'le< that have ALL WOOL Camel’s Hair Melangz Peau de Gant French Velveteen Cloth (Fatin ¥ |msl|> hevron Strips French Shooda Cloth, also Crepe de France, a pure Silk and Wool Malerial I2 all the new shad:s and black. $1.50 a yard en excellen* fabrlc for a beflutlful Mail or Express INDICATIONS OF ACTIVITY IN REAL ESTATE MARKET Forward Movement Is Setting In and All of the Brokers Are Correspondingly Happy. The expected forward movement in real e has =et in and all the brokers are py. ‘There are buyers for lots in all of and for available n and farming properties. There #re also enough applicants for flat houses and tenements to keep the rent- business active There are few eligi- t are not rented where the provided proper facilities In some of the real estate uses the 'rnun: b'\an’ gl all sides, Among and also among the ce is expressed in the | e estimates give the sina® the time of the taking of the last censi’s, when the population was 342,00) rot'nd figures. The pressure upon the hotels for accomsmodations and the bLlld- | ing of nt‘ hotels, lodging hco apartment houses to meet the e for .'f‘-om are signs that are not Jooked by the imvestors who are studying | and the outlook with e present st care progress o’ building is satisfactory s to be adas-d to tk te future was to the amouw structure ~-hat the Mutual Bank N ark street, running already looms up 3 the made to prepare Flood buflding on the Baldwin Hotel, for the e old the and also for the Crocker site Hotcl on the corner of Geary and Powell streets. The baildings of the old Risdon plant have been removed. The Southern Pacific Compa: once begin t0 improve in th The era of costly buildings h ¢ ushered for San Francisc The wholesale sec- tion south of Mardtet street and east of Third undergoing such a change that it amounts to rebuflding that part of San 3 a scaie of expense that as- tonishes n the old-time dwellers the city, Who have for years been pre- dicting *he future greatm of Francisco. A much larger space than usual is need- ed for the reports of the doings of the realty who have long lists to give out. Taeir summaries of recent transactions are given below. Sales and Prices. Recent seles reported by Shainwald, sckbee & Co. are the following: on ghe south line of Washington 6 feet west of Hyde, thence west 60x with three very substamtial residence for §. Bernard; lot on the south I feet east of L2 for '$13,000, 1 t on the west line of Looust street of Sacramento, 27:8% account of Joseph L. Spear J Hardy; 1ot and residence un the east 27:6x107:6, for $13,000, for eccount of Becker estate; lot on southwest corner of Lake street and First ave 27485 feet, for $I5%0, for account estate Sutro; Jot on east line of Hoft ent wold LB of Jones street, 80 feet north of Turk, feot south of Stxteenth, 66100, for r account of Mrs, F. B. Lowndes to Jo- Risso. Easton, Eldridge & T have sold the following: Jane A. Ingalls to Bobert Carlson, lot on e southeast corner of Eighteenth avenue and 4x96:1 feet, for $500; Ban Lumber Company to BEdward Feu- wier, 82¢ Guerrere street, west side, between Fifteenth _and _Sixteenth, lot with four $5000; Morris Abraham to Michael %5 to §21 Alabama street, east side, 234 feet south of Twentleth, lot 26x100 feet, four flats of four rooms each, for §2500; Marie Hunt to Willilam B. Bush, southeast corner of San- and Twenty-fifth streets, lot 22:1%x81:9 with two fiats, for $4000 Properties in Country. David Bush & Son have made these try sales: Contra Costa County, for the Bank of Mar- of grazing and stock land, ith a small vinevard, to G. report that they d City, formerly the | home cf Horace Hawes Jr., for the Santa Qlara Valley Land Company, to C. P. Bradford for $30,000; the villa home of Hermann Schuss- ler of the Soring Valley Water Company, at Bl Cerrito Park, to A. P. Welch, Baldwin & Howell representing Schussier on the sale, at price of $20,000, the land amounting to 4 acres and having upon it a.suburban for the Cerrito Land Company to A. P. Jot 5 in Cerrito Park for , the lot being bout il acres In extent. hton & Gardiner have .sold to A. Picge, for G. M. Klumke, lot 60x75 feet on the south line of Ban Jose avenue, be- tween Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth streets, and also an adjoining lot for the Brickell estate. G. H. Umbsen & Co. have sold for the estate of John Kimball, to Ferdinand Hesthal, 50x87:6 feet, on the north line of McAllister street, 37:6 feet east from Hyde treet, for $30,000; lot 28x84 feet, on the north line of Pine street, 84:6 feet, east from Taylor, for Mrs. Houston, to F. Piffer, for $6000; also a block in the town of nta Clara for Mrs. Bowne, to Dr. A. E. Osborn, for $4500, as the site of a sani- tarfum. K. A. Tuttle reports the following sales: Lot with 8 feet frontage on the morth line of Pacific avenue, east from Buchanan street, for Bdward Weinlander to W. R. Morton, for zum. three new flats on Larkin sireet, near on, for §11,250; three flats on lyon street, | a growth approximating 10 per cent near McAllister, for $6700; two flats on Pierce sireet, near Turk, for $4500 Boyce, Toy & Sonntag report the sale of 30x160 feet on the northwest line of | Mi: n street, 275 feet northeast from Fourth street, for R. E. Dickinson, to A. Aronson, for §29,000. On this a five-story building will be erected. The same brok- !ers report the following sales: 28x62:6 feet on the north line of Geary $_feet west from Willlam street, for m Sharp to R. D. Connolly, for $15,000; 84 acres of land in Contra Costa County, in- cluding 68 acres in fruit and the remainder in grain lands, with buildings and fruit dryer, for the Botham estate to John M. Ackerman, for $23,000. Guy T. Wayman reports the sale of the northwest corner of Turk and Hyde | streets to A. W. Wilson, for $15,000. Controversy Arise A. J. Rich & Co. have received a deposit on the sale of the southeast corner of | Bush and Kearny streets for the Martirs and McElroys, to L. & M. Alexander, at the price of $50,000. Owing to a disagree- ment among the parties in interest as sellers, the deed has not yet passed. The lot is 23:6x65:9. On it is a building that | rents for $342 per month. There is a dif- ference of opinion, amounting to $5000, among the sellers as to the price that the property is worth. Oscar Heyman reports the sale of the fcliowing properties: Lot and six-room cottage on the east line of Califernia avenue, 25 feet south from Virginia avenue, to F. D. Cooney for $2750; four-room cottage on Twenty-ninth avenue, near the San Bruno road, for §i300; corner of Goettingen and Wayland sireets, 100x120 feet, for 3800; corner of Twentieth street-and Hoffman avenue for $1250; two lots on Roscoe street, south from ent avenue, for §500. Baldwin & Howell have sold recently the following properties in the Sunset district: | Lot 22:6x100, on the southwest corner of H street and Eighteenth avenue, for $2000; lot 30x | 120, on the east iime of Eighteenth avenue, near the H-street electric cars, for $17 X100, on the north line of I street, ‘ween ineteenth and Twentieth avenues, for §i0; 20, on the east line of Twentieth ave- nue, between H and I streets, for $1400. | The Jacob Heyman Company reports | the sale of lot 25x114, with five-room cot- tage, on the north line of Twenty-third | street, 200 feet west from Douglass, for | $2800. The same company is bullding a cottage on the opposite south line of Twenty-third street. Sales are reported by Sol Getz & Bre. as follow: 2x127:6 end improvements on east line | of Furreents avenue, between Clement ana Gelitornia streets, from Emilie Allen to Rose 3 = cast line of Second Point Lobos avenue, line of 1 street, szo ifth avenue, for $450; ‘orty-elghth avenue, 175 foat reet, for $900; 50x100, in block B, . for $300. All Parts of City. Lyon & Heag report the following re- cent sales: Wells, Fargo & Co.'s Bank to Katharine Welsmann, Jot and improvements on north line of Twentieth street, 75 feet west of Hartford, 26x82:6 feet, §1525; also for the said bank, lot on east line of Harrison street, 5 feet south | of Eighteenth, 75x12¢ feet, $3100; to a large | manufacturing concern, now located near the water front, lot on the southeast corner of | Eighteenth ‘and Folsom streets, 206xi5) feet, | §15,000; lot and improvements on south side of Carl street, §2:6 feet west of Stanyam, 25x100 | feet, $3750; house with lot 24:6x1%5 feet on the cast line of Guerrero street, 217 feet south of Twenty-fitth, $3750; to Carl E. Ritter, lot and improvements ‘on the northeast corner of Fil- bert and Baker streets, 25x92 feet, $3100; Mrs. B. Hubbard to Emma L. Callaghan, lot and improvements on the cast line of Guerrero | street, 114 feet north of Twenty-third, 27x5) | feet, 33600; for H. S. Brickell, lot on east line of San Jose avenue, 195 fect South of Twenty- fourth street, 65x30 feet H. Feige to Robert Broad, lot with two new flats on west line of Capp 'street, 105 feet south of Twenty-fifth, Zx115, { H. Rowe to M. E. Hettrich, lot on the morth line of Frederick street, 100 feet | west of Colé, 25x100 feet, $2000; lots 38 and 29, block 41, Sunnyside, $550; lot on west line of Mississippi street, 204 feet morth of Twenty- third, 30x100 feet, $400; Barbara Bellls to H. | 8. Smith, 1ot on the southeast corner of Castro and Jersey streets, 30x85 fect, $2000; for the Pixley estate, iot on west line ot Steiner street, 187:6 feet north of Green, $1060; J. L. Barker to H. Michel, 20 lots in West Berkeley, $1500; lot on south’ line of Jefferson street. 62 feet west of Broderick, 75x112: feet, $i500: lot and improvements on the north line of California street, 45:3 feet east of Tenth avenue, Z5x100 feet, §2800; lot on west line of Minnesota street, 1% ‘feet morth of Twenty-second. 2x100 feet, $1200; lot on north line of Washington street. 31:3 feet east of Lyon, 50x102, #6500, lot on east line of Cole street, 137:6 feet south of Freder- | | fck, 50x108 feet, pigs; lot and improvements | on ‘west line of Fillmore street, 62:6 fest south | of' Unlon, 25x: n feet, $6000; 1ot and im | ments on east line of Buchanan street, feet south of Turk, 23:0x110 feet, $500, Auction Catalogues. | Easten, Eldridge & Co. will auction realty on Monday, December 3. Among the important properties to be disposed of are a 50-vara on the east corner of Howard and Eighth streets, with im- provements; 50x75 on Fifth street, near Howard, with improvements; house on California street, near First avenue; Haight-street residence, near Scott. There are also properties on Tehama and Third streets, on Boardman place and on Turk street. The following will be offered at auction by G. H. Umbsen & Co. to-morrow at their rooms at 14 Montgomery street: Lot, 48x80 feet, With six tenements, at 32'to 844 Moss street, between Sixth- Seventh DESERT FIELDS BEING LOGATED Bowers Gives Account of Wells Drilled on the Colorado. Shcrtage of Cars Works a Hardship to the New Industry. g e Some idea of the extent to which the California desert reglons have been taken up by oll prospectors is afforded by the report of Stephen Bowers, fleld assistant to the State Mineralogist, concerning the Colorado Desert. Claims on that desert | have been located by the Cactus, Ca.Tizo Creek, Flowing Weils, Helvetla Inves'- ment, Longrehr Oil and Development. Palm Springs, San L San Diego Oil Belt, San Di Oil and Dev-I- opment,. ~ Signa! Mountain Oll, Signal Mountain Exploration and Developmert, Success Oil, Vallecitos Oil and Yuaha Ofl companies. The desert has been divided into four sections, which are known as | the Coyote Wells, Currizo Creek, Fish | Creek and Seventeen Palms Spring dis- tricts. All of Carrizo Creek district, near the bed of Carrizo Creek, from the foot of the mountains to Salton Lake, and a.30 along the bed of Valiecitcs Creek below Vallecitos Springs, has been located. The district is bounded on the north by Black Mountain, on the west and southwest by Vallecitos and Laguna mountains and cn the south by Carrizo Mountain. The va'- ley ,of Palm Springs, including the clay hills, is about eight miles wide, at Cor- rizo Springs about ten miles wide, and ! Rbout five miles wide al the Cactus Com- | | pany’s oil well. The wells that have been | begun in the desert in this general local- | ity have been drilled by the Palm Springs, | Cactus Oil, Mesquit= Ofl and Hanna, Roark & Blethen companies. On the des- ert are water and sas wells and soda springs. The district is generally de- scribed by Bowers as fcllows: This district extends from the boundary line between the United States and Mexico on the south to the Riverside County line on the north, and skirts the mountains at their east- ern extremity, which in carly Tertlary times were islands in the ocean, or made a deeply indented seashore across what is now 3an Diego County. Tke district extends from tn2 mountains eastwardly somewhat indefinitely. The desert proper slopes from an altitude of about 400 feet toward the.Colorado River and Gulf of California, and in some places Is be- low sea level. Much erosion has taken place, and the desert is largely covered with washes, sand dunes, scarps, etc., which make travel more or less difficult. The mountains on the western side of this vast plain are destitute of vegetation, but mesquite trees, in the desert. | the conviction on the THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1901 T YEARS MORE FOR DIMMICK Judge de Haven Denies " Motion in Arrest of Judgment. A Fine of 8730 97 Is Added to Those Already Im- posed. Walter N. Dimmick yesterday had two years added to his punishment for falling to deposit Government i{unds properly. United States District Judge de Haven denfed the motion in arrest oS judgment and sentenced the defendant to wo years' imprisonment at hard labor in the peni- tentlary. A fine aggregating $3130 97 was imposed also, that being the total of the two sums of money alleged to have been held over by Dimmick from the quarter in which it was recelved into the next quarter. This sentence was imposed on the verdict of conviction on the nineteenth aud twentleth counts of the indictment. The motion for arrest of judgment on seventeenth count | was granted by consent of counsel for the prosecution, the last day of the quarter mentioned therein falling upon a Sunday. Dimmick’s counsel was allowed twenty days' time in which to prepare a bill of exceptions, and ten days’ stay of execu- tion of sentence was granted in which to prepare a writ of error. Judge de Haven filed a lengthy written report in the matter of the motion in ar- rest of judgment. It had been insisted by the attcrney for the defendant that the indictment- was defective in this, that all the facts alleged might be true, and vet the defendant might not be guilty of any crime, because, consistently with the facts alleged, the defendant might have deposit- ed the money in the United States Sub- Treasury before receiving notice to de- posit the same upon the date named in the indictment, or, after having received such notice, he might in fact have depos- ficd the money before the time fixed by the notice. In commenting upon this point Judge de Haven said that while the indlctment would be more valuable as a precedent if it had distinctly charged that the de- fendant did not, upon the date he was re- quired to do so, or at any time prior thereto, make deposit of the money re- ferred to, and that he willfully failed to n:ake such deposit until after the required | date, still, he did not think that the judg- ment should be arrested for that omis- sicn. The court continued: “It is not necessary that such defense tived in the indictment. The rule is, that greasewood end some other shrubs grow along the washyshould have been anticipated and nega- The Car Shortage. ‘The shortage of oil cars on the Southern Pacific s working-a great hardship to tre oil producers. As an cxample the facts | concerning the Union Iron Works are quoted by the Pacific Uil Reporter as fol- Tows: When the oil fields of Coalinga and Kern | were develoed so as to insure an amundant supply of fuel the Unjon Iron Works made a contract with the Monte Cristo Company by Which they agreed to take a large amount of ofl, covering a long perlod of time. The oil is used under six large bollers, and nearly a car and a half is consumed dally. For a while all went well. The ofl burned well, a great saving of fuel was effected, and the labor bill for handling fuel was lessened. The contract provided that the Unfon Iron Works buy the ofl at Bakersfield and do its own transportation, and as the demand for ofl increased all over the State the Unlon Iron Works began to have trouble to get cars. - At last it became impossible to supply the neces- sary fuel for the furnaces, and one after another the ofl burners were taken out and coal took the place of oil. At present only one furnace is burning ofl, where there should be six. The Monte Cristo has the ofl, but the Southern Pacific Company has not got the tank cars. Over half a dozen of the-larg- est consumers in San Francisco have gone back to coal, not because they did not prefer ofl, byt because they could not get it. The Standard Ofl Compeny has its own cars, and makes the raflroad haul them. It seems to be the only concern that is able to supply ofl as wanted. Fuzoring Combination. Nearly every witness who could be classed as an oil producer who appeara.. before the Raflroad Commissioners the | last week in the railroad rates case at- tributed the demoralized condition of ths oil business in this State to a lack of com - bination amorg the producers. It was conceded that nothing could raise the price of ofl except combination. The Los Angeles witnesses, attributing the falling off in the price at Lus Angeles to the competition of the Kern River oil in the first instance, spoke a5 decidedly in favor of making a strong -ombine as did the owners of oll properties in the Xern Coun- ty fields. The manager of the Standard Oil Com- | pany announces that from Point Rici- mend the Pacific islandz will be supplici with California fuel off The company be- lieves that there will ke a very large do- mand for oil in the Philippine Islands. The Bakersfield Caliiornian says that the Peerless Oii Company has three strings of tools at work, and that four | more holes will be driiied. The New York Commercial gives thc following figures relative to the produc- tion of the Beaumont gushers: Total | shipments of oil to November 1, 1,500.00 barrels; amount in storage, 900,000 barrel waste from Lucas, Beaumont, Palestine | and other gushers, 1,000,000 barrels; total barrels, 3,400,000. From this it appea-s that there are 2,400,000 barre's for the market exclusive of .tre 1,000,000 barreis that went to waste. To make this total shipment would require a demand for 10,- 000 barrels per day for five months. The domestic consumption of the Beaumont oll, so says the Los Argeles Herald, nas | been confined te Texas and Louisiana, and this has been increased by the ve-y low price of from 10 te 20 cents per barre! f. 0. b at Gladys City or Beaumont. L e e e ol ) and Howard and Folsom streets, renting for $75 a month; southeast corner of Twenty- fourth street and Hoffman avenue, consisting of & lot 65x100. with a cottage and a_stable, and two adjoining lots, each 30x100, on Twenty- fourth street: lot. 37:x125 feet, on the east side | of Eurcka street, %:8% south. of Seventeenth | street; three lots. 25x114, on the gouth line of | Alvarado street, 105 feet weet of Noe, and nme | on the southwest corner of those stroets, 26:6 ne street and 105 feet on Alvarado; lot 50:10x11%, “on the northwest corner of Deuglass and Valley streets; lot 25x70, on the west line of Anderson street, 100 feet north of Eugenla | avenue; lot 125x180, on the north side of Folger | avenue; 783:4% east of Bay street: lots 2005100, | on the east side of Head screet, 200 feet north of Garfleld; lot 50xI1, on the south side of | Marshall street, 400 feet east of Congdon: lot, 57 feet on Banchez street and 105 feet on Nin: teenth: lot, 25xi87:6, with two flats, at 1U8 and 1118% Fell street, between Scott and Devisa- dero: eight-room house, with a lot 26:9x100 feat, at 1902 Green street: lof, $5x122:6, with store and flats, on the southeast corner of Howard and Twentieth streets, Margaret A. Skelley has leased through the agency of A. M. Speck & Co. to the! Lemle-Levy Company a three-story and basement bullding on the northwest line of Mission street, 77:6 feet east from Third, for five years for the gross sum of $15,000. ‘The sales of local realty that were re- corded during the past week reprezeated the total of $399,030. The remaining properties of the Wil- liam A. Piper estate will be auctioned by G. H. Umbsen & Co. on Monday, Decem- ber 16. The southeast corner of Lombard and Stockton streets will havé a three-story bullding, to be erected by Mrs. Rose Fiegenbaum. It will cost $14,500. Mrs. Louise Adelalde Palmer has rented the Kenilworth House to be erected upon the northeast corner of Bush and Powell streets by Douglas 8. Watson for $36,000 for'a term of five years. Mrs. Anna H. Spring has planned to have twelve flats in the bullding tht she will erect on the north lime of Capp -treet. lfi feet west of Seventeenth. The cost of m will be about $20,000, ‘all matters of defense must come from the defendant, and need not be anticlpat- ed or stated by the prosecutor.’” (Chitty on CI inal Law.) ‘Only a prima facie casc against the defendant is required.’ (Bishop on Crim. Proc., Sec. 513.) The al- leged omision in the nineteenth count did not tend in any manner to the preju- dice of the defendant upon the trial, nor was it claimed by him that he deposited the money referred to before the date when he was required to do so, and if such had been the fact he was entitled to prove the same under his plea of not guilty.” MINSTREL SHOW FOR NATIVE DAUGHTERS’ HOME Members of Buena Vista Parlor to Sing for a Worthy Charity. One of the institutions in this city that in time is destined to become ome of the prominent features of fraternal organiza- tions in this city is the Native Daughters’ Home, on O'Farrell street, near Van Ness avenue. It was started for the purpose of providing a place where members of the order coming here from the interior can rest in comfort. The parlors of the order have assisted the home in many | ‘ways, but as yet sufficlent funds have not been secured to warrant the securing of larger quarters, which are needed, as the cosy little place now utilized is hardly large enough to accommodate all who would like to make it thelr home while in the city. With the idea of creating the nucleus of a fund that may in time be swelled by donations, the members of Buena Vista Parlor, of which Grand President Mrs. Genevieve Watson Baker is a member, have generously offered to give a minstrel show in Native Sons’ Hall, on the night of the 2d of December. This action on the part of Buena Vista Parlor has aroused a degree of interest in the other parlors, and the members are doing all they can to help the cause.along and to have a crowded house to witness the | Jadles in white and black repeat the per- foermance they so successfully presented a few weeks ago, for the benefit of the fund for the sick of their parlor. There will be a change of programme, new jokes will be introduced and there wilt also be some special features. Past President Miss Annie Worth will again appear as interlocutor and the principal participant will be Miss Alice Ticoulet, president of the parlor; Misses Annie Tremier, Belle O’Brien, Adel Laig- non, Laurier Miller, Etta O'Brien, Etta Welch, Lillie Wll!on. Emily Siebrech and Mrs. Ella Wehe. ———————— Druids Visit Oakland. Noble Grand Arch Julius 8. Godeau and a mx?ber of the grand officers of the United Ancieat Order of Druids, together with the Past Arches’ Assoclation of this city, pald a visit last night to Rome Grove in Oakland, where there was an exemplification of the ritualistic work. Addresses were made by the noble grand arch, by President James F. Martinoni of the Past Arches, Grand Trustee A. M. Armstrong and other visitors, after which there was a banquet. ————— Boy Thief Convicted. Richard Silva, the 15-year-old boy who was emploved in the store ot the Max Shirpser Jewelry Company and systemati- cally stole articles of jewelry, which he distributed among his friends and rela- tives, was convicted of petty larceny by Judge Mogan yesterday. Ex-Judge Tread- well made a strong plea for leniency, but the Judge said he would make an ex- ample of him when he appeared for sen- tence to-morrow, —— e Murder Case Dismissed. The case of Mrs. Bertha Dale, midwife, charged with the murder of Mrs. Flor- ence Hamilton, was dismissed by Judge Mogan yesterday. The Judge held that the evidence utterly failed to substanti- ate the charge. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. VASELINE NO GOOD FOR HAIR. Tandruff Germ Thrives in It, ag Well as in All Grease. A well’known Chicago hair specialist invited the Inter Ocean reporter to coms to his office and see, under a microscope, how the germ that causes dandruff? thrives in vaseline: The speclalist said that all hair preparations containing | 8rease simply furnish food for the germs and help to propagate them. The only wny to cure l?‘-mlru is ta destroy the , and the only hair mflon that :zlll dt)tht‘hlt is Newbro's e e *‘De- roy cause, you lm'fi ‘Without M‘rufl no W. &‘ 0 bald- [ ness. deatrvver ot the dane RSN YRR OES N EEEI NN EREREEEEE CONTINUATION OF CUT PRICES Owing to our enormous sales we are enabled to cut prices below any com- petition. Only this season's productlons Faultless garments in frt and finish. GOLDEN GATE CLOAK ano SUIT HOUSE WILL PLACE ON SALE AT $20.00. BROWN, CARDINAL, NEW BLUE TAILOR SUITS. new blouse and Norfolk effect, elegantly trimmed and tailored; regular_oprice 5.00 and extra value at that. CUT PRICE .... B $25.00. BLACK, NAVY AND NEW RROWN TAILOR SUITS. newest Eton effect, made of good qu ality Broadcloth or Venetian cloth, ex- tra quality Taffeta Silk Drop Skirt; splendid value at $32.50. CUT T R N R R R T R $25.00 100 RAINY-DAY SUITS. newest style ‘and ‘newest material. CUT PRICE .$10.00, $12.50, $15.00 and $17.50 Were $12.50, $15.00, $20.00 and $22.50 wlth doublc capes, plain and fancy back. CUT PRICE o 0.00, $12.50, $14.00 and $17.50 Were $x2 50, $15.00, $20.00 and $25.00 600 BLACK. CHEVIOT. VENETIAN and BROADCLOTH SKIRTS. trimmed in the very newest styles. latest cut, with extra quality Per- caline and Amisilk Lining. CUT PRICE . s -1.00, 85.00, $8.50, $7.50, ‘8.50 $ . ® .50 Were $5.00, $6.50, $7.50, $10.00, $12.50 and $15.00 100 BLACK AND COLORED CLOTH CAPES, stitched and fancy trimmed, lonw and short. CUT PRICE . 85, 00 *6 50 3 .50, $8.50 Were $7.50, $8.50, $moo and $12.50 EXTRA-—1 off from regular prices on all Fur Capes, Jackets, Boas. 1230-1232-1234 MARKET STREET. AEAREER AR AR NN E RS GRAND OPERA HOUSE SAN FRANCISCO SEASON OF GRAND AL EVERY EVENING AT § SHARP! | Under the Direction of MR. MAURICE GRAU. | Matineeg Saturday and Sunday at 2 sharp. Second Sunday Night | SPECIAL MATINEE THANKSGIVING DAY Tu “IGHT AT 8 Performance at AT 2. PRICE -. “THE HLGUENOTS (n qum) ‘With an extraordinary cast. Gadski, Louise Homer and Suzanne Adams; Dippel, Scotti, Muhimann and Journet. Conductor, Flon. % COATS, AMUSEMENTS. ! +*TIVOLI» S MONDAY. Nov. 25, Great Production of the Queen of Musical Comedies, THB GEISHA Given With a Complete Cast of the Most Talented Children on the Stage. De- M 5 COSTUMES IMPORTED FROM JAPAN. SUPERB SCENIC EFFECTS. POPULAR PRICES—25¢c, 50c and 75c. Telephone Bush 9. SCALE OF PRICES: y .' 0 c IOrchenra Tear rows, entire Dress Circle.. 82 30 Juvenile Opera Co. | ay Ev’'g, Nov. 2, KURE. Damrozc!: v’ Nov. at 745, DO BILL. 2] DON PASQLALE LIACCL" Scheff; De Marchi, Declery, Reiss “ROMEO ET JULIETTE,” Sibyl Sanderson, Prices for "ROMEO ET JULIETTE" mati- s Bo 3§25 and’ $30. RS Dlnrpel Bispham, Muhimann and E4 de Reszke. EBames and Louise Homer; Scotti, Se;épflll | BIERE DI SIVIGLIA™ vecchia ard )%d de Reszke. conductor. Sep; HH "ARAY clery and Scotti. Conducwr. Flon. - been able to extend his San Francisco of Mmes. Emma Eames and Sembrich in Gallery, reserved 1 u 00 Orchestra, front rows Boxes, $12, $15 and fls Emma Eames, ignac, Campa- TO-NIGHT Gadski, Schumann Belce; UBLE *" Sembrich; Scotti, Ta- vecchia and Salignac. and Campanari. Conductor, Flon. Bridewell; Journet, Gilibert, Declery, Salignac. nee, $2, . “DIE MEIS- Conductor, Damrosch. Frid: ““ATDA.™ Muhimann and De Marchi. Conductor. (The Barber of Se- ville). Saturday Ev'g, Nov. 30, at § "“C. Prices for t performances, $2, SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. refore, give the following Monart's opera, “LE NOZZE DI FIGARO" Pollard’s ‘Australian 0 ar S Family.Circle . General ldrfll!l'flll. i nari and Ed d.e Resxkg Conducto{D %;Dplm 1 Van Dyek, Blass, Bispham. Conductor.l W Followed by “I P\G- Thurs. Aft., Nov. 28, a Extra matinee, Conductor, Flon. Thur& N !:R"‘ Gldnk! and Schumann-Heink; Ev'g, Nov. 29, at 8, Journet, Saturday Aft.. Nov. 30, at 2. SembYrich; Salignac, Campanari, Ta- Calve and Suzanne Adams; De March: and §7. Genoral admission, $2. Grau takes pleasure in announcing that 2, at 2—Joint appearance (The Marriage of Figaro), brich; Campanari and Ed de Reszke. Conduc- tor, Seppilli. ~Monday Ev'. Pes. 2. st $-DOUBLE BILL. .E LA BOHEMF,” Jdams and Scheff; De Marchl, Porl.no Giiibert and Seott followed by Calve, To be “CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA,” Brideweil: Salignac, Declery. Conduc- Dec. 3. at 7:45—"TRISTAN mann-Heink: Van Dyck, Bispham, Muhlmann, Reles, Bars and Ed de Reszke. Conductor, Damrosch. Wednesday Ev's, Dec. 4, at 8—Farewell ap- pearance of Mme. Calve and Mme. Sibyl San- derson in San Francisco. Thursday Aft., Dec. 5, at 2—Farewell mati- C O anasTHALLS NTRABS: KING OF THE PRICES: OPIUM RING. z:r2i% = 0c, 13¢, 23 TO-MORROW EV'G, a Great Production of SIBERIA. SPECIAL MATINEE THANKSGIVING DAY. BESIEAR Belasco & Thall.. MA'H.N'EE TO-DAY. < TO-NIGHT- SELF AND LADY. BEGINNING TO-MORROW (MONDAY), THANKSGIVING WEEK, Best of All Modern Military Plays, “WE 'UNS OF MATINEE TO-DAY TO-NIGHT Last Time. Greatest of All nee. Thursday Ev'g. Dec. 5, at 8—Farewell night. oErices for these performances at §2, “ d %. Sale of seats will begin TO-MORROW | MORNING et the Box Office. WEBER . PIANOS USED. CALIFORNIA T0=NlfiflT IVBR! EVENING THIS WEEK, TINEE SATURDAY. 7] Precentd by & Metonicss Company. ' ENNESS Next—Sunday, Dec. 1, the N, Y. Manhattan Theater Comedy Su “'A STEANGER IN Interpreted by NGE LAND.” 'SEATS THURSDAY. THE SURPASSING ALCAZAR STOCK CO. Special Matinee Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 2Sth. Beats on Sale Six Days in Advance. Regular Matinee Saturday and Sunday. NEXT.. .AN ENEMY TO THF KING CHUTES a» Z0OO RACING Every Week Day— . Rain er Shine. NEW CALIFORNIA JUCKEY CLUB OAKLAND RACETRACK. Races start at 2 P-'r! ~boats hl\" San Fra: 4 Week Commencing THIS AFTER- NOON, November 4. (SPECIAL MATINEE THANKSGIV- ING DAY.) THE PICK OF VAUDEVILLE. —~— La Tortajada Grenada’s Celebrated Singer and Dancer PR Andy Lewis & Co. In Thelr ontn-l Farcs. * The Cocaine Mile. Taglione Scenic and Electric Dancer. GOLEMAN'S TRAINED DOGS AND CATS Europe’s Foremest Animal Aet. Kaufmana Troupe Greatest Cyclists of the Universe. The Comedian and Sweet Singer. BICKNELL Comic Clay Modeler. THE BIOGRAPH With the Latest Moving Pictures. e e Last Week of the Universal Favorite, Lillian Burkhart With Her Company, Presenting “Kitty Clive, Actress.” § : ? z g : % Parquet, 25c. any seat: Balcony. 10e: Children, '10c. any part except reserv: A few front orchestra rows reserved, 5c; front Tows of Balcony reserved, 2c. Ward and Curran 3 B ° ® 08906000680009000020960 COLUMBIA "o TO-NIGHT AND FOR ONE MORE WEEK. Special Holiday Matinee Thanksgiving Day. “WHEN'S THE WIND COMING UPPT* WILLIAM :GOLLIER In Augustus Thomas’ Phenomenally successtul Comedy, “On the LAST TIME NEXT SUNDAY NIGHT. SHE'S NEXT! MONDAY, December 2, The Sprightly— “THE GIRL FROM MAXIM’S.” The Celebrated French Farce ° Quiet” FROM THE CRITERION THEATER, N. Y. SEATS READY THURSDAY. UNION COURSING PARK JOEN GRACE, Judge; JAS. F. GRACE, Stipper. TO-DAY, SUNDAY - HIGH-CLASS - November 24 COURSING EVENTS. OPEN 4 Specia_fmSIakes 53—-NOMINATTONS 8. $1000—TOTAL PURSE—$I000 TRAIN SERVICE. Iuve. Third and Townsend sts., 10:15 a. i a 12 m._and 1 p. m.; Twenty- Vflancll sts., flve minutes D. m. and aftér the last course. Mneo electric cars every six minutes. ADMISSION 2% CENTS. LADIES FREE. an e Weekly Cal It Publishes the Cream of the News of the Week and MANY ORIGINAL FEATURES —_— IT IS THE BEST WEEKLY PAPER ON THB PACIFIC COAST SUPERB VAUDEVILLE BILL! HARRY HARMON, In His Benlnllmul High Dive. Next Amateur nght Will Take Placel on WEDNESDAY, Thursday Belng a Holiday. - 1, 1:30, 2, no and 3 Witk thaiha s stoppini Telephone for Seats—Park 2. Flscm s CONCSRT HOUSB | PALACE:and GRAND HOTELS. Oro, Barnard and om- m anmull On one side of ud T e orawuellon; 1| potels is the- whole-.lg ‘mann. un-?nw(.hg‘hem e m om'n facturers’ district—on. m other re- Reaerved seats 2bc. u-u-ue y. tail stores, clubs, oad and flices, banks and th:; .llg. FRED H. HANSON Y o8 on TUBSDATY Y | 4 SRREUNR S e it ltl.rty, or Uninteresting. ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR BAJA CALIFORNIA Damiana Bitters § A GREAT RESTORATIVE, INVIGORA. l tor and Nervine, ATTRACTIVE AND St and at ¥ L]