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THE €A FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26 1903. GRAND 8253s ONLY MATINEE SAT TRDAY. N1G 1 A F RAYMOND AND CAVERLY Sup Eastern Company in ARVARD?” STAN NIGHT PRICES, 25 (19 lN Saturday )RD UNIVE SITY B0c, TSe. NEXT SUNDAY NIGHT, POLLARD LILLIPTIANCD. In the “BELLE OF NEW YORK.” | , Aug. 26. , 10c; Chil- H and BALLARD Pr VA SURPRISE”; The Fleury Trio; Sam Edwards and Company; Larkins and Patterson; Roberti and Billoski; Rosie Ren- John Le Clair; Heeley and Meely and Lew Hawkins, COLUMBi SAR FRANCISCOS Every Night Except Sunday. MATINEE TO-DAY And again on Saturday. HENRY MILLER ——AND— MARGARET ANGLIN Next Week—Eenry Willer and Margaret Anglin smmerse -~ A MILLE production of L JRSDAY. AT SAL B del 75 |, ML 30/ “SHENANDOAH" TIVOL CAMILLE D'ARV OPERA HOUSE. EEK THE HIGHWAYMAN. GRAND OPERA FEASON OPENS NEXT WEEK LUCIA DI LAMMER TS = ~ ALCAZAR™#5 TO-NIGHT. 525072 axn LAST WEEK. £ MATINEES EXTRA THURS. AND SAT. MATINEE NEXT SUNDAY RM sy THE DAIRY FA ALL RE ry one able t News Letter. LLOW. ree Mats EXT MONDAY—Special Season of ——FLORENCE ROBERTS—— HE UNWELCOME MRS. HATCH.” W SELLING. secure CENTRAL iz Eighth—Phone South 633. B & NE ¢ Alexander Dumas’ “CAMILLE.” E LAWTON AS CAMILLE . as ARMAND D PRICES 2 MONDAY, August 3! —“TEE GREAT RUBY."— Five Baby Lions in the Zoo. GREAT HOW EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING IN THE THEATER. Inspect RET DE LA MORT.” SEE THE CHINESE BABY IN THE INFANT INCUBATOR. VISIT THE— “MYSTIC MIRROR MAZE” AMATEUR NIGET THURSDAY. ADMISSION CHILDREN, Be. A HEEATEOYS AN LYRIC HALL >ttt Charles Frohman Presents .EVERYMAN... the XV Century Morality Play. Evenings—Commen: rhoons Reserved Seats A1 Sherman, Clay & Co.'8. -..82, $1 50 and $1 Now on sale. LEADNG THEKG2E | LASCO | 'SCHEEL'S MASTER TOUCH WORKS WONDERS WITH LOCAL ORCHESTRA ' Sympheny Concert Delights Enthusiastic Audience, | for the Phrasing Was Delicately Balanced | | | | | | | | | é Throughout and the Readings Were Inspirations — DIST AND GRAND MPHONY L ATI GATH ADER WHO RING ERDAY D A GREAT IN THE OF AFTERNOON. avo! ert of yesterday San made u warrant of § ncehall to draw: al broth ng short of asto ain, the audienc e topmost gallery at t! A FRESKHh SKIN For haif a century Heiskell's Olntment has been used by careful mothers every- where for purifying and preserving the skin in beauty. Heiskell's Ointment cures red, rough skin, Pimples, Blotches, | Bum Ids, Tetter, Erysipelas, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Itch, Ringworm, Ulcers, Sore Nose, Sore Eyelids. HEISKELL’'S Ointment cools all irrita: makes the skin beau- tifully fair and ooth. Helskell's S8oap and Heiskell's Ointment make a complete treatment and sure cure for an T trouble. At druggists’, soap, 25¢; of men 50c. Send for book of test! monials. JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY & CO. a delphia. t- > DON'T FAIL TO see the ! COURT Lounging | room, the EMPIRE | PARLOR, the PALM ROOM, the LOUIS XV PAR-! LOR, and the LA- "DIES’ WRITING' Palace and Girand Hotels | BAJA CALIFORNIA 'Damiana Bitters § A GREAT RESTORATIVE, INVIGORA- tor and Nervine, | . The most worderful aphrodisiac and Spectal Tonic for the £ex_i Organs, for both sexes. The Mexican Remedy for Discases of the | Kidneys and Bladder. Sells on its own merits. NABER, ALF§ & BRUNE, Agents, 823 Market st.. 8. F.—(Send for Circulars.) DR.PIERCES GOLDEN DISCOVERY QIL(_)Q:!)._I.IVER.I.IJNGS. ' BRUSHES &% 2 brewers, bookbinders, candy-makers, eanners, | dvers, fiour mills, foundries, laundries, paper | bangera, printers, ~paintess, shoe factories. | stablemen, tar-rocfers, tanners, talors, eto. BUCHANAN Brush laau!umnmlu;‘-.nl ROOM. FOR BARBERS, BA- kers, bootblacks, bath. for local . from e Grand tables, | } Sym- | neighbor. | nished new delights. [ | and grandeur. | sound lent its little richness to the cor- | | tege, no glint or gleam of the Beethoven - house shows not an inch of empty tery at a symphony concert—given | fternoon remembered; whea | be E hows a like conges- ery below e community may begin to take | some comfort as to its musical health. So t was, handsomely, yesterday afternoon. | Nor less remarkable and encouraging is onable interest in the Colonel Higginson of ot u he had imposed | Madame Hub that with- | the belief up: out the symphony cachet she was out of | “It.”” To-day she would soon dream { of neglecting her symphony subscription | Madame Gotham would of going with- | her box at the Metropolitan Opera- ouse. With the result that the Boston | Symphony Orchestra is upon a paying basis, and. not unimportantl of the world's best. Let us pray, therefore, that madame of the local haut monde will con- | hue to regard attendance at the sym- | phony as an imperative soclal propriety | as 1 as a high pleasure. But the music’s the thing! The sym- phony’s the question, and yesterday aft- one of the noblest, the el's ng of the work , its performance excellent. Dignity without stodginess, delicacy with- out triviality, plasticity without sloppi- ness, characterized the handling of the | whole composition. It was polished, suave, finished. Each theme fell upon the ear with lucent logic, every phrase came in delicately balanced relation to its Tonal beauty, climax, a sensi- tiveness of light and shade truly remark- able pervaded the whole performance. Perhaps in the funeral march the fash- jon of Mr. Scheel's grip upon his men was most apparent. In the long move- | ment there was not once a deflection of interest, that was breathlessly main- | tained until its last somber note. The dif- | ficult tread of the tempo went steadily to its final dving step, the superd pro- | ssional moving with utmost nobility Each tiny banner of color was lost, but the lovely detail was merged into one splendid whole, one ador- able unity. The strife and turmoil of the first movement also found significant ex- pression, full value being given to the dramatic side of this musical drama, with its majestic themes and colossal har- The reading was thfoughout and ripely picturesque. The . taken at a dazzling tempo, fur- It was played with breathless’ delicacy and lightness and the orchestra showed nowhere more conclu- sively its advance under the Scheel re- beautiful | | 8ime. The performance of the finale also | 1s., at the Savoy Hotel yesterday. | The friends of the youthful | went | arranged by Georg of the law WEDS THE LOVE OF Hi5 BOYAOOD Finds Former Sweet- heart a Widow and Marries Her. Santa Rosa Man's Long Court- ship Has Romantic Ending. SEOCRYL5:0. Special Dispatch to The Call. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 25.—A. O. Evans, of Santa Rosa, Cal, was mar- ried to Mrs. M. S. Spear, of Springfleld, Mr. Evans and his bride were sweethearts in | their childhcod in San Antonio, Texas. She was an orphan and her guardian was W. J. Cralg, general freight, passenger | and claim agent of the New York, Texas and Meéxican rallway, a Texas branch of the Southern Pacific. The suit of young Evans was discour- | aged by the guardian, although Miss | Craig loved him. She was induced to | wed another man, however, and became | Mrs. Spear. Her husband lived in Spring- field, 111, but he died about a yvear ago. lovers ar- ranged a correspondence and Mrs. Spear visited relatives at San Antonio. The result was a renewal of the old tles. Last month, Mrs. Evans, mother of the groom, to northern summer resorts with Mrs Spear. A letter from the latter to her sweetheart in California,, told , that they would be in Kansas City yesterday. Mr. Evans was here to meet them and the wedding followed. Mr. Evans and his wife will live in the | Republic of Mexico, where he has a po- sition with the Mexican Gulf and Inter- Oceanic railway. The newly married couple did not telegraph to any of the bride’s relatives of the marriage. “We are old enough to know, explanation they gave. IR SRS Ly LAW SCHOOL OF Y. M. C. A. WILL SOON BE REOPENED was the | ADVERTISEMENTS. DR. MILES’ Anti=Pain P Quickly and effectively in all cases of Nervous Headache, Lumbago, Sea-Sickness, Car-Sickness, Irritability, Periodic, and Ovarian Pains. “I could not get al relief from almost any ;25: bad effects afterwards, as o Sick Headache, Bearing-Down without Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills. They give almost instant Xgivol.nomw-uo!tchyldxan,cvanmhbl;:mnfln e does from most rem " — EN, 203 Indlann Ave., Riverside, Calif. MRS. IRA A “Two years ago I had ttack of La Gi k5 doctor’s care ave egagewit:e:;o:::{‘nua: ';':hv:nnl‘honigl a box orl‘::% ‘fide-‘-“}'.n'é'fd?'flnmfin-. e ove “pite . 'me ago had another attac! hanks to Pain Pils, ‘was soon Gured, taking only three of the piis. —JOHN N PURTTEMAN, Cimdaie: Ore " “1 have used Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pllls for a number of years, and find that relieve ordinary and neuralgiac headache. They give dn;‘l)l. relief to mL:fia.“— . B. BAKER, Angsies, Calit. “Once, and often twice k. for years I have had spells of dull, h across the forehead accompanied with pains in he Neart. st and shoulders. T And Dr. Mier Sna roin very beneficial, one tablet usually being suficlent to stop the pain.”— MRS. LEONA ER, Wheatland, Calif. “T hayve frequently used Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills for Neuralgia, and they give rellef. Also in traveling, am never without them. using them to event mmm headache.”—E. L. SANFORD, Mgr. Etna Springs Hotel, Etna Springs, 2 MRS. M. S. TOBEY, who was 11 years postmistress at Carpenteria, Calif,, says: in the bacl meck. “1 suffered Dr. Miles" a l time from nervuos headachee, and very severe pain 'k of my 3 .:.nut-h ain Pills brought relief, for which I am very grateful. I am pleased to recommend thean 0 others. Large Class Is Expected to Enter and Many New Teachers Have Been Engaged. The night law school of the Young Men's Christian Assoclation will be reopened on September 1 and the faculty has been en- larged, as it is expected that there will be a big class during the coming term. The school has been muck improved and noth ing has been left undone to make it thor. ough in every ular. { The following men have been engaged to teach in the school during the aj proaching year: James A. Ballentine Yale and Harvard Law School; James T. Burcham, instructor of law at Stanford University: F. S. Dorety, instructor of law at the University of Californ! George L. ark, instructor in law at Stanford Uni- versity, and Irving C. Wright, a graduate of Harvard Law School The general plan of the school has been | H. Boke, of the head E who # Iso instructor in law at the versity of California. An advisory committee, consisting of William Carey Jones, head of the law department of the University of California, and Pro- | f or Nathan Abbott, dean of Stanford | Law School, has given great assistance in the preparations for this work. H e e An Interesting Trip. | Mill Valley suburbanites proud over the | success of the new third rall electric system recently adopted by the North The method is a novel one in the trains of five and sev ease, comfort and speed hool. he station plat- forms are amply protected and there is abso- lutely no danger. | A ‘trip to Mill Valley either during the day or evening to see the new system is one that e ody should place on their hook of en- gagements There are many trains so that you can select almost any hour to go and turn, L e 2 ) came well up to the level of the preced- ing work and closed a bit of symphony- | making that we have not seen the like of since Scheel was here before. i The noveltles of the programme were a swan song of Sibelius, a valse de concert of Glazounow, and the Mendelssohn “Spinning Song,” arranged for orchestra. Sibelius came first, the young Finn's | work proving to be an ultra- Wagnerian and very charming bit | of orchestral writing, with the | song of the dying swan (on the | oboe) as motif. The croon of the north | is about it, the pure and alien flavor of an ancient saga. Mr. Scheel s wholly fortunate in his “swan” soloist, but the movement left a distinct desire to hear more of the new composer. G zounow’s valse is the sort of decorative, swinging stuff Scheel used to give us in his Vienna Prater days, and is very good of its kind. The Mendelssohn “Fileuse,” as it was rather absurdly programmed, without warrant of its step-frater- However, as the Man Who Knows the little song without words could have been better orchestrated. I not heard afterward that Scheel himself had added the dash of horn that leavened the strings, and that the movement was originally arranged for string quartet. It was delightfully played, and elicited a double encore. The Berlioz overture, “A Roman Car- nival,” began the programme, and the perennially happy overture of the ‘Mer- ry Wives of Windsor" closed the after- noon. Needless to say, perhaps, that the applause was generous throughout. The concerts are hereafter to take place on Tuesday afternoons, at 3:15 sharp. Mo- nd woodwind zart’s Symphony in E flat major is pro- grammed for next week. BLANCHE PARTINGTON. | i '} SCHUMACHER & CO. ane. [ ] ; Jewelers 8 New Montgomery St. Also Entrance From Palace Hotel Corridor Precious =« Semi-Precious Stones, : Watches, Gold Jewelry. [ CALIFORNIA SOUVENIRS. Gold Quartz Jewelry—Specimens of All Kinds. Watches and Jewelry Repaired at Reasonable Prices. | 000600000000000000000000000000008 Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Sciatica, Backache, La Grippe, Pain in Stomach, Ague Pains, Indigestion, Dizziness, Nervousness and Sleeplessness. A v iles’ Anti-Pain Pills for Neuralgia and Nervous Headache and alwa: recehx'efyim;finr‘:x;etd e e Aeadaches occurred at intervals, usually in the morning, and 1+ taking a Pain Pill when first symptom appeared, always prevented the attacks, My husi y 3 1 without them. has also used them for headache, and says he cofilgs!'mévv-sfié.‘é?“ RDSLEY, Moscow, Idaho. . teful that T have found such a perfect remady for headache. I had a sun- atrols Shite T the army. and ever since have sufferd greatly from headache and biliousness The only thing that ever gave me any rellef was Dr. Mlis" Anti-Pain Pills, whic av used with satisfactory results for a number of years ' PR L 5 4 ve been bothered for years with headache and dull pains. I came across some of Dr. Miles! :’\I:I‘ll-Pnln Pills, an@ tried them, and they gave me relief at once, I have found them teo be just the thing, and recommend them highly. J. FRANK STERNS, Eugene, Ore. o bject to spells of severe pain through the eves et :;Sm‘é’,"gi:"foé_' ‘The attacks often contintied two days, durin 6 do anything. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills relieved the pain, and attacks by taking one Pill when I found the pains coming on. T have used and they never failed to relieve me.”—W. R. HOYT, boro, Ore. Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills are sold by all druggists, 25 cents a box, under a positive guarantee that the first box will benefit or money refunded. and across my forehead— which, time ! was unable afterwards prevented the them for a long time Says Dress Was Ruined by Dyeing. CREAMERY OPERATORS Jumps From Car and Is Injured. ARE ABOUT TO CONVENE Many Topics of Technical Interest Are Mentioned on FProgramme of the Annual Exercises. The fourth annual convention of the California Creamery Operators’ Associa~ tion will be held at the State Fair Pavil- jon at Sacramento on September 10 and 11. A programme of exercises has been prepared. Papers will be read by E. H. Zimmer of Watsonville Henry F. Lyon of Alameda, Peter J. Shields, president of the California Dairy Assoclation; Pro- fessor W. L. Carlyle of Fort Collins, Colo.; George G. Knox of Sacramento, M. W. Stenger of San Francisco, E. H. Hageman of Fresno, Thomas Hodge of San Francisco, Dr. A. R. Ward of the University of California, Professor E. W. Major of the University of California and H. P. Glasier of> Oakland. An annual report will be read by Secretary William H. Saylor of San Francisco, In addition to those named many others are to take part in the discussions. A competitive butter contest is announced to take place in connection with the State fair and prizes have been offered by the management amounting to $380. The judges will be Professor E. W. Major of the University of California and W. H. Roussel of San Francisco. e — DEFECTIVE GAS KEY CAUSES DEATH OF RANCHER Farmer Archer of Lompoc Is Suffo- cated While Asleep in a Lodging-House. The usual defective gas key and poor municipal regulations were the cause of the death by suffocation of Dewitt T. Archer in a room at 62 Ellis street last Monday night. Archer was a rancher 78 vears of age, and came to this city'last Monday from his home near Lompoc with his son, T. R. Archer. The pair were assigned to rooms on the top floor, that glven to the old man being about eight feet wide by eight feet long. The son and a friend went to the room of the aecedent at half-past 9 o'clock yesterday morning and found him dead in his bed, with iHuminating gas escaping from a bracket, the key of which was partly open. Deputy Coroner Meehan found that the key was loose and in bad order, and that Archer in turning off the gas had turned it on again unthinkingly. Archer ledves a widow at Lompoc. —_—————— Objects to Paying Tax. Justice of the Peace Percy V. Long, an attorney for the absent heirs of the late Caroline E. Cogswell, secured an order from Judge Troutt yesterday directing those interested in Mrs. Cogswell's estate to appear Friday, September 4, and show cause why his glients should not be re- leased from the payment of the collateral inheritance tax. He claims that he is en- titled to the release under the recent deci- sion of the Supreme Court. Long repre- sents the Garrett Biblical Institute, the town of Orwell, N. Y., and the town of Central Falls, R. L & Shortly after 4 o'clock yesterday after- noon the sudden burning out of a fuse on a Fillmore-street car so frightened Mrs. F. E. Buckland that she sprang from her seat on the car to the street while the car was still in motion and suffered a lacera- tion of the .left eye, bruises on the left arm and a severe nervous shock. After being cared for in a nearby drug store she was removed to her apartments at 2460 Washington street. THANKS ST. ANDREW'S SOCIETY.—At the weekly meeting of the St Andrew's So- ciety a letter was read from Sir Colin Seott Monerieff thanking the members for their hospitality to him when he was in this city several weeks ago. Sir Colin is en route to his home in London after a long soourn In the Orient. Helen Henk has sued Furnard Bertin in the Justices’ Court to recover 30 dam- ages alleged to have been sustained by reason of the spoiling of a silk dress which the plaintiff left with the defend- ant to be dyed. The complaint alleges that as a result of the dyeing the dress became unfit to be worn. —_—————— Our $12 gas range will save your temper and keep your kitchen cool and comfort- able. San Francisco Gas & Electric Co, —————— ¢ Y. M. 1. ENTERTAINMENT.—Phil Sheri« dan Council, Y. M. I, will give an entertain- ment and dance for the benefit of the Land- marks League at Mangle's Hall, Folsom and Twenty-fourth streets, next Friday evening. Many of the best-known entertainers in the city will appear. A hat for dress at $1.95 These hats at $1.95 are not only good for business wear, but are suitable for dress as well. They are sylishly blocked and good felt is used in their making. They are equal to the usual two-fifty hats. They come in soft and stiff shapes in all the shades of the season from black to pearl. Each hat is guaranteed. - This is the store where the guarantee means something. Out-of-town orders filled—write us. s 00D 740 Market Street