E VICTOR HERBERTT*l».«400 Bnranii Last Four Weeks of A SOCIETY CIRCUS ADDED FEATURE IN THE ARENA....

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Ttovicmtic Story of Gardner Will- iams, an American Engineer. Bj M. O. Cnuniff. TTIOS or sam 8. a lee SHTBEBT. n»a \l YRIP ' - We "'-" lf B-W ' Tel. imBryiurt. \LI niWEvtrs. 8:1 S. Mats. Wed. ASat.. 1:15. \ B»»lnnlne TO-MORROW Nlfht, \ MS ; LENA ASHWEU \ The C«lel>ratf«d En»llah ActrMs. ' \ p^isUTHE SHULAMITE \ Extra Mat. Eieotlon Day Scati on Sal*. KPKCIAL>E»sinnInB Frl.. Not. 9.'and aaeh Xm^ MATS, i Toes.. Wed. and TH. th«^att«r. Beat Sale Mon., Not. 3. Ms.ll Orders Now. Henry Miller MRS. la PTPPA Presents LE MOT>TE Browrjlnr* FAISM. Management M.iin.SHVBERT * A - jrr>E ? l £ J!i - -*. 434 and 44th Sta, and «th A.v«. T*l». «400 Bnranii Last Four Weeks of A SOCIETY CIRCUS ADDED FEATURE IN THE ARENA. HERMAN TRAINED LIONS TWICE I Mats.. 25c. to $1.00. I NO DAILT. | Nights, 25a. J.0_% I.^o. | HIGHER. SUNDAY CONCERT TO-NIGHT. last TIME f^ II O A IN NEW TURK %»| \u25a0 \u25a0 II H^ g% THIS SEASON %^ %^ ** ADA CHAMBERS Soprano JEANETTE POWERS Violinist HERBERT L. CLARKE CornetUt POPULAR PRICES. Sir. to $1.00. Box Office open from 10 A. M. To-day. PRl^fiF^*s B way and J»th St. T«l». lt«( Mad. rnii^UCOO Erz».t:Zo. Mat«.Thur. 4 Sat.lUO. ,''««*"« i THE HSNBY ANGLIN I «h;« MILLER BEATS SELUNG FOR 1J WEEKS. Speelal Matinees Election Day and Thankss;W^. MATS. Tues.. Mem.. Nor. 13. and each Sba, MATS. J Tues., Wed. and Frl. thereafter. Seat Sale Thar*.. Not. 8. Mall Orders Now. Henry Miller MME. ALLA la HEDD*. Presents NA2LHOVA Ibsen's " BLEB fACADEMY OF MUSIC E. O. GILMORE. % , l«t& st -j^ EUGENE TOMPKINS Macaywi. Irving PV LAST WEEK r Ltebler £ Co/» Missive Rural Play, CAPE GOO FOLKS A Pleoslnr Story of Down-I»«t Life. PRICES 25. bo. ?8. j.oo. , Last Mats. Wed, and gat.. I. Evsa'.nf 8:15- SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT FOR FOUR WEEKS FROM MONDAY, NOV. 5. SPECIAL MATINEE ELECTION DAY, Tuosday, Nov. 0. \u0084, SPECIAL MATINEE THANKSGIVING DAY, Thurtdiy. Nov. 28. Mr. Wm. A. Brady announces 84 PERFORMANCES. 24 Nights and 10 Afternoons. or the plays or Sba;c«speare and Bulwer t>y MR! ROBERT When Alfred Mo»ely. the Engllßhmaii who bo ad- xn'.res American ways that he brings commission! over to study them, was asked the reason cf hl« a<lr-i : .ratlor., lie Mid: "Gardner F. Williams, the American mining: en- gineer tr*so directs the diamond output of the world." Sir. MoMly made his fortune ia South Africa. Kb watched Cecil Rhode's dream of empire de- velop and knew the man \rho made It real. The one who took his Jmafflnatlon was Gardner Will- iams. "The country that can produce such a man," he said to himself, 'la a country from which mine can leant." Few men have earned puch a tribute. Here was a. can' who had left Michigan at the age of fifteen to go with a pioneering father to California ln the flush days of the early mining camps, had had a \ 111 I^PTin way and 60th St. "' OO Cohimbus. \ RlAuLullU Evs.B:ls. Mats. Wed. and Sat.. 2:15. \ WI BLT.-SHI'BERT CO Props. \ THE TOURISTS \ Special Mat.Election Day. Seats Now en Salo. «undnv I To-day 8:15. 23r. 50<-. All Star cSSc "rts.|To-nl*ht_B 750^1. Vau-levUIP. \"LE*W™3FrELDS^ ~ B'way and 35th. Tel. 24S5 38. \ urniin cnillDC Evenings 8:15. \ HERALD SQUaRC Mats. Tues. and Hat. 2:15. \ " and His All Star \ LEW FIELDS Company \ AD o e^s,o n A3OUT TOWN \ Special .^l»t. Election I>ny. Seats now on sale LINCOLN SQ. THEATRE B'way. 68th St. Phono 54<t Col. - West Side Amusement Co.. Lessees, j a H r>«xt«r Schubert Theatrical Co.. Dlrsctora. I Manasar * OPENING THIS TUESDAY GUY STANDING "^SgnSK S a TEE LOVE ROUTE A Thrilling Play of Frontier Life. Election and Thanksgiving Special Matin***. Resolar Matinees Wednesday and Saturday. BEST SEATS $1.00 .„ .T 0 ; R i v . \ HACIMn B'way & 39th St. Tel. 1646 Bryant. \ kAOlrgU Bes. NEXT SATURDAY MGHT. \ JAMES T. POWERS S^r" \ &•&!& THE BLUE MOON \ Seats Rprfdy Wednesday. V EXTRA MAT. ELECTION DAY. PMDIDP THEATRE. Broadway »n4 \u2666»**»- CiVIPIKCr Iv«i 8 15. Mats. Wed. * Sat.. Sil6. EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY. I/VmiCT nOITW In A.,W. Plnero-» HIS \f\JrIIN LIKfL>V> HOUSE IN ORDER. C A DDirif THEATRE. 85th St., nr. B*w«.y. U/iKltll/It £v 8 . 15 . Mat. Sat.. i:ls. EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION VAX. 1 WM. GILLETTE ln cl lzr ' Will AI* lf C THEATRE. B'way and 30th St If ALL Aim OEvm sir Mats. Wed. and Sat., EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY. SAM BtRINARD Ml{ ho<;<,e\heimer. J\ l/riV THEATRE. 34th St. and B'way. J/AVUI Eve. 8:13. Mat. Sat.. 2:16. p A \f W\ A \f I C* THE HOCBE FAY DAVIS of miktii. MONT. I KVKI.E BEIXKW | SEATS NOV 8. I in BRIGADIER GKRAKD. I NOV. 1. UlinCnU THEATRE. 44th St.. East of B'way. nUUOUn Evg. 8:15. Mats. Wed. and Sat.. 2:15. EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY. THE HYPOCRITES CRITERION" B'way and 44th St. Evr. S:ls. CRI ML O MATTNEE EUICTION I»AY. UttSSSi THE LITTLE CHERUB Tom Wise. James Blakeley and 70 others. KNICKERBOCKER THEATRE, B'way. .".Sth St. Eve. 8:15. Mat. Wed. and Sat.. 1:15. EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY. MONTGOMERY & STONE T^t " ED I VPCII&4 Broadway and 45th St. Evjjs. 8:15. L|uCUf7l Mats. Thur. nnd Sat. Nt 2:15. EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY. 400 th TIIJI.J Oct. 00. urn the mouse Souvenirs. TIIE HUH THE IfIUUOC TO-NIGHT at 8:30 %%S"S7 BURTON HOLMES TRAVELOGUES (TRAVEL TALKS), gSSSS- MOTION PICTURES ; 'NAPLES & NEARBY" POPULAR PRICES 91.50 to 500. Box Offlco open from 2:30 P. M. To-day. MEN DELS SOUS HALL. WEDNESDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER 14TH. M- NIESSEM-sfONE Son^ Recital Seats $1 and 91.50, at Mendelssohn Hall Box Office. ARRANGEMENT OF ROLES: ~~~"~- \u25a0" mm Mon.. Ties., Wed Nights FIE.ST E and Tues. Afternoon. week j RICHARD 111 Sn ay HAMLET Thi:r»., I'll . Sat. Nights Xrnon MSI C LEAR sEcoNif ny OTHELLO —_—,—.- : Tues., Wod. Nights and , WEEK ! Wednesday | » f% {% \u25a0 '< Afternoon. | fi\ %Jl f±Jt (Firit time In New York.) Thursday RICHELIEU Night. lit I 1/ n L L I EiU Fri.. Sat. Nlfrhts and l^SSn. HASH! LET third s S. iy MACBETH ! „_ "_ j Tues., Wed. Nights and WEEK j TfeUM. and <C IS \ f C X Bat. Afternoons. «-» ** I LWt H (First time in New York.) Thursday OTHELLO NiKht. OTH ELLO Friday, »« a o •" \u25a0\u25a0 sat. Nisht.. M A_C_B E T H FOUTH AND FINAL WEEK Mr. NANTELL Will Be Seen for the First lime as BRUTUS in "JULIUS CAESAR" ! SKATS READY TUESDAY \^ MORNING FOB ENTIRE ENGAGEMENT. M NDELB 8011 X HALL. Friday Evening. November 2. rooLi i WILLTAMS Rooital WILLIAMS Res. Beats $1 nnd $1.50 at Box Office. Mendelssohn Hall. MENDELSSOHN HALL. ifNEISEL QUARTET H TflL 16th Season in New York. SIX EVENING CONCERTS Nov. 13, Dec. 11. Jan'y S. Feb'y 5. March 5. April 2. General Subscription Sale opens Nov. Ist. Apply to J. M. Priaulx. care Dltson's. 867 Broadway. MENDELSSOHN HALL. Thursday Afternoon, November Ist, at 2:30. cracia |$ Il%a.§s §1 £| SONG Seats $1 and $1.50, at Box Office. Mendelssohn Hall. MENDELSSOHN' HALL. Four Chamber Music Concerts Thurs. Evs. : Deo. 20, Jan. 17, Feb. 28, Apr. 11. Olive Mead Quartet _„ Olive Mead j Gladys North Elizabeth Honghton I Lillian Llttlehales (subscription tickets 55, at office Musical Art Society, I West 34th St.. and at Box Office. Mendelssohn Hall. I2th Season. KALTINBORN QUARTET _ \u25a0 January 16th and February 27th. Subscription Tickets $3 and $2. Single Seats $1.50 and Jl. at 10 E. 17th St.. Mendelssohn Hall and Frana Kaltenborn, 61 W. S6th St. GARDNER P. WILLIAMS. The American mining engineer who helped to create, and then managed, the South African diamond monopoly. SL &$ 'V ii 8* THEATRE. B'way. 45th St. h v) i y R Eve 8. Mat. Sat.. 2. rS %J> i i \u25a0 \u25a0 i^i iii ii ii Phone 253 Bryant. ""'\u25a0'aorre'ouV Zte-'n XTRA MAT. ELECTION DAY. vlval."— Herald. VIOLA Beauty of Seen- ! i*. W W "WT* «^T er v.-_worid. Ai. s a »i r%i "Bert Shake- tfk &^t &-J SlL* L^ spearean per- 1 formation M1 ss I as IMOGEN In iii. " ; "CYMBELINE; MLfI&MSTEROAIir st. West KLAW & ERLANOER .Manager* Eves. 8:15. Matinees Wed. and Sat. at 3:11. 1 MATINKE WEDNESDAY. BEST B>E.\TS $1.30. 1 BEGIN- TSipC On VI EXTRA MATINEE NINO lUCO., Utl. OU ELECTION DAY. KLAW A ERLAJCGER will present Mr. FOBBES-BOBEBTSOR Miss GERTRUDE ELLIOTT AND THEIR LONDON COMPANY In C/ESAR and CLEOPATRA A History, by G. BERNARD SHAW. CARNEGIE HALL. n n 0 T n it— \u2666 hII ii I II PI I A permanent orchestra j UUU I U II I maintained solely for con- n y flB nJln I? ' ) ceit performances. I 01 if I I II U 11 1 nvo Evening Concerts. ORCHESTRA 1 thcrsdats. UnUnLUinH Feb. S, March tL Conductor: DR. KiILMUCK Bj-ga: (Of ti.e RoraJ op- Nov lu _ Deo 3 j. ir cr Soloists: Ftb - 23 March - 3 - Pad6rßWSki Chanco «f rroEramm. (His only appear- Each Performance. - \u25a0 anca In New York), ROSCntfiß ' Season tickets with reserved ni»« elmJ >L(t seats for the series of f.ve «v«D- LIPS rnS^Dtt In? concert or fivs mattnsM. A°? .V CI ".T SU ! 1 J7 50. S-J. $5 and $3. Boxes «M uSLDriiOWiiSCn i and S4o> accorciln B to •<>««»«* liuSS Subscription sale row open 2»4-«i«nuiolf 1 i ' »' C»rne«l« Hall bos office and flflamOWSKl Luckhardt « Beldefs. 10 East- and others. ' 17th street, and at Tyjon'a. BROADWAY THEATRE B'way ami 41«t St. Eves. 8. Mats. Wed. and Sat. I.ITT * DINGWALL Manarsrs EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY. _ j 51'En> ESDAY MAT. BEST SEATS ?1.50. [ PEATS \u25a0» WEEKS IN ADVANCE. KLAW * ERLANOER'S MAGNIFICENT PRODCCTION OF GEN. LEW WALLACE'S THE PRINCE OB? 1111/ 11 1 ! Constantinople I b I s " w rh the Fall of S fill sL/ a i i Constantinople. I + »» + \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666» X MUSICAL ART SOCIETY t + Flunk Damrosch * Director "t" 1. . 14TII SEASON. i + TWO CONCERTS— Dec. 13 and March 7. X SYMPHONY CONCERTS | FOB YOUNO PEOPLE > 4- * Frnnk Damrosch Director "£. 4- m , SIX SATURDAY AFTERNOONS. I 4- Tickets and prpgrammes for both scries- at X 4. office Musical Art Society. 1 W. 3-ith St. T \u2666 \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666•\u2666>\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 > \u2666\u2666» Dram hy J. I. C. Clarke. Music. Prof H Parker. -. &CT3 11 SCENES «00 iE'.'PLE. CARNEGIE HALL. Eight Saturday Evening Concerts Eight Sunday Afternoon Concerts TIIE I Soloists: rKSmii VftA Mme. GADSKI !C ' lOFSi S Mme. SCHUMANN O.. mn L Ku CESAR THOMSON bympnony ™*> *™™* ft* I r . J MORITZ ROSEXTIIAL Orcnssira jj ° sef lhevinne Y^ALT£R OAMBQSCH, conductor. Nov. 3d and 4 th. first appearances. In New York of Monsieur CAMILLE SAINT-SAENS Subscription tickets on salo at box office. Carnegie Hall: at office. Musical Art Society. l W. 31th St., ana at Luckharrtt & Belder's, 10 E. 17th St. Prices 'for either series): Parquet. $10: Dress Circle. 57; Balcony. $5 ana $3.50; Boxes, $75 and $100. COLONIAL saw* Columbus. . STAR CONCERTS TO-XUiHT 8:15. be So TO-MORROW o alj T «Sp HARRYTATEaGO."H§IIIia'G f in the Satirical Skit. 0 BW-BillllUi JACK NOIUVORTH. GREEN « WERNER, ward's JUGGLING SEA LIONS _ . " M BLACK HI'SSARS 14. ADOLF ZINK. l-,-VlON an/? WATriK I IRENE LEE KENNEDY an " BOONEY | AND KANDY KIDS I 1I 1 EXTKA FEATURE < CHRLETON IVI&CY I MAUDE HALL I CAS N E I E HALL. PHILHARMONIC society 11108. .. Sixtv-flfih iSeusoa .. .1907. Conductor WassiSy Safonoff ORCHESTRA OT^ OVER ONU HUNDRED. SOLOISTS: , Josef LIIE VI^ SE .. . . Piano (First Appearance) Miss Maud POWELL Violin Alois BUKGSTALLEK Tenor (First Appearance) Ossip GABKILOW Piano Hugo HEEK3I ANN Violin anil others to be announced. GENERAL SUBSCRIPTION now going on at Car- negie Hall. - * LIBERTY THEATRE. iti St.. West of R-iv^y. Eves. 5:13. Mat. Sa» KLAW & ERLANOER Ma~agers THE SECOND PRODUCTION BT ' ELEANOR ROSSQN In the succession of new plays to be Riven at this theatre as previously announced WILL BE HADE MONDAY NOV. 19, The title to he mad-? known next week. I UE3LCK & CO.. Manager" LAST THREE WEEKS OF MISS _R.OBSON A |rR7OB!E." EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY. Ti A I ¥'<? THEATRE. B'way & 30th St.. Eves. 8:15 UMI.9 O Matinees Wed. and Sat., at 2 15 k\ti;a MATINEE ELECTION DAY. MATINEE WEDNESDAY. BEST SEATS 81.S0. RICHARD CARLE In the NATURALIZED ENGLISH HIT. THE SPRING CHICKEN V HikfEl HI OilY-.2 To-day. The Music oi To-Day! VICTOR HERBERT 5D5 D ORCHESTRA AE U CONCERTS n "th ay. & i?e st. la n Mifi D fS n >phons 6oo ° oH*» fIIINnFRTC TO-DAY at 3:16. STAIt vUilul.il I O TO-NIGHT at 8-15 WEEK TO- \\ d nYV MATINEE BEGINNING IU"I'IUKKUW DAILY 25c 1 BRANSBY WILLIAMS la Character Sketches from Dickens* Works. FKKO IIFOY AMI THE FOUR [I MAtT>E NIBLO, II CLARKE, II LIKENS. fOl HTNEY. .lonepMu-. I Goldsmith TUP PIVO fifiHAN AXD "dHoppe. Infc rATo W'inMli CO. ' Vltagrapli. I (Adepts Myrtle). E CARNEGIE HAIL. 7TH AYE. A 57TH ST. I It/I 17 MTO O IB* I? LECT- JL JVISL L% U? \P JK, URES MAGNIFICENT TELEPHOTOORAPH3 IN COLOR AND MOTION PICTURES. 5 SUNDAY EVENINGS AT 8:13 SHARP. HOLLAND NOV. It THE RHINE " 18 SWITZERLAND " 25 NORTHERN ITALY DEC. 8 SOUTHERN ITALY - 0 COURSE TICKETS. Tubb.. Oct. SO. 9 A. M. Prices, $6. »5. U. $3. IS.M. Mall Orders Now. BINGLB TICKETS. Wed.. Nov. 7, » A. M. CARNEGIE HALT. WEDNESDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER TTH. ROSENTHAL Th* N. T. Symphony Orchestra. Walter Damrosah \u0084 Conductor Management Henry Wo'.fsohn . Re-erv«d scats IS.OO to 7 So. at tho Carnegta Hall Box Office end 10 E. 17th Street. The Weber Piano Used. DEER HUNTER SERIOUSLY SHOT. Utica, Oct. 27.—Harold Becker, of Rensselaer. a young man who was in the Adlrondacks about five miles from Tupper Lake with a party hunting deer, was seriously wounded this morning. He was brought out of the woods and will reach here this afternoon. It is supposed that a bullet from a rifle passed through his abdomen. He is said to have been handling a gun that he supposed contained no charge. Sailor Has Narrow Escape on Solitary Sea Voyage. Machias. Me., Oct. 27.— With a crew of one man the two masted schooner Little Elva lies in this harbor to-day after a perilous coasting trip, in which nearly all the Maine ports have been visited, and in which the email vessel was almost lost. The one man who was caotain. cook and crew is Louis Aristide, who sailed in the seven-ton schoo- ner from Poruand early In September for Maciiias- port. Near Libby Island Light, off Machiasport, In a storm, the boat's hull was punctured by one of the piles of an old fishweir. As the captain rushed on deck tc abandon his ship a huge sea washed him overboard. He caught hold of the dory, which was tied up astern, and. climbing into this, reached the beach, where he spent the remainder of the night exposed to the storm. The next day the gale abated, and Aristide, finding his little ves- sel still afloat, just beyond the outer line of tho breakers, brought her Into port. Arietlde Is a Frenchman. He served in the navy during the Civil War. Mother Appeals to Ministers in Behalf of Daughter She Thinks Abused. Portland, Me., Oct. 27.—Appeal haa been made to some of the clergymen of Portland to take up the cause of Mrs. Alice Phelps. of City, who has attempted to persuade one of her two daughters, who entered the Holy Ghost and Us colony at Shiloh, si* years ago, to desert that so- ciety. Mrs. Phelps says that the experiences of her daughters, Bessie, thirty years old, and May, thirty-two, who were teachers In Kansas schools, have been peculiarly shocking. One of tnem was oommitted to the State Insane Asylum Ust sum- mer, having lost her mind as the result of the Ufa at Shiloh. The oth*>r daughter Is believed to be suffering for food and clothinp, which are reported as being ecarce at the Shiloh colony since the de- parture of tho R*v. Frank W. Sandford and about seventy of the members for the Holy Land The Rev. Dr. Smith Baker, pastor of "Willlsston Congregational Church, and the Rev. J W Ma- gruder, pastor of the Chestnut Street Methodist Church, accepted invitations to meet Mrs Phelps next Monday forenoon and discuss the possibility of securing tho daughters' release by moral influ- ence, as It Is considered impossible to obtain it by legal process. Other pastors will be invited to be present at Monday's conference. m WASHED FROM BOAT IN STORM. WANTS RESCUE FROM HOLY GHOSTERS. chance to qualify as distinguished experts will ba next Wednesday. This will wind up tho outdoor shooting for qualification for this season. First Lieutenant Alexander A. Foreman, of Com- pany D, 23d Regiment, has resigned on account of business. He Joined tlio regiment as a private In IS&4. Colonel Duffy, of the C3th Rpßlment, has ap- pointed Second Lieutenant John "\V. Elms, of Com- pany F, assistant inspector of rifle practice. The headquartera of tho regiment Is etill In the old armory, but will be removed to the new armory to- morrow night, it Is expected. All the lockers for the officers and men in the building will be of steel, and havo been Installed In the different rooms. The 14th Regiment has made a net gain of fifty- eight officers and men during the past six months. The aggregate strength of the command Is 762 officers and men. Unless Companies C and F Im- prove in discipline and drill attendance there Is a Berious danger of their being disbanded. They are In a very unsatisfactory condition. Colonel Foote has done good work in Improving the regi- ment elnce he took command, and hopes to bo able to bring the two delinquent companies up to the proper standard. Captain F. C. E. Yon Sternberg, of Company C of tha 13th Regiment, hns resigned on account of business. He nrst joined the reelment from the 71st Regiment, in March, 1891. He will be suc- ceeded by First Lieutenant Ford. MADISON SQ. theatre Rak». 13. Mats. Wed. and Sat., 1:13. WALTER K. LAWRENCE pr«3«nt» GARLOTTANILLSON INRACHEL CROTHER'S BIG , BOUNDING. BOLD SUCCESS. THE THREE OF US SKATS READY TO JANUARY IST EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY. IX THE FIRST OF A SERIES OF NOTABLE PRO- GRAMMES. EMBRACING THE ELOQUENT THE IDYLLIC THE CHARMING IX ORCHKSTRAI, AND VOCAL, MfSIC . ' ' ':~r 1 \u25a0/\u25a0:; ;;;•\u25a0 MAKIrf «roi>]»A«T. eVfl D l/ THEATRE. Bwa. 4Uh to . -•- \u2666• Nr?C I U ft Xv * s - 8:li - » Mat». Wed. A Sat.. J:lS. mill* KLAW & ERLAXQER, -Manarar» t PRICES Me, 500., 78«>.. »1.00. NQ HIGHEB.T LAST WEEK. Aurustua Pltou pr«4*&ta CHAUNCEY OLCOTT la A NEW play by Th«odor« Burt Ba/r*. EILEEN ASTHORE <E T L^s^,x ,__ *3"HEAR OI.COTT'a NEW SON >-> let rAY TEAIPLETON 45, « >n>TTKs EXTRA MATINEE Ellggj&^g^ 11 '^ TO-NI GHI -- concert WEST END ™^R^^ ta lir^a7^"Xrr £& CONCERTS TO-NIGHT Bil3. IS to Tig Week Startta, Me. MATIVEES | **S.Md joo. To-morrow I MONDAY and WED.I Mat. bat. A STORY OF THE OOLDEV W«ST. THE COWPUNCHER PRICES ALWAYS *a 80, SO aoJ 79c, NO H: Ufca. W«ak Nov. 8— YE SOW. (Mat. Elation D*y.> TO HIPPODrtOME LAST TIMS THIS SZAJON. SO US A THREE SOLOISTS. Box ofSo* op«n from 11 a. a. HAfKFTT™ KATER - 4 « st wirn>ir MR. HACKBTT Sol* Luh« anJ Vaaa** ROSE STAHL uSTrxS* » THE CHORUS LADY S^T 1 . EXTRA MAiINKK EUCTIOX PAY. D C I ACPr\ THE A., 42d St.. W. of B'way. DCILAOVvVj Evg.. 8:15. Mat. 3at.. a. LAST FOUR WEEKS. DAVID BELASCO Presents BLANCHE BATES o 7 to IN "THEGIRLOFTHE |STL. GOLDEN WEST" m't'it" A P'»y ot '**\u25a0 Bc«ne In California. oaSaU By DAVID BELASCO. EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY. Broadway __ II I IO17 Xv ** $:B°- andlOthflt. ** a «J V^ V Sat. Mai. 1:18. NAT. C. GOODWIN ta GE T«?s. SPECIAL THtniNDAT NOV. Matinee AITEK>OON'. X3T. when WE WERE TWESTT-OVE. (Mr. Goodwin la his original rol* of Rlchmrd C«x«vr«.) NEXT COM. MONDAY. NOV. 3TH MAY IRtVIIM InHer MRS. WILSOXr Wir ** »«*.•*mr« N(wPta . THAT'S ALL. „4 _, By GEOROB V HOBART. mi. Election Day— WboeTT Wins, Boat* 8«Uln«, The Turf. A POPULAR DRINK. Scotch and Polly. rum Qto oa, I GARDEN THEATRE t £f «™ HENRY W. SAVAGE Manager Evenings 8:15. Matinee Saturday, 2:16. | POPI I.AR PRICE if MATINEE SATIIUJAr. I SOCVEXIKS. I AN UNPRECEDENTED SUCCESS ! MS: CLAY CLEMENT and His Specially Selected Company __ of Fifty People. In SAM HOUSTON The Thrilling, Keallßtto. Historical Southern Four-Act Play. ($3 II ATT A M THEATRE. lil M filBl A 9 3A II B'way. 234 St. \u25a0U II IB HI n \u25a0 IH» Phone 8168 Mad. EVERY NIGHT 8:15 and WED. and SAT. MATINEES 2:15. •J EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION and THANKSGIVING DAYS. MISS GEORGE ~ SECOND MONTH. E GRACE GEORGE HKB ft Ay**Z Hapwooa and Channln* WEIVY -1 '- 1 " Suc-feßsfui Society Comedy, . m* ts CLOTHES V^ I. *at»,Xnw Hourly to An .l | n -l. Dec. 1. J r iUK c* BL. M AMk rA^I UK nFSFgoEh CARLO'S DOGS. NIBBE & BORDOUEX AT CART H TON. JOHN' F. CLARK. HARRY MHO IVY DEL MAR * IVY.JOHN WALSH. MARTIN 4 B DGEWA V fe* VITA A G Y RAPH°' MCRPHrtPAffISR: iIAMMERSTHN'S 4Sd 8t - B>wiiy and 7th a^ Ml.lnllli.nuI win 0 Evening*. 25c to SI. 11 DAILY MATS. Wo. H. Thompson 4 Co., Walter , He. und 30c. Jones & Mabel Hit*and oth»r». TO-DAY AND NIGHT— Two Vanderflle Concert*. I WEBER'S E*TRE. B'way and lith St. WW * J " lj * % - Evenings 8:15. Mat. Sat.. 8116. JOS. M WEBB^Pr^and Mp£h«. mo Mad. __ GREAT DRAMATIC LOVE BTORY. THE MEASURE OF A MAN RIGO HARLEM CASINO I *"^"" >VBVr 114 TH BT. A 7TH AYE. I flay* Nl«iitl}-. TabU d'Kot*. 7So. 8»t. and bun,, 11. | IRVINO rU ** Theatre, Ev«nlD»« at f.t*. I ** *i-»VB Mod Turn,, W»d., Sohoentaao'i com- I •dr In 3 act*. "DKR HERR II NAT QIC* }£y In 3 acti, *ppearano« ot Mr. WILLT u ur . >d . tt ii fir » t »Pp««u-ano» of Mr. WIllI i fBAIER, Every following Ev«nln« and B»turda» - Matin**. lUrtw.U-i comedy. "O>it EiT tOSL* CAKNEOIIS ILAJLL, Tri. Ero., N o y, », At t:M. »-. TO-NIGHT & BIJOU THEATRE 3KSV* BIG Includim ArttiU from Or&nd CONCERT £?m? ml ° OP«». I«r',» Only Fr«noh - ' S>|: ' X * Concert In N. T. Tlok«U TT»on'i. Qivizsfe&^ss^s: RACING AT JAMAICA OCTOBEn M TO KOVEMBEB l. TXOI *«* REMSEN HANDICAP and five oth«r rao**. b«»ianln« *t li« OP. U. . Er*l n ; '•£!• **•* »"* "»«. i»a«. m^« **'•> ,H«». li»l Flsrtusa ivy tfilS, II 10. lliiO^^iiT Ok Hr cto*«t to to** nut \u25a0»• mSSSmk taste of California mining, bad gor.e when still a young man to explore In South Africa, and had be- come general manager of the great monopoly of the diamond mines. A fighter of financial battles and a manager of men, a writer, a scientist, and one of the world's greatest engineers, he so stamped his personality on the people among whom he lived that he was feted and cheered by all South Africa when he retired last spring and came back to the United States to build a home for his leisure years In the land of his birth. Here was a man who played a man's part in perhaps the most In- spiring and romantic undertaking of his time. His father went, with a little capital, to Cali- fornia in the 50's. and the son entered California College—afterward the University. He wished to ! become a ruining engineer, but there was no good \u25a0 mining school in the country. "Perfect yourself." ea'd his father, ''even if you have to go abroad." Bo off he went to th« Mining Academy of Freiberg, among the lead mines of Saxony. On his return to Ben Francisco In ISCC. two v.»:; spent years in the mint made him an expert assayer. and then he went to fining In the I'ioehe country of Southern Nevada. He came back to be appointed receiver of a water and mining company l"- Northern Cali- fornia. Within a year the company was paying dividends for the first time and his diplomacy had brought into harmony the two warring factions that had necessitated the receivership. From this post he was called, by an invitation from a classmate at Freiberg named De Crano. who had organized an exploring company for the \u25a0•. nothschllds. to look for valuable minerals in t*Jlashonalanil. Then began his acquaintance with if bush and karroo, with the slow advance of ox teams jf across the level veldt, with the handling of Zulus ( end Matabeles and other natives, with the sturdy but pigheaded Boers, with th» adventurers who were rushing in hordes to this new Golconda. He shot elephants and lions, lived oft the country, panned and tested the sand end gravel of every stream, and scoured the region for promising out- crops or hints of value. On his way back to Lon- den to report he fell in with Cecil Rhodes, who hap- pened to be a fellow passenger on the steamer— a meeting that proved to be the turning point in his i career. Rhodes had often said that he strove for wealth, because only through wealth could he hope to realize his plan of British empire in Booth Africa. "Chinese" Gordon once told him of refusing a roomful of gold with which the Chinese govern- ment wished to reward him for subduing the T&lpins rebellion. Xv "What would you have done?" he asked Rhodes. m) "Taken it." was the reply, "and as many more V rcorpfuis es they would have given me. It's no use to us to have tigideas If we haven't the money to carry them out." . And since it was on the claims he controlled in the De Beers diamond ml:ie that he based his hopes of wealth, be talked eagerly with this American mining engineer, as the steamer kicked its way up the African coast, of possible, ways to make hU diamond mining pay as hugely aa he. thought it should. Aral in arm tliey paced the deck day after day and evening after evening;. They were kindred spirits. Rhodes told Williams what he knew jf the wild land that the American had been exploring, and Williams explained and diagrammed the art of Mining And bi th talked of men and of how men may be handled. After a Short stay in England Mr. Williams came home to see his family. In the midst of his visit he was surprised to receive a cablegram from Rhodes asking him to resign from the exploration company and come out and take charge of Mils dia- mond mine. He started at or.cc for London, met Hhodes, and early in 1888 Bailed back to the Cape general manager of the De Beers Company. He took hold of the mining operations at once and quickly familiarized himself with conditions. The first step v.as to work out a eystem of un- derground T.:'.r,i;.F that should be safe and econom- ical, for the methods in use had been neither. At successive levels In the tunnels the workmen had been assiduously cutting the blue ground from under the feet of the workers on th» level Just above, and they were leaving behind them dla- tnond-bearir.? rock in the pillars they carved as supports in lieu of timbers. He solved th^ problem by driving a set of tunnels clear across the mines from crater wall to crater wall. The miners in i these tunnels had cleared out the blue ground above them, and had moved back from the crater edge, before the next group of miners In a set of tunnels forty feet below had begun In turn to blast down the blue ground above their heads. So on to the lowest levels. These men had moved back be- fore the men in another set of tunnels below had begun to blast. All the blue ground was thus Igfeaa out. and no sang st work had another gang blasting just beneath It. The system was a revolu- tion in diamond mining. He kept several men at work on experiments, until one of them discovered that if a mass of pebbles be carried across a heavily in-eased sur- face, »very diamond In the mass will stick in the grease, though all the other pebbles, and even glass, will Sow away. Greased pulsators were at once Installed, and the diamonds are now separated automatically. / l ,^. The fuel problem Is a serious one In the Goalless end almost treeless country about Klmberly. where the diamond fields centre. Recently a coal mine was discovered In Rhodesia. He at once arranged to have most of Its output delivered "at the mines. It waa of poor Quality and "clogged the fire bars cruel." Nothing daunted, he devised grates that would burn It economically. It was this sort of ready resource, this quickness to step out of the rat, that marked his whole policy. j Be picked bis assistant* from various countries, many trvs. the United States, but he never lost touch of the sfTt^rs of the mines In all their rami- fication*. Nothing- of Importance waa done that did list pus OT«r fcls de«k. and he kept the loyalty of bis torn: tor always treating them with scrupulous Jsntlo*. When th* Beer* mine took fire through. ft»» cwtlMnui *>t a Kefir who left r lighted 6s-ae'l» r.eejr the timbers on one of the upper lerela •hortly after th« 00/ieoll'Ution, Imprisoning 685 men •!jb«>w, he hurri«4 at ence to the mine, and, as \u25a0\u25a0mttto «s.W tfUnrard. "worked night and day Many Nets Subjects Will Be Taken Up Next Month. Eight of the courses of free public lectures which have been conducted by the Board of Education during the present month will be brought to a close during the coming week. Most of the courses will bo followed by others, plans for which have been completed by the lecture bureau. Next Monday evening Louis U. Wilkinson, of Cambridge University, England, will close his course on "The Characters of Shakespeare" at the Educational Allianoe, East Broadway and Jefferson street. The course In astronomy, by Professor Herman S. Davis, will be concluded on Friday evening at Public School 160. Suffolk and Rivlngton streets, and the following evening Professor Morris Loeb, of New York University, will give the last lecture in his coursa on chemistry at the Museum of Natural History, 77th street and Central Park West. The sunie evening Leslie Willis Spraeue ends his course on "Social Forces In the Victorian Novel," at the High School of Commerce. 65th street, west of Broadway. Thlß course will be fol- lowed by a course of six lectures by Mr. Sprague on "George Eliot's Novels and Their Treatment of Personal Relationship." Prominent among the new courses planned for November wll! be one of six lectures on physical m graj ' y I v Professor William Ldbbey. of Prince- ton, to bp piven on Saturdays, at the Museum of Natural History; a course of six lectures on "Rep- resentative Ensllsh Writers." by Professor A. V. W. Jackson, of Columbia, at the Educational Allianoe, Ea?t Broadway and Jefferson 6treet. on Mondays, bepinnlng- November <"., and a course by Professor Adolphe Cohn, of Columbia, on "Great Writers of Mod< m France," on Thursdays, at Public School 46. At Public School 130. First avenue and 51st street, Pr Walter E. Clark. r>f the College of tho City of New York, who recently closed his course there on "Money and Bankinp." willgive three special lect- ures on successive Monday evenings, on "Trade," "Transportation" and "Trusts." NATIONAL GUARD NEWS- General James McLeer. of the Second Brigade, will review the 47th Regiment at its armory on Wednesday evening, November 28. A band con- cert will precede the review, and dancing will follow the military exercises. It is expected that Governor Hlggins will act upon the recommendation made by General George Moore Smith. First Brigade, and indorsed by Major General Charles F. Roe. to reduce the Sth Regiment to c. battalion, either to-morrow os Tuesday. There has been some delay in installing the fur- niture In the new armory of the "Ist Regiment, and for this reason the formal opening of the armory, arranged for the night of November 27 next, has been indefinitely postponed. Colonel Hotchkln, of the 22d Regiment, has been authorised to form two additional companies In his regiment, which will make the command a three battalion organization and give it an ad- ditional major. The new companies will be known as L and M. The former will be organized by Lieutenant Harvey Garrison, of Company C and the latter by ex-Captain H. C. H. Stewart, of the »th Regiment. Lieutenant Garrison has seen con- siderable service in the Philippines as an officer In the United States Volunteers, and Captain Stewart, before joining the 9th Regiment, served as master at arms in the Ist Naval Battalion and In the Ist and 4th regiments of New Jersey. The Regimental Athletic Association will hold games at the armory on December 3 next, and is now preparing the programme. Corporal C J. Ahem. of Company I, has taken his discharge after over six years' service, during five of which he per- formed 100 per cent of duty. Is an expert rifleman. An Interesting rifle competition has been ar- ranged by Company B of the l*th Regiment of this city, and Company I of the Ist Regiment of New Jersey. There will be several matches, the first of which will be shot in the armory range of the 12th Regiment on Saturday, November 24. The teams will consist of twelve men each The regiment on October 22 had qualified all told 6$ marksmen at Cre*dmoor. Of these 230 were BharD- ehootere. 78 were experts and 7 were distinguished Officers and men of the Sth Regiment have been very much amused during the last week at the action of Colonel Jan-is In forbidding officers to meet In the armory for discussion. On one occa- sion Lieutenant Colonel Kerby. Major Edwards and one or two other officers were talking in th« field officers' room, when the colonel came alon* and told therm all to 60 home. Ho stated that h» would not allow any meetings of officers in such manner, and also ordered the Janitor to turn out the lights. Some officers were la the main hail talking, and the colonel, in the present of enlisted men. ordered them to dlspers* ana said he would not tolerau any discussions. One of the officers replied that they were discussing tactics, and the colonel said that he would not allow this outside an officers' school. i ""»*»• Members of the National Guard who have not yet qualified marksman at Oreadmoor will haVe the fast opportunity to do so to-morrow. Th» \tg\. LECTURE COURSES END. On his departure from Africa last spring In a very storm of regrets and farewell celebrations, he left his son, Alpheus Williams, behind him as general manager. At Rliodes's request the young m-in had been made assistant general manager, and the di- rectors of the De Beers Corporation insisted that he replace his father. The son is on tho path to a career perhaps as notable as his. Mr. Williams is now building a house in Wash- ington, where he will live with Mrs. Williams and his daughter Dorothy. He was besought by his as- sociates to live in London, but he said. "No. I'm going home."— (From advance proofs of The World's Work for November. T for the relief of the \u25a0ufferers." Five hundred of I the imprisoned men escaped, because, with due pre- cautions to prevent the escape of Kaffirs with stolen diamond*, exit Into the old open working's had been left to provide against such a contingency. One of his mining- axioms tru that the first thing to con- sider In sinking a mine Is to prepare exits In case of accident, and the way he has followed it has given him a wide popularity among the miners. Some people have wondered why the thousands of Kaffirs who work under the white bosses are content to give up the freedom of their ravage life to live In "compounds" and toll In the mines. They work, of course, in order to save enough to buy many wives And afterward live In ease. Such Is their treatment that when Mr. Will- lams went to a native chief, to ask his assistance In securing labor, the chief replied, "Icannot tell my people to leave their kraals and go to Kimberly, but Ifa boy come to me and say, 'I want to go to work In the 'mines' I say, 'Go,' for he go to work for you." Mr. Williams caw Klmberly grow from a email mining town to a city of imposing proportions. There he made his home In a beautiful wide- j verandacd house, covered In the fall with wistaria I bloom and surrounded by frulf trees and vineyards. J When the Boer War broke out he took an active J part In the defence of tho city, and it was under I his direction that George Labram built in the De I Beers Company workshlj>a, "Long Cecil," the I famous gun that stiffened the notablo front the city \u25a0 made against the Boers. V.'hen famine threatened ] he turned over his orchards and vineyards to the people of the tor.x* To help the defence he offered the military leaders every facility for using the mines in their operations. There was much dyna- mite on hand for blasting. Colonel Kekowich, in command of the British forces, asked him to de- vote it to planting mines about the city to guard against a Boer rush. "Put down ten pounds every thirty foot," was the request. No sooner said than done. But the report sent hack to the colonel was, "Mines laid. We put down thirty pounds j every ten feet." Never Idle, always alert for new knowledge, he studied and experimented till he knew as much about diamonds as any man living. He proved that they were not formed in the blue ground where they lie, but far underground, where the bubbles of gaseous carbon of which they are crystalliza- tions were compressed by the weight of overlying strata. They were afterward shot up, he reasoned, by volcanic mud rushes which later hardened into blue ground. In acknowledgment of his scientific work, just before his departure from Kimberly >c was elected president of the South African Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Science, and lie recently received the medal of the Swedish Academy of Science. With all his many activities, more- over, he found time to write the standard book on diamond mining under the title, "The Diamond Mines of South Africa," unique volumes crammed with all the fascinating lore of diamonds, legendary and scientific, filled with stories of the world's dia- mond mines, and made Intensely interesting by their account of the mines he developed himself. Much of what ie told in this brief sketch ho tflls there in most entertaining detail, hiding, however, his own eh.ire in the great undertakings that came to his hand beneath his enthusiastic appreciation of Rhodes and other men. Written with all the picturesqucness that the subject suggests, tho book is not only a revelation to engineers and scientists, but a narrative of deep human interest, and the last word on diamonds. The illustrations he has gathered of all the world's great diamonds and of the early scene 3in and about the South African mines ara remarkable. As a writer, he is as con- vincing and distinctive as he is as engineer, scientist and nan of affairs. 'JmtMdmenU* Amusement*. STW TOa*. THEATBK* TOMB *H»Jj»Dt HIPPODROME Amusementi. tOTT^YORK: !DA*^ TESZfIJ]^ 6HOTXA.Y. OOTOBEB ; 28. 1900, 'Amutementa. KEITHdts PROCTOR'S PhnDH MM Mridlsoa. FBFTH AVENUE ITO 10:oO. ?3c . 30c. V.Vj. ARNOLD DALY. Kauffman Troupe. Bedlr.l & Arthur. KranW Bush. Stanley A Leonard. Welsh, Mealy & Col. Mile. Nadji. Harry & Halvers. Charlotte Ravanacroft. Whittle. Ward Bros.. Gallando. Demonlo A Bells, Otha T»-<lay - Continuous 1-10:8*) WJnsor MrCay._?l-->rrN J'r^nin. Emni» Parca^Mary &\u25a0 Hall. fftli«'< TViip <Vh«y< lMth "';.. nr. "*7th Aye! IJI A "i, r"'t"2T tfSfc£&A Lj'iVffv £T '" x riMll|> VAI'DEVILU;" Thonr. S3 49 lorn. Btl AitL STO UiEiiA rflUUub ITO 10:30. 13*. ->sc. 50c. 75«. MASTER (iABVIKL as Buster. Wir.sor McCay, Edwards Davis A Co.. Nora Bar**,WIUU Family. Thos. M««»»a ACe Duraml Trio, Jack Wilson & Co.. Lowell & Lowell. Tom •...-<>. Alexis A Schall. Count de But* A COv. To-day Continuous— Mrs. Lanstrv^fi Mu.ti--.:1 Oittya. T. "•\u25a0*• Sully Print-*** Trii!^, Jn. Oa«iiman A P!ck« -. ~lKkilhU C?J i| "ARKY I'ILFOIU Hassan Ben. PC'TJ' <^T j ALL STAi: VArDEVILLK. UmUN SU. | All's Arabs. Meredith Sister*. H«rr* 'JjL^L' ' t t^^-'^t, 11 " "., GE t NE «l"°113- i j^m—p . , rnnV -.._ T-_,T -_, c,,, tv Fii- '" ~ " LINDT 3 Renards. L«a Harriaoa. Sub. Esp. Station. S^av Tc» FWd, fi Wart y Matinee*. SS I**-™1 **-™ - CO * EDY Suss** rnvri\-rnr« muncl Uay <fe Co.. *i*ias& warn. * ilackay & Nloker-ion. Hayes * H»>TI>I.ULS. Franco Piper. Adalr & Dahn. Kitty All Seat* 1.V.. Sjc. Johnson. Brown. Harris & Brown. 1:30 to 10:30. Stevens. Earl & Harriett. Chas. & ,£? t . Pr j£?"' Zara & Stetson. 55.00c. Box Seats $1 Fanny Van. To-day. 1:30 to 10:30. ljO - to 3Or - TO-DAY AND NIC.HT Phon«l92BOrant. Grand Valid. fnni : crt._( rnfinuoiip.. P.f 1 "- 1 ? .'mil p:.-,z:i Vnndevlll<>_Concert—Blg_BllL_ | 00 ft GY '". ' alT^taTTTaTi >T: viT.~i-?~ IQCTJ cT I Margaret anglins /dU Ola £ 6 MR. ANDMRS. SIDNEY DP.EW.I ";" Olil Remarkable Pacee". IS Musical Cuttys. O'Brien &Havel. J \u0084 \u0084 _ 1 "MRS. DANES DEFENSZ.- THE HOME OF Ellnore Slaters. Byron & Langrdon. c i' ! J t ' n '" ';. I)ai 'V , rMI"r Ml " Morgan. Mr. McAllister. NOVELTY. \u25a0 Three Donald Brun Trio. oths.| SKAT!>. 1.i0., 23c. Mr. Norton. Miss Scott and Vaud. Matinees Dally. Night Price*. 15. 2.'». .15. 50. 73«-.g Box Ofllco Open I Curtain Rise* 1:30 and 7. 13c. and Me. TODAY iiml TO-NIGHT Grand! A. M to 10 p. M. TO-DAY AND NIGHT Grand Phone M— Chel. Vaudeville Concert STar Bill. j Phone 1230 Harlem. Yauil?vllle Concert 30 Stan. MASTER OF MIXES.

Transcript of E VICTOR HERBERTT*l».«400 Bnranii Last Four Weeks of A SOCIETY CIRCUS ADDED FEATURE IN THE ARENA....

Page 1: E VICTOR HERBERTT*l».«400 Bnranii Last Four Weeks of A SOCIETY CIRCUS ADDED FEATURE IN THE ARENA. HERMAN TRAINED LIONS TWICE I Mats.. 25c. to $1.00. INO DAILT. | Nights, 25a.J.0_%

Ttovicmtic Story of Gardner Will-iams, an American Engineer.

BjM. O. Cnuniff.

TTIOS or sam 8. a lee SHTBEBT. n»a\lYRIP ' -

We"'-"lf B-W' Tel. imBryiurt.\LIniWEvtrs. 8:1S. Mats. Wed. ASat.. 1:15.\ B»»lnnlne TO-MORROW Nlfht,

\ MS; LENA ASHWEU• \ The C«lel>ratf«d En»llah ActrMs.' \ p^isUTHE SHULAMITE\ Extra Mat. Eieotlon Day Scati on Sal*.

KPKCIAL>E»sinnInB Frl.. Not. 9.'and aaeh Xm^MATS, i Toes.. Wed. and TH. th«^att«r.Beat Sale Mon., Not. 3. Ms.ll Orders Now.

HenryMiller MRS. la PTPPAPresents LE MOT>TE Browrjlnr* FAISM.

Management M.iin.SHVBERT *A-jrr>E?l£ J!i

--*.

434 and 44th Sta, and «th A.v«. T*l».«400 Bnranii

Last Four Weeks of

A SOCIETY CIRCUSADDED FEATURE IN THE ARENA.

HERMAN TRAINED LIONSTWICE I Mats.. 25c. to $1.00. I NODAILT. | Nights, 25a. J.0_% I.^o. |HIGHER.

SUNDAY CONCERT TO-NIGHT.last TIME f^IIO AIN NEW TURK %»| \u25a0 \u25a0 IIH^ g%

THIS SEASON %^ %^**

ADA CHAMBERS SopranoJEANETTE POWERS ViolinistHERBERT L. CLARKE CornetUt

POPULAR PRICES. Sir. to $1.00.Box Office open from 10 A. M. To-day.

PRl^fiF^*s B way and J»th St. T«l». lt«(Mad.rnii^UCOO Erz».t:Zo. Mat«.Thur. 4 Sat.lUO.,''««*"« i THE HSNBYANGLINI «h;« MILLER

BEATS SELUNG FOR 1J WEEKS.Speelal Matinees Election Day and Thankss;W^.

MATS. Tues..Mem.. Nor. 13. and each Sba,

MATS. J Tues., Wed. and Frl. thereafter.Seat Sale Thar*.. Not. 8. Mall Orders Now.Henry Miller MME.ALLA la HEDD*.Presents NA2LHOVA Ibsen's „"BLEB

fACADEMY OF MUSICE. O. GILMORE. %

, l«t& st -j^EUGENE TOMPKINS Macaywi. Irving PV

LAST WEEK rLtebler £ Co/» Missive Rural Play,

CAPE GOO FOLKSA Pleoslnr Story of Down-I»«t Life.

PRICES 25. bo. ?8. j.oo. ,Last Mats. Wed, and gat.. I. Evsa'.nf 8:15-

SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTFOR FOUR WEEKS

FROM MONDAY, NOV. 5.SPECIAL MATINEE ELECTION DAY,

Tuosday, Nov. 0. \u0084,

SPECIAL MATINEE THANKSGIVING DAY,Thurtdiy. Nov. 28.

Mr. Wm. A. Brady announces84 PERFORMANCES.

24 Nights and 10 Afternoons.or the plays or Sba;c«speare and Bulwer t>y

MR! ROBERT

When Alfred Mo»ely. the Engllßhmaii who bo ad-xn'.res American ways that he brings commission!over to study them, was asked the reason cf hl«a<lr-i:.ratlor., lie Mid:

"Gardner F. Williams, the American mining: en-gineer tr*so directs the diamond output of theworld."

Sir. MoMly made his fortune ia South Africa.

Kb watched Cecil Rhode's dream of empire de-velop and knew the man \rho made Itreal. Theone who took his Jmafflnatlon was Gardner Will-iams. "The country that can produce such a man,"he said to himself, 'la a country from which minecan leant."

Few men have earned puch a tribute. Here wasa. can' who had left Michigan at the age of fifteento go with a pioneering father to California ln theflush days of the early mining camps, had had a

\ 111 I^PTin way and 60th St."'

OO Cohimbus.\ RlAuLullU Evs.B:ls. Mats. Wed. and Sat.. 2:15.\ WI BLT.-SHI'BERT CO Props.

\ THE TOURISTS\ Special Mat.Election Day. Seats Now en Salo.

«undnv I To-day 8:15. 23r. 50<-. AllStarcSSc "rts.|To-nl*ht_B 750^1. Vau-levUIP.

\"LE*W™3FrELDS^~

B'way and 35th. Tel. 24S5—

38.\ urniin cnillDC Evenings 8:15.\ HERALD SQUaRC Mats. Tues. and Hat. 2:15.\

"and His AllStar\ LEW FIELDS Company

\ ADoe^s,o n A3OUT TOWN

\ Special .^l»t.Election I>ny. Seats now onsale

LINCOLN SQ. THEATREB'way.68th St. Phono 54<t Col. -

West Side Amusement Co.. Lessees, j a H r>«xt«rSchubert Theatrical Co.. Dlrsctora. I Manasar*

OPENING THIS TUESDAYGUY STANDING "^SgnSK Sa

TEE LOVE ROUTEA ThrillingPlay of Frontier Life.

Election and Thanksgiving Special Matin***.Resolar Matinees Wednesday and Saturday.

BEST SEATS $1.00 .„.T0;Riv.

\ HACIMnB'way &39th St. Tel. 1646 Bryant.

\ kAOlrgU Bes. NEXT SATURDAY MGHT.

\ JAMES T. POWERS S^r"\ &•&!&THE BLUE MOON\ Seats Rprfdy Wednesday.V EXTRA MAT. ELECTION DAY.

PMDIDP THEATRE. Broadway »n4 \u2666»**»-CiVIPIKCr Iv«i8 15. Mats. Wed. *Sat.. Sil6.

EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY.I/VmiCTnOITW In A.,W. Plnero-» HIS\f\JrIIN LIKfL>V> HOUSE IN ORDER.

C ADDirifTHEATRE. 85th St., nr. B*w«.y.U/iKltll/It £v 8.15. Mat. Sat.. i:ls.

EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION VAX. 1

WM.GILLETTE lncl

lzr'

Will AI*lfC THEATRE. B'way and 30th St

IfALLAim OEvm sir Mats. Wed. and Sat.,EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY.

SAM BtRINARDMl{ ho<;<,e\heimer.

J\ l/riV THEATRE. 34th St. and B'way.J/AVUI Eve. 8:13. Mat. Sat.. 2:16.p A\f W\ A \fIC* THE HOCBEFAY DAVIS of miktii.

MONT. I KVKI.E BEIXKW | SEATSNOV 8.I in BRIGADIER GKRAKD. I NOV. 1.

UlinCnU THEATRE. 44th St.. East of B'way.

nUUOUn Evg. 8:15. Mats. Wed. and Sat.. 2:15.EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY.

THE HYPOCRITESCRITERION" B'wayand 44th St. Evr. S:ls.CRIMLO

MATTNEE EUICTION I»AY.

UttSSSi THE LITTLE CHERUBTom Wise. James Blakeley and 70 others.

KNICKERBOCKER THEATRE, B'way. .".Sth St.Eve. 8:15. Mat. Wed. and Sat.. 1:15.

EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY.

MONTGOMERY &STONE T^t"ED

IVPCII&4 Broadway and 45th St. Evjjs. 8:15.L|uCUf7l Mats. Thur. nnd Sat. Nt 2:15.

EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY.400 th TIIJI.J Oct. 00. urn the mouseSouvenirs. TIIE HUH THE IfIUUOC

TO-NIGHT at 8:30 %%S"S7BURTON HOLMES

TRAVELOGUES (TRAVEL TALKS),

gSSSS- MOTION PICTURES;'NAPLES & NEARBY"

POPULAR PRICES 91.50 to 500.Box Offlco open from 2:30 P. M. To-day.

MENDELS SOUS HALL.WEDNESDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER 14TH.

M- NIESSEM-sfONESon^ Recital

Seats $1and 91.50, at Mendelssohn Hall Box Office.

ARRANGEMENT OF ROLES:~~~"~-\u25a0"mm Mon.. Ties., Wed Nights

FIE.ST E and Tues. Afternoon.

week j RICHARD 111Snay HAMLET

Thi:r»., I'll. Sat. Nights

Xrnon MSI C LEARsEcoNif

™ny OTHELLO

—_—,—.- : Tues., Wod. Nights and ,WEEK ! Wednesday | » f% {%

\u25a0'< Afternoon. | fi\ %Jl f±Jt

(Firit time In New York.)Thursday RICHELIEUNight. litI1/ n LLIEiU

Fri.. Sat. Nlfrhts and

l^SSn. HASH! LETthird s S.iy MACBETH

! „_"_ j Tues., Wed. Nights andWEEK j TfeUM. and <C IS\ f C X• •

Bat. Afternoons. «-» **ILWtH(First time in New York.)

Thursday OTHELLONiKht. OTH ELLOFriday, »« a o •" \u25a0\u25a0sat. Nisht.. M A_C_B E T H

FOUTH AND FINAL WEEKMr. NANTELL Will Be Seen for the

First lime asBRUTUS in "JULIUS CAESAR"

! SKATS READY TUESDAY\^ MORNING FOB ENTIRE ENGAGEMENT.

M NDELB 8011 X HALL.Friday Evening. November 2.

rooLi i WILLTAMSRooital WILLIAMSRes. Beats $1nnd $1.50 at Box Office. Mendelssohn Hall.

MENDELSSOHN HALL.

ifNEISEL QUARTETH TflL 16th Season in New York.

SIX EVENING CONCERTSNov. 13, Dec. 11. Jan'y S. Feb'y 5. March 5. April 2.

General Subscription Sale opens Nov. Ist. Apply toJ. M. Priaulx. care Dltson's. 867 Broadway.

MENDELSSOHN HALL.Thursday Afternoon, November Ist, at 2:30.

cracia |$Il%a.§s §1£| SONG

Seats $1 and $1.50, at Box Office. Mendelssohn Hall.

MENDELSSOHN' HALL.

Four Chamber Music ConcertsThurs. Evs.:Deo. 20, Jan. 17, Feb. 28, Apr. 11.

Olive Mead Quartet_„ Olive Mead j Gladys NorthElizabeth Honghton I Lillian Llttlehales(subscription tickets 55, at office Musical Art Society,IWest 34th St.. and at Box Office.

Mendelssohn Hall. I2th Season.

KALTINBORNQUARTET_\u25a0 January 16th and February 27th.Subscription Tickets $3 and $2. Single Seats $1.50 andJl. at 10 E. 17th St.. Mendelssohn Hall and FranaKaltenborn, 61 W. S6th St.

GARDNER P. WILLIAMS.The American mining engineer who helped to

create, and then managed, the SouthAfrican diamond monopoly. SL &$ 'V ii8* THEATRE. B'way. 45th St.

h v) i y R Eve 8. Mat. Sat.. 2.rS %J>

ii\u25a0

\u25a0 i^iiiiiiii Phone 253 Bryant.

""'\u25a0'aorre'ouV Zte-'n XTRA MAT. ELECTION DAY.vlval."—Herald. VIOLABeauty of Seen- ! i*. W W "WT* «^Ter v.-_worid. Ai. s a »i r%i

"Bert Shake- tfk&^t&-JSlL*L^spearean per- 1

formation M1s s I as IMOGEN In

iii.";"CYMBELINE;

MLfI&MSTEROAIirst. WestKLAW & ERLANOER .Manager*

Eves. 8:15. Matinees Wed. and Sat. at 3:11.

1 MATINKE WEDNESDAY. BEST B>E.\TS $1.30. 1BEGIN- TSipC On VIEXTRA MATINEE

NINO lUCO., Utl. OU ELECTION DAY.KLAW A ERLAJCGER will present

Mr. FOBBES-BOBEBTSORMiss GERTRUDE ELLIOTT

AND THEIR LONDON COMPANY In

C/ESAR and CLEOPATRAA History, by G. BERNARD SHAW.

CARNEGIE HALL.n n 0 T n it— \u2666hIIiiIIIPI I A permanent orchestra jU U U IU II I maintained solely forcon-

ny flB nJln I? ' ) ceit performances. I01 ifIIIIU 11 1 nvo Evening Concerts.

ORCHESTRA 1 thcrsdats.

UnUnLUinH Feb. S, March tLConductor:

DR. KiILMUCK Bj-ga:(Of ti.e RoraJ op-

Nov lu_ Deo 3 j.ir

crSoloists: Ftb - 23 March

-3-

Pad6rßWSki Chanco «f rroEramm.(His only appear- Each Performance.

-\u25a0

anca In New York),

ROSCntfiß 'Season tickets with reserved

ni»« elmJ>L(t seats for the series of f.ve «v«D-LIPS rnS^Dtt In? concert or fivs mattnsM.A°? .VCI".TSU!1 J7 50. S-J. $5 and $3. Boxes «MuSLDriiOWiiSCn iand S4o> accorciln B to •<>««»«*

liuSS Subscription sale row open

2»4-«i«nuiolf 1

i' »' C»rne«l« Hallbos office and

flflamOWSKl Luckhardt « Beldefs. 10 East-

and others.'

17th street, and at Tyjon'a.

BROADWAY THEATREB'way ami 41«t St. Eves. 8. Mats. Wed. and Sat.I.ITT * DINGWALL Manarsrs

EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY. _j 51'En> ESDAY MAT. BEST SEATS ?1.50. [

PEATS \u25a0» WEEKS IN ADVANCE.KLAW * ERLANOER'S MAGNIFICENT

PRODCCTION OF GEN. LEW WALLACE'S

THE PRINCEOB? 1111/ 11 1 ! Constantinople

Ib I s "

w rh the Fall ofS fillsL/ a ii Constantinople. I

+ »» + \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666»X MUSICAL ART SOCIETY t+ Flunk Damrosch * Director "t"1. . 14TII SEASON. i+ TWO CONCERTS— Dec. 13 and March 7.

X SYMPHONY CONCERTS |FOB YOUNO PEOPLE >

4-*Frnnk Damrosch Director "£.4- m , SIX SATURDAY AFTERNOONS. I

4- Tickets and prpgrammes for both scries- at X4. office Musical Art Society. 1 W. 3-ith St. T\u2666 \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666•\u2666>\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 > \u2666\u2666»

Dram hy J. I. C. Clarke. Music. Prof H Parker.-. &CT3 11 SCENES—

«00 iE'.'PLE.

CARNEGIE HALL.Eight Saturday Evening ConcertsEight Sunday Afternoon Concerts

TIIE I Soloists:

rKSmii VftA Mme. GADSKI

!C • ' lOFSi S Mme. SCHUMANNO..mnLKu CESAR THOMSONbympnony ™*> *™™*ft* Ir . J MORITZ ROSEXTIIAL

Orcnssira jj°sef lhevinne

Y^ALT£R OAMBQSCH, conductor.Nov. 3d and 4 th. first appearances. In New York ofMonsieur CAMILLE SAINT-SAENS

Subscription tickets on salo at box office. CarnegieHall: at office. Musical Art Society. lW. 31th St., anaat Luckharrtt & Belder's, 10 E. 17th St. Prices 'foreither series): Parquet. $10: Dress Circle. 57; Balcony.$5 ana $3.50; Boxes, $75 and $100.

COLONIAL saw*Columbus.. STAR CONCERTS TO-XUiHT 8:15.

beSo TO-MORROW oaljT «Sp

HARRYTATEaGO."H§IIIia'G f

in the Satirical Skit. 0 BW-BillllUiJACK NOIUVORTH. GREEN « WERNER,

ward's JUGGLING SEA LIONS_ ."M BLACK HI'SSARS 14. ADOLF ZINK.l-,-VlON an/? WATriK I IRENE LEEKENNEDY an"

BOONEY | AND KANDYKIDS

I1I1 EXTKA FEATURE <

CHRLETON IVI&CYIMAUDE HALL I

CAS N E IE HALL.

PHILHARMONIC society11108. .. Sixtv-flfih iSeusoa ...1907.

Conductor

WassiSy SafonoffORCHESTRA OT^ OVER ONU HUNDRED.

SOLOISTS:, Josef LIIEVI SE .... Piano(First Appearance)

Miss Maud POWELL ViolinAlois BUKGSTALLEK Tenor

(First Appearance)

Ossip GABKILOW PianoHugo HEEK3IANN Violin

anil others to be announced.GENERAL SUBSCRIPTION now going on at Car-

negie Hall. - *

LIBERTY THEATRE.itiSt.. West of R-iv^y. Eves. 5:13. Mat. Sa»KLAW & ERLANOER Ma~agers

THE SECOND PRODUCTION BT'ELEANOR ROSSQN

Inthe succession of new plays to be Riven atthis theatre as previously announcedWILL BE HADE

MONDAY NOV. 19,The title to he mad-? known next week.

IUE3LCK & CO.. Manager" •LAST THREE WEEKS OF

MISS _R.OBSONA|rR7OB!E."

EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY.

TiAI¥'<? THEATRE. B'way&30th St.. Eves. 8:15UMI.9 O Matinees Wed. and Sat., at 2 15

k\ti;aMATINEE ELECTION DAY.MATINEE WEDNESDAY. BEST SEATS 81.S0.

RICHARD CARLEIn the NATURALIZED ENGLISH HIT.

THE SPRING CHICKEN

V HikfEl HI OilY-.2 To-day.

The Music oi To-Day!

VICTOR HERBERT5D5D ORCHESTRA

AEU

CONCERTS

n "thay. & i?e st.la nMifiD fS n >phons 6oo

°oH*» fIIINnFRTC TO-DAYat 3:16.STAIt vUilul.ilIO TO-NIGHTat 8-15

WEEK TO- \\d nYV MATINEEBEGINNING IU"I'IUKKUWDAILY 25c

1BRANSBY WILLIAMSla Character Sketches from Dickens* Works.

FKKO IIFOY AMI THE FOUR [I MAtT>ENIBLO, IICLARKE, II LIKENS. fOlHTNEY..lonepMu-. I Goldsmith TUP PIVOfifiHANAXD "dHoppe. Infc rAToW'inMli CO.'

Vltagrapli. I (Adepts Myrtle).

ECARNEGIE HAIL. 7TH AYE. A 57TH ST.

IIt/I17 MTOO IB*I? LECT-JL JVISLL% U? \P JK, URESMAGNIFICENT TELEPHOTOORAPH3IN COLOR AND MOTION PICTURES.

5 SUNDAY EVENINGSAT 8:13 SHARP.

HOLLAND NOV. ItTHE RHINE

"18

SWITZERLAND"

25NORTHERN ITALY DEC. 8SOUTHERN ITALY

-0

COURSE TICKETS. Tubb.. Oct. SO. 9 A. M.Prices, $6. »5. U. $3. IS.M. Mall Orders Now.

BINGLB TICKETS. Wed.. Nov. 7, » A. M.

CARNEGIE HALT.WEDNESDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER TTH.

ROSENTHAL•Th* N. T. Symphony Orchestra.

Walter Damrosah \u0084 ConductorManagement Henry Wo'.fsohn.

Re-erv«d scats IS.OO to 7So. at tho Carnegta HallBox Office end 10 E. 17th Street. •

The Weber Piano Used.

DEER HUNTER SERIOUSLY SHOT.Utica, Oct. 27.—Harold Becker, of Rensselaer. a

young man who was in the Adlrondacks about fivemiles from Tupper Lake with a party hunting deer,was seriously wounded this morning. He wasbrought out of the woods and will reach here thisafternoon. Itis supposed that a bullet from a riflepassed through his abdomen. He is said to havebeen handling a gun that he supposed contained nocharge.

Sailor Has Narrow Escape on Solitary SeaVoyage.

Machias. Me., Oct. 27.— With a crew of one manthe two masted schooner Little Elva lies in thisharbor to-day after a perilous coasting trip, inwhich nearly all the Maine ports have been visited,and in which the email vessel was almost lost.The one man who was caotain. cook and crew isLouis Aristide, who sailed in the seven-ton schoo-ner from Poruand early In September for Maciiias-port.

Near Libby Island Light, off Machiasport, In astorm, the boat's hull was punctured by one of thepiles of an old fishweir. As the captain rushed ondeck tc abandon his ship a huge sea washed himoverboard. He caught hold of the dory, whichwas tied up astern, and. climbing into this,reached the beach, where he spent the remainderof the night exposed to the storm. The next daythe gale abated, and Aristide, finding his little ves-sel still afloat, just beyond the outer line of thobreakers, brought her Into port.

Arietlde Is a Frenchman. He served in the navyduring the Civil War.

Mother Appeals to Ministers in Behalf ofDaughter She Thinks Abused.

Portland, Me., Oct. 27.—Appeal haa been madeto some of the clergymen of Portland to take upthe cause of Mrs. Alice Phelps. of City,who has attempted to persuade one of her twodaughters, who entered the Holy Ghost and Uscolony at Shiloh, si* years ago, to desert that so-ciety. Mrs. Phelps says that the experiences ofher daughters, Bessie, thirty years old, and May,thirty-two, who were teachers In Kansas schools,have been peculiarly shocking. One of tnem wasoommitted to the State Insane Asylum Ust sum-mer, having lost her mind as the result of the Ufaat Shiloh. The oth*>r daughter Is believed to besuffering for food and clothinp, which are reportedas being ecarce at the Shiloh colony since the de-parture of tho R*v.Frank W. Sandford and aboutseventy of the members for the Holy Land

The Rev. Dr. Smith Baker, pastor of "WilllsstonCongregational Church, and the Rev. J W Ma-gruder, pastor of the Chestnut Street MethodistChurch, accepted invitations to meet Mrs Phelpsnext Monday forenoon and discuss the possibilityof securing tho daughters' release by moral influ-ence, as It Is considered impossible to obtain it bylegal process. Other pastors will be invited to bepresent at Monday's conference.

m

WASHED FROM BOAT IN STORM.

WANTS RESCUE FROM HOLY GHOSTERS.

chance to qualify as distinguished experts willbanext Wednesday. This will wind up tho outdoorshooting for qualification for this season.

First Lieutenant Alexander A. Foreman, of Com-pany D, 23d Regiment, has resigned on account ofbusiness. He Joined tlio regiment as a private InIS&4.

Colonel Duffy, of the C3th Rpßlment, has ap-pointed Second Lieutenant John "\V. Elms, of Com-pany F, assistant inspector of rifle practice. Theheadquartera of tho regiment Is etill In the oldarmory, but will be removed to the new armory to-morrow night, it Is expected. All the lockers forthe officers and men in the building will be ofsteel, and havo been Installed In the differentrooms.

The 14th Regiment has made a net gain of fifty-eight officers and men during the past six months.The aggregate strength of the command Is 762officers and men. Unless Companies C and F Im-prove in discipline and drill attendance there Isa Berious danger of their being disbanded. Theyare In a very unsatisfactory condition. ColonelFoote has done good work in Improving the regi-ment elnce he took command, and hopes to boable to bring the two delinquent companies up tothe proper standard.

Captain F. C. E. Yon Sternberg, of Company Cof tha 13th Regiment, hns resigned on account ofbusiness. He nrst joined the reelment from the71st Regiment, in March, 1891. He will be suc-ceeded by First Lieutenant Ford.

MADISON SQ. theatreRak». 13. Mats. Wed. and Sat., 1:13.WALTER K. LAWRENCE pr«3«nt»

GARLOTTANILLSONINRACHEL CROTHER'S BIG ,BOUNDING. BOLD SUCCESS.

THE THREE OF USSKATS READY TO JANUARY IST

EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY.

IX THE FIRST OF A SERIES OF NOTABLE PRO-GRAMMES. EMBRACING

THE ELOQUENTTHE IDYLLIC

THE CHARMINGIX ORCHKSTRAI, AND VOCAL, MfSIC. ''':~r 1 \u25a0/\u25a0:; ;;;•\u25a0 MAKIrf «roi>]»A«T.

eVflDl/ THEATRE. Bwa. 4Uh to. -•-\u2666•

Nr?C IU ft Xv*s- 8:li-»Mat». Wed. ASat.. J:lS.mill* KLAW & ERLAXQER, -Manarar»

t PRICES Me, 500., 78«>.. »1.00. NQ HIGHEB.TLAST WEEK. Aurustua Pltou pr«4*&ta

CHAUNCEY OLCOTTla A NEW play by Th«odor« Burt Ba/r*.

EILEEN ASTHORE <ETL^s^,x

,__ *3"HEAR OI.COTT'a NEW SON >-> let

rAY TEAIPLETON 45, « >n>TTKsEXTRA MATINEE Ellggj&^g 11'^

TO-NIGHI--

concert

WEST END ™^R^^talir^a7^"Xrr£& CONCERTS TO-NIGHT Bil3.IS to TigWeek Startta, • Me. MATIVEES | **S.Md joo.

To-morrow IMONDAY and WED.I Mat. bat.A STORY OF THE OOLDEV W«ST.

THE COWPUNCHERPRICES ALWAYS *a 80, SO aoJ 79c, NO H: Ufca.

W«ak Nov. 8— YE SOW. (Mat.Elation D*y.>

TO HIPPODrtOMELAST TIMS THIS SZAJON.

SO US ATHREE SOLOISTS.

Box ofSo* op«n from 11 a. a.

HAfKFTT™KATER-4« st wirn>ir

MR. HACKBTT Sol* Luh« anJ Vaaa**ROSE STAHL uSTrxS*» THE CHORUS LADY S^T1

.EXTRA MAiINKKEUCTIOX PAY.

D C I ACPr\ THEA., 42d St.. W. of B'way.DCILAOVvVj Evg.. 8:15. Mat. 3at.. a.

LAST FOUR WEEKS.

DAVID BELASCO Presents

BLANCHE BATESo7to IN"THEGIRLOFTHE

|STL. GOLDEN WEST"m't'it" A P'»y ot '**\u25a0 Bc«ne In California.oaSaU By DAVID BELASCO.

EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY.

Broadway__

IIIIO17 Xv**$:B°-

andlOthflt.** a «J V^ V Sat. Mai. 1:18.

NAT. C. GOODWIN taGET«?s.

SPECIAL THtniNDAT NOV.Matinee AITEK>OON'. X3T.when WE WERE TWESTT-OVE.(Mr.Goodwin la his original rol* of Rlchmrd C«x«vr«.)NEXT COM. MONDAY. NOV. 3TH

MAY IRtVIIM InHer MRS. WILSOXrWir** »«*.•*mr« N(wPta. THAT'S ALL.„4 _, By GEOROB V HOBART.

mi. Election Day—WboeTT Wins, Boat* 8«Uln«, The Turf.

A POPULAR DRINK.Scotch and Polly.

rum Qto oa,

IGARDEN THEATRE t£f«™HENRY W. SAVAGE

™ ManagerEvenings 8:15. Matinee Saturday, 2:16.

| POPI I.AR PRICE ifMATINEE SATIIUJAr.

I SOCVEXIKS. I

ANUNPRECEDENTED SUCCESS !MS: CLAYCLEMENT

and His Specially Selected Company__of Fifty People. In

SAM HOUSTONThe Thrilling,Keallßtto. Historical SouthernFour-Act Play.

($3 II ATT A M THEATRE.lilMfilBl A 9 3AII B'way. 234 St.\u25a0U IIIB HIn \u25a0 IH» Phone 8168 Mad.

EVERY NIGHT 8:15 andWED. and SAT. MATINEES 2:15.

•J EXTRA MATINEE ELECTIONand THANKSGIVING DAYS.

MISS——

GEORGE~ SECOND MONTH.

E GRACE GEORGEHKB „ft Ay**Z Hapwooa and Channln*WEIVY

-1'-1"

Suc-feßsfui Society Comedy,.m*ts CLOTHESV^ I. *at»,Xnw Hourly to An.l |n-l. Dec. 1. J

r iUKc*M»BL. MAMkrA^IUK nFSFgoEh

CARLO'S DOGS. NIBBE & BORDOUEX AT CART HTON. JOHN' F. CLARK. HARRY MHO IVY DELMAR *IVY.JOHN WALSH. MARTIN4 B DGEWA Vfe* VITA

AGYRAPH°' MCRPHrtPAffISR:

iIAMMERSTHN'S 4Sd 8t-

B>wiiyand 7th a^Ml.lnllli.nuIwin 0 Evening*. 25c to SI.11 DAILY MATS. Wo. H. Thompson 4 Co., Walter ,He. und 30c. Jones & Mabel Hit*and oth»r».TO-DAY AND NIGHT—Two Vanderflle Concert*.

IWEBER'S ™E*TRE. B'way and lith St.WW *

J"lj*%

-Evenings 8:15. Mat. Sat.. 8116.

JOS. M WEBB^Pr^and Mp£h«. mo Mad.__GREAT DRAMATIC LOVE BTORY.

THE MEASURE OF AMANRIGO HARLEM CASINOI*"^"">VBVr 114 TH BT. A 7TH AYE. Iflay* Nl«iitl}-. TabU d'Kot*. 7So. 8»t. and bun,, 11.|

IRVINO rU** Theatre, Ev«nlD»« at f.t*.I** *i-»VB Mod Turn,, W»d., Sohoentaao'i com- I•dr In 3 act*. "DKR HERR IINATQIC*}£y In 3 acti,

*ppearano« ot Mr. WILLTuur.>d.ttii fir»t »Pp««u-ano» of Mr. WIllIifBAIER, Every following Ev«nln« and B»turda»

-Matin**. lUrtw.U-i comedy. "O>itEiT tOSL*

CAKNEOIIS ILAJLL, Tri. Ero., Noy, », At t:M.

»-.

TO-NIGHT &BIJOU THEATRE 3KSV*

BIG Includim ArttiU from Or&ndCONCERT £?m? ml

°OP«». I«r',» Only Fr«noh- 'S>|:'X * Concert In N. T. Tlok«U TT»on'i.

Qivizsfe&^ss^s:

RACING AT JAMAICAOCTOBEn M TO KOVEMBEB l. TXOI

*«* REMSEN HANDICAPand five oth«r rao**. b«»ianln« *t li«OP. U.. Er*ln;'•£!• **•*»"* *£ "»«. i»a«. m^« **'•>

,H«». li»lFlsrtusa ivy tfilS, II10. lliiO^^iiTOk Hr cto*«t to to** nut \u25a0»• mSSSmk

taste of California mining, bad gor.e when still ayoung man to explore In South Africa, and had be-come general manager of the great monopoly ofthe diamond mines. A fighter of financial battlesand a manager of men, a writer, a scientist, andone of the world's greatest engineers, he sostamped his personality on the people among whomhe lived that he was feted and cheered by all SouthAfrica when he retired last spring and came backto the United States to build a home for his leisureyears In the land of his birth. Here was a manwho played a man's part in perhaps the most In-spiring and romantic undertaking of his time.

His father went, with a little capital, to Cali-fornia in the 50's. and the son entered CaliforniaCollege—afterward the University. He wished to !

become a ruining engineer, but there was no good \u25a0

mining school in the country. "Perfect yourself."

ea'd his father, ''even if you have to go abroad."Bo off he went to th« Mining Academy of Freiberg,

among the lead mines of Saxony. On his return to

Ben Francisco In ISCC. two v.»:; spent years in the

mint made him an expert assayer. and then he

went to fining In the I'ioehe country of Southern

Nevada. He came back to be appointed receiver of

a water and mining company l"- Northern Cali-

fornia. Within a year the company was paying

dividends for the first time and his diplomacy hadbrought into harmony the two warring factions

that had necessitated the receivership.

From this post he was called, by an invitation

from a classmate at Freiberg named De Crano.who had organized an exploring company for the

\u25a0•. nothschllds. to look for valuable minerals in

t*Jlashonalanil. Then began his acquaintance with

ifbush and karroo, with the slow advance of ox teams

jf across the level veldt, with the handling of Zulus( end Matabeles and other natives, with the sturdy

but pigheaded Boers, with th» adventurers whowere rushing in hordes to this new Golconda. He

shot elephants and lions, lived oft the country,

panned and tested the sand end gravel of every

stream, and scoured the region for promising out-crops or hints of value. On his way back to Lon-den to report he fell in with Cecil Rhodes, who hap-pened to be a fellow passenger on the steamer— ameeting that proved to be the turning point in his

icareer.

Rhodes had often said that he strove for wealth,because only through wealth could he hope torealize his plan of British empire in Booth Africa."Chinese" Gordon once told him of refusing aroomful of gold with which the Chinese govern-

ment wished to reward him for subduing theT&lpins rebellion.

Xv "What would you have done?" he asked Rhodes.m) "Taken it." was the reply, "and as many moreV rcorpfuis es they would have given me. It's no

use to us to have tigideas Ifwehaven't the moneyto carry them out.". And since it was on the claims he controlled inthe De Beers diamond ml:ie that he based his hopesof wealth, be talked eagerly with this Americanmining engineer, as the steamer kicked its way up

the African coast, of possible, ways to make hUdiamond mining pay as hugely aa he. thought itshould. Aral in arm tliey paced the deck dayafter day and evening after evening;. They werekindred spirits. Rhodes told Williams what heknew jf the wild land that the American had beenexploring, and Williams explained and diagrammedthe art of Mining And bi th talked of men and ofhow men may be handled.

After a Short stay in England Mr. Williams camehome to see his family. In the midst of his visithe was surprised to receive a cablegram fromRhodes asking him to resign from the explorationcompany and come out and take charge ofMils dia-mond mine. He started at or.cc for London, metHhodes, and early in 1888 Bailed back to the Capea« general manager of the De Beers Company. Hetook hold of the mining operations at once andquickly familiarized himself with conditions.

The first step v.as to work out a eystem of un-derground T.:'.r,i;.F that should be safe and econom-ical, for the methods in use had been neither. Atsuccessive levels In the tunnels the workmen hadbeen assiduously cutting the blue ground fromunder the feet of the workers on th» level Justabove, and they were leaving behind them dla-tnond-bearir.? rock in the pillars they carved assupports in lieu of timbers. He solved th^ problemby driving a set of tunnels clear across the minesfrom crater wall to crater wall. The miners inithese tunnels had cleared out the blue ground

above them, and had moved back from the crateredge, before the next group of miners Ina set oftunnels forty feet below had begun In turn to blastdown the blue ground above their heads. So on tothe lowest levels. These men had moved back be-fore the men in another set of tunnels below hadbegun to blast. All the blue ground was thusIgfeaa out. and no sang st work had another gangblasting just beneath It. The system was a revolu-tion in diamond mining.

He kept several men at work on experiments,until one of them discovered that if a mass ofpebbles be carried across a heavily in-eased sur-face, »very diamond In the mass will stick in thegrease, though all the other pebbles, and evenglass, will Sow away. Greased pulsators were atonce Installed, and the diamonds are now separatedautomatically. / l,^.

The fuel problem Is a serious one In the Goallessend almost treeless country about Klmberly. wherethe diamond fields centre. Recently a coal minewas discovered In Rhodesia. He at once arrangedto have most of Its output delivered "at the mines.It waa of poor Quality and "clogged the fire barscruel." Nothing daunted, he devised grates thatwould burn It economically. It was this sort ofready resource, this quickness to step out of therat, that marked his whole policy.j Be picked bis assistant* from various countries,many trvs. the United States, but he never losttouch of the sfTt^rs of the mines In all their rami-fication*. Nothing- of Importance waa done that didlist pus OT«r fcls de«k. and he kept the loyalty ofbis torn: tor always treating them with scrupulousJsntlo*. When th* D» Beer* mine took fire through.ft»» cwtlMnui *>t a Kefir who left r lighted6s-ae'l» r.eejr the timbers on one of the upper lerela•hortly after th« 00/ieoll'Ution, Imprisoning 685 men

•!jb«>w, he hurri«4 at ence to the mine, and, as\u25a0\u25a0mttto «s.W tfUnrard. "worked night and day

Many Nets Subjects WillBe Taken

Up Next Month.Eight of the courses of free public lectures which

have been conducted by the Board of Educationduring the present month willbe brought to a closeduring the coming week. Most of the courses willbo followed by others, plans for which have beencompleted by the lecture bureau.

Next Monday evening Louis U. Wilkinson, ofCambridge University, England, will close hiscourse on "The Characters of Shakespeare" at theEducational Allianoe, East Broadway and Jeffersonstreet. The course In astronomy, by ProfessorHerman S. Davis, will be concluded on Fridayevening at Public School 160. Suffolk and Rivlngtonstreets, and the followingevening Professor MorrisLoeb, of New York University, will give the lastlecture in his coursa on chemistry at the Museumof Natural History, 77th street and Central ParkWest. The sunie evening Leslie Willis Spraeueends his course on "Social Forces In the VictorianNovel," at the High School of Commerce. 65thstreet, west of Broadway. Thlß course willbe fol-lowed by a course of six lectures by Mr. Spragueon "George Eliot's Novels and Their Treatment ofPersonal Relationship."

Prominent among the new courses planned forNovember wll! be one of six lectures on physicalm graj

'y I v Professor William Ldbbey. of Prince-

ton, to bp piven on Saturdays, at the Museum ofNatural History; a course of six lectures on "Rep-resentative Ensllsh Writers." by Professor A. V. W.Jackson, of Columbia, at the Educational Allianoe,Ea?t Broadway and Jefferson 6treet. on Mondays,bepinnlng- November <"., and a course by ProfessorAdolphe Cohn, of Columbia, on "Great Writers ofMod< m France," on Thursdays, at Public School 46.

At Public School 130. First avenue and 51st street,Pr Walter E. Clark. r>f the College of tho City ofNew York, who recently closed his course there on"Money and Bankinp." willgive three special lect-ures on successive Monday evenings, on "Trade,""Transportation" and "Trusts."

NATIONAL GUARD NEWS-General James McLeer. of the Second Brigade,

will review the 47th Regiment at its armory onWednesday evening, November 28. A band con-cert will precede the review, and dancing willfollow the military exercises.It is expected that Governor Hlggins will act

upon the recommendation made by General GeorgeMoore Smith. First Brigade, and indorsed byMajor General Charles F. Roe. to reduce the SthRegiment to c. battalion, either to-morrow osTuesday.

There has been some delay in installing the fur-niture In the new armory of the "Ist Regiment,and for this reason the formal opening of thearmory, arranged for the night of November 27next, has been indefinitely postponed.

Colonel Hotchkln, of the 22d Regiment, has beenauthorised to form two additional companies Inhis regiment, which will make the command athree battalion organization and give it an ad-ditional major. The new companies willbe knownas L and M. The former will be organized byLieutenant Harvey Garrison, of Company C andthe latter by ex-Captain H. C. H. Stewart, of the»th Regiment. Lieutenant Garrison has seen con-siderable service in the Philippines as an officerIn the United States Volunteers, and CaptainStewart, before joining the 9th Regiment, servedas master at arms in the Ist Naval Battalion andIn the Ist and 4th regiments of New Jersey. TheRegimental Athletic Association will hold gamesat the armory on December 3 next, and is nowpreparing the programme. Corporal C J. Ahem.of Company I, has taken his discharge after oversix years' service, during five of which he per-formed 100 per cent of duty. H» Is an expertrifleman.

An Interesting rifle competition has been ar-ranged by Company B of the l*th Regiment ofthis city, and Company Iof the Ist Regiment ofNew Jersey. There will be several matches, thefirst of which will be shot in the armory rangeof the 12th Regiment on Saturday, November 24.The teams will consist of twelve men each Theregiment on October 22 had qualified all told 6$marksmen at Cre*dmoor. Of these 230 were BharD-ehootere. 78 were experts and 7 were distinguished

Officers and men of the Sth Regiment have beenvery much amused during the last week at theaction of Colonel Jan-is In forbidding officers tomeet In the armory for discussion. On one occa-sion Lieutenant Colonel Kerby. Major Edwardsand one or two other officers were talking in th«field officers' room, when the colonel came alon*and told therm all to 60 home. Ho stated that h»would not allow any meetings of officers in suchmanner, and also ordered the Janitor to turn outthe lights. Some officers were la the main hailtalking, and the colonel, in the present of enlistedmen. ordered them to dlspers* ana said he wouldnot tolerau any discussions. One of the officersreplied that they were discussing tactics, and thecolonel said that he would not allow this outsidean officers' school. i

""»*»•

Members of the National Guard who have notyet qualified a« marksman at Oreadmoor willhaVethe fast opportunity to do so to-morrow. Th» \tg\.

LECTURE COURSES END.

On his departure from Africa last spring In a verystorm of regrets and farewell celebrations, he lefthis son, Alpheus Williams, behind him as generalmanager. At Rliodes's request the young m-in hadbeen made assistant general manager, and the di-rectors of the De Beers Corporation insisted thathe replace his father. The son is on tho path to acareer perhaps as notable as his.

Mr. Williams is now building a house in Wash-ington, where he will live with Mrs. Williams andhis daughter Dorothy. He was besought by his as-sociates to live in London, but he said. "No. I'mgoing home."— (From advance proofs of The World'sWork for November.

T for the relief of the \u25a0ufferers." Five hundred ofIthe imprisoned men escaped, because, with due pre-

cautions to prevent the escape ofKaffirs with stolendiamond*, exit Into the old open working's had beenleft to provide against such a contingency. One ofhis mining-axioms tru that the first thing to con-sider In sinking a mine Is to prepare exits Incase of accident, and the way he has followedit has given him a wide popularity among

the miners. Some people have wondered why thethousands of Kaffirs who work under the whitebosses are content to give up the freedom of theirravage life to live In "compounds" and toll In the

mines. They work, of course, in order to saveenough to buy many wives And afterward live Inease. Such Is their treatment that when Mr. Will-lams went to a native chief, to ask his assistanceIn securing labor, the chief replied, "Icannot tellmy people to leave their kraals and go to Kimberly,

but Ifa boy come to me and say, 'Iwant to go to

work In the 'mines' Isay, 'Go,' for he go to work

for you."Mr. Williams caw Klmberly grow from a email

mining town to a city of imposing proportions.

There he made his home In a beautiful wide- jverandacd house, covered In the fall with wistaria Ibloom and surrounded by frulf trees and vineyards. JWhen the Boer War broke out he took an active Jpart In the defence of tho city, and it was under Ihis direction that George Labram built in the De I

Beers Company workshlj>a, "Long Cecil," the Ifamous gun that stiffened the notablo front the city \u25a0

made against the Boers. V.'hen famine threatened ]he turned over his orchards and vineyards to thepeople of the tor.x* To help the defence he offeredthe military leaders every facility for using themines in their operations. There was much dyna-

mite on hand for blasting. Colonel Kekowich, incommand of the British forces, asked him to de-vote it to planting mines about the city to guardagainst a Boer rush. "Put down ten pounds everythirty foot," was the request. No sooner said thandone. But the report sent hack to the colonelwas, "Mines laid. We put down thirty pounds jevery ten feet."

Never Idle, always alert for new knowledge, hestudied and experimented till he knew as muchabout diamonds as any man living. He proved thatthey were not formed in the blue ground wherethey lie, but far underground, where the bubblesof gaseous carbon of which they are crystalliza-

tions were compressed by the weight of overlying

strata. They were afterward shot up, he reasoned,by volcanic mud rushes which later hardened intoblue ground. In acknowledgment of his scientificwork, just before his departure from Kimberly >cwas elected president of the South African Asso-ciation for the Advancement of Science, and lierecently received the medal of the Swedish Academyof Science. With all his many activities, more-over, he found time to write the standard book ondiamond mining under the title, "The DiamondMines of South Africa," unique volumes crammedwith all the fascinating lore of diamonds, legendary

and scientific, filled with stories of the world's dia-mond mines, and made Intensely interesting by

their account of the mines he developed himself.Much of what ie told in this brief sketch ho tfllsthere in most entertaining detail, hiding, however,

his own eh.ire in the great undertakings that cameto his hand beneath his enthusiastic appreciationof Rhodes and other men. Written with all thepicturesqucness that the subject suggests, tho bookis not only a revelation to engineers and scientists,but a narrative of deep human interest, and thelast word on diamonds. The illustrations he hasgathered of all the world's great diamonds and ofthe early scene 3in and about the South Africanmines ara remarkable. As a writer, he is as con-vincing and distinctive as he is as engineer,scientist and nan of affairs.

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