16 ABOUT PLAYS AND PLAYERS. The Coming Attractions at the Local Theaters. Margai et Mather, the Duff Company and Salvini. The IJuffg to Give Miss Helyett-Mar g-aret Mather and Her Reper toire—News Notes About Stage Matters. The J. C. BuiT |opera organization, whirh appears at the Grand on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, has a reper toire this season of Cavalleria Rustic ana, Trial by Jury and Mies Helyett. They will open Tuesday night with a double bill—Cavalleria Rusticana and Trial by Jury, aud on Wednesday night the musical comedy, Miss Helyett, which has had such a phenomenal run in London, Paris aud New York, will be given. Its music is by Amlran, and the book has been adapted irom the French, by David Belasco. The dialogue in its present form is very clever and sufficient ly risque. The idea which permeates the comedy is'intensely Frenciiy. Miss Helyett, while staying at a hotel, in the Spaniph Pyrenees, falls down a moun tain, nnd is picked up by an unknown man, who does not see her face, as it is covered by her clonk, nor does she see him. None but the bold nioun'aineer. whose arms had encompassed the fair Helyett, and whose eyes had fea?ted upon her trim ankleß, when in a com promising position on the moun tain, must be privileged to mar ry her. The search for this unknown hero, by herself and her father, constitutes the main idea of the plot, and the many mistakes and uncertainties into which they both fall leads to many amusing siuatious. The prima donna of the company is Miss Helen Bertram, a clever singer and actress, and an exceedingly pretty woman. Mr. Charles Bassett is the tenor. The company numbers tiO peo ple in all, and includes, besides Miss Helen yon Doenhoff, Miss Villa Knox, Mies Minnie De Rue, Mies Drew Don aldson, Mr. J. H. Ryley, the comedian, and Messrs. J. J. Raffael, William Ham ilton, William Schuster, Mr. Morris Abbey and Mr. J. D. Dupuys. MARGAKET MATHER. For those ol the amusement-loving peo ple who delight in the solids of dramatic food, there will be much of pleasure in the announcement of the comingof Mar garet Mather 10 the Grand opera house next Friday and Saturday, for four performances. Of Miss Mather herselt and her fame for capable, clever work, it is perhaps unnecessary to say but a word. She has been seen here before, and of that former visit nothing but the most pleas ant memories survive. Since that last visit she has been constantly on the stage and ia said to have gained, in the range of her experience, that mellow ness and ripeness of portrayal that can only come from practice in the field of endeavor. Her repertory as announced is one that should contrfbute greatly to the pleasure oi her visit. For the opening night she lints John Tobin'a ever charming comedy, The Honeymoon—really another version of 3hakespeare'a Taming of the Shrew—in which she hne, as Juliana, achieved more than a email amount of laudatory notice. For Friday night she promises her first great success, Juliet, in Romeo and Juliet, the role in which Bhe is co pleas antly remembered in this city and the one in which she last appeared here. For the matinee performance Satur day she offers the dashing, Jvivaciouß romance, The La.ly of Lyons. In this ehe ia given oppnrtunty to display all the emotions of the human mind, and in it has been eminently euccessful. For her final appearance Saturday night she offers her new comedy curtain raiser, Nance Oldfield, the petite comedy which Charles Reade wrote for Miss Ellen Terry, and which Mies Mather purchased from the fair Knjjlish woman. With this ehe groups her latest tragedy, The Egyptain, which ie eaid to be a close and faithful copy of all the strong points of Victor Hugo'a soulful novel, The Hunchback of Notre Dam u . Her company, which includes such ■cell-known people as Joseph E. Whit- Z, H. A. Langdon, Frederick L. Power, Kmma Cuehman Tuttle, Mre. Sol Smith, Erekine Lewis and Royden Erlynne, numbera 21 people. ALEXANDER SALVINI. Manager Wyatt of the Los Angeles theater has tecured that noted young actor, Alexander Salvini, for a series of his beet known plays. As Don C*e=ar, D'Artagnan, and simi lar rolee, Mr. Salvini stands unap proached on the American stage. He has inherited all the talent of his father and will doubtless in time achieve as much greatness. The engagement will be a notable one in all respects. NOTES FROM DUNLAP'B STAGE NEWS. Patti Rosa tried ber new play, Miss Dixie, at Topeka, October 22d. Erne Shannon has been granted her divorce from Henry Guy Carleton. Ramsay Morris has signed a contract with Elsie de Wolfe for five years. The tour of The Old, Old Story has been cut short, and the cauee is the old, old story. Lottie Collins will soon join the Mies Helyett company, dancing between the acts as ehe doee in Jane. F. H. Sothern is taking lessons in tough clang from Steve Brodie, to be used in a curtain raiser. William Mandeville and hie wife, Dickie Martinez, are members of tbe new Larry the Lord company. Mme. Maurice Bernhardt, daughter in-law of Sarah, has applied for a divorce from her husband in Paris. Sydney Roeenfeld ie to write plays for ermann's theater, which will become ::a Ame ican Palais Royal in January. Fred Solomon will in future be a fix ture at Koster & Bial's, where he haa been engaged to Btage all coming pro ductionß. Lizzie Hudeon Collier is now leading lady in Nat Goodwin's company, which is to appear in The Gilded Fool at the New York Fifth Avenue theater Novem ber 7tb. Last spring Rernard Dyllyn was fined $299 at San Francisco for beating a chorus girl, and last week hie victim met, him in Cleveland and whipped him within an inch of hie life Manager ,1. M. liil! hap the Casino after November 14 h to The Fencing Master, tl c variety scheme of the Aroneot.'s hpftiii n vt-rv hnu failure. At the Standaid, »iicie LUv Fencing Master ■was to have been produced November 14th, Mr. John Drew and Charles Froh man's company are to appear for eight weeks. Mre. Bernard-Beere and John E. Sheridan were European arrivals last week. The title of the play written by Vic torien Sardou for Charles Frohman is La Belle Americaine. Flora Walsh has made another very great hit at Washington in A Texas Steer, and was almost buried in roses on Monday evening. W. A. McConnell, the well known comedian, lias signed a contract to man age the toiirs for the next three years for tragedian Downing. The latest thing is a 10-milo waltzing contest, "for the championship," an nounced to take place at Madison Square Garden on Thanksgiving eve. Cal. McCarthy and Tommy Danforth will be a special feature of The Dark Side of a Great City during the coming tour, which hegina at the Windsor thea ter. New York, next Monday. Charles L. Harris, the actor who died in Chicago, best known by hia splendid portrayal of Chad in Colonel Carter of Cartersville, was a native of Louisiana, aud the best American dialect actor in the world. Mabel Amber has closed as leading lady of N. C. Goodwin, jr.'s company, and has returned to New York. Mr. Goodwin has canceled a week of night etande, and will open at the Fifth Ave nue theater November 7th. Miss Fanny Davenport may possibly appear as Lady Gay Spanker and ss Nancy Sykea in Oliver Twist next sea son. Trie actress is becoming quite lissome again, and it is to this fact that tbe revival of these popular roles will be due. Katie Enimett ia making a great deal of money in Texas with Killarney. Minna Gale's sea on will begin in De cember, aud Bornebody will lose a "pot" of money. The Councillor's Wife, by J. K. Jerome, will be acted for the rmt time in New York, at a special matinee at Hoyt'a Madieon Square, November 11th, the Charlee Frohtnan Btock ap pearing in the cast. Stewart Robson's handsome revivai ofJShe Stoops to Conquer ia drawing more money in the south than the Hen rietta ever did, and is one of the solid successes of the season. Thiacomediau's Tony Lumpkin ranks witb Joseph Jeffer aon'a Boh Acres, and iB one of the most delightful impersonations made known on the American stage in many years. Mr. Robson haa every reaeon to be satis fied with hia venture into legitimate comedy. Something of a sensation has been caused by the public learning that one of the leading theaters of London only engages actresses on condition that the theater may cancel their engagements at a week's notice if they marry without the consent of the management. It is also arranged that the engagements shall be canceled if the actresses become engaged in any scandal. The legality of the marriage rule is contested in some quarteis, and it is asserted that an actress could claim damages should she he dismissed because she married. A newspaper woman leads in an outcry against this clause of the contracts. She declares that any wholesale re straint on matrimony among marriage able women is obviously immoral. Nellie McHenry and her clever com pany of players are now in Indiana. Next week they will he at Chicago. Miss McHenry's personal popularity is phe nomenal. It is quite possible that even with a poor piece she could draw fair sized audiences, and with A Night at the Circus she finds not the slightest difficulty in playing to S. R. O. The farce comedy serves an excellent medi um for the introduction of diverting specialties and timely songs, but it is also intensely amusing on its own hook. Thomas O'Brien, one of the members of the company, is performing with great intrepidity the feat of sliding on his ear. A committee of western physicians will, it is hoped, make an examination ehort iy of this wonderlul freak. J. K. Emmet is now touring through New York state. That he ia an em phatic success is indicated by the box office receipts, quite as clearly as by the abundant applause that greets him in variably on hia first appearance on the stage and that ia repeated frequently throughout the performance. The pub lic never seem to grow weary of Fritz in Ireland. This ia due to the same fact that haa made RiD Van Winkle, The Rivals, The Old Homestead, Col. Sellers and Our American Cousins, perennially popular. The vogue of all of these pieces is brought about because they are first of all human in their interest. Mr. Emmet's individual popularity is by thia time firmly established. There is no doubt in the fact that he is Amer ica's representative German dialect comedian. Thomaß W. Keene is now in the sec ond week at McVicker'a theatre, in Chicago, and the Bize of the audience that crowded into McVii kera demon strated that there are etill a large num ber of people in Chicago who cherish an affection for the Shakespearean drama This tragedian'" tour may be described as one continuous ovation, and nowhere has this been more clearly indicated than at Chicago. Tbe character in which he haß perhaps received the greatest amount of praiee from the critics is Richard 111 ; and here is a practical demonstration that the critical and the popular verdict can coincide, for the box-office receipta of tbil attrac tion have been and are very large. Mr. Keene haa wisely surround'd himself with a company of exceptional ability— no star could ask for a better leading man than Frederick Paulding, or a bet ter leading woman than Maida Craigen. Paddon Hall teems to b6 Dretty much of a failure in London, but there ia a wonderful thunderstorm tfiat people go to see in epite of its dullness. The hero ine has resolved to elope with her best fellow, and, in accordance with tradi tion, she steale away from ber father's house while a brilliant reunion ia iv progress, and her flight is further fa vored by the storm which conveniently breaks at that juncture. The spectator sees tbe flight and the storm. As the effect of this the stage gradually be comes pitch dark. Then the forked lightning plays upon a curtain which has meanwhile been lowered. It ia real lightning, or, at least, electricity, and is more natural than anything yet seen on the stage. The roar of the etorm i» taken np by the orchestra, and on both eides of the curtain the elements seem to be at war. Tlub continues for some minutes; then the gauzes lift, one by one, disclosing a brilliant scene, in which the coetumer's art touches the highest point of magnificence, while the orchestra as suddenly changes from the growling noise to the joyous one. The he« 4 regulator of the d'cestlve organs, a so be«t ap| elizer known, ll Angostura Hitlers, the ire lUlue of Dr. J. Q. B. Slegcrl & Hons. At all druggists. Mullen, Bluett it Co.'Bb.vs' snd young mi n's depirtme.'.t's as well > quioperl as is the men's, and sold at equally low piices. LOS ANGELES HERALD; SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 6, 1892. PUBLICATION OF NOMINATION TO OFFICE Of persons to be voted for in the County of Los Angeles, California, at the GENERAL ELECTION, TO TAKE PLACE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8,1892, In accordance with the provisions of Section no 4, Political Code: Office of the County Clerk of Los Angeles County, California, > Los Angeles, October 20, 1892. \ In accordance with Section uo4 of the political Code, I hereby publish the nominations to office certified to me by the Secre tary of State of the State of California, and also all those filed with me as County Clerk, of the persons to be voted for at the next general election, to be held November 8, 1892. T. H. WARD, County Clerk. Sixth Congressional District, Senatorial District, Assembly District. County of Los Anircles. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS. Vote for Nine. THOMAS R. HARD Republican JOSEPH C. CAMPBELL Republican W LLIAM CARSON Republican MICHAEL L. MERY Republican J AMES A. WAYMIRE Republican I. AAC HECHT Republican I:;*NRY V. MOREHOUSE Republican JaMES R. WILLOUGHBY Republican SI U HANSCOM Republican J. A. FILCHER Democrat W' LLIAM GRAVES Democrat ■R P. HAMMOND Democrat JACKSON HATCH Democrat R. A. LONG Democrat J. '-• LYNCH ...Democrat M 7 ROUS ROSENTHAL Democrat W. L SILMAN Democrat J. F. THOMPSON Democrat R. ri McDONAI.D Prohibition F. >. PORTER Prohibition AR' iIIBALD Mc-ARTHUR Prohibition . WiV! P. MILLER Prohibition T. L. HIERLIHY Prohibition H. ii LTJSB Prohibition F. E. CATON Prohibition F. E KELLOGG Prohibition S. FOWLER Prohibition S. BOWERS People's Party J. S. DORE People's Part v A. L. Warner People's Party J. N. BARTON People's Party L. F. MOULT. W People's Party T. V. OATOB People's, party WM. McCCLLVICK People's Party W. C. BOWMAN People's Party D. T. FOWLER People's Party REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS. Vote for One. MARION CANNON People's Party MARION CANNON Democrat 0. R. DOUGHERTY Prohibition HERVEY LINDLEY Republican STATE SENA COR. Thirty-seventh District. Vote for One. JOHN R. MATHEWS Democrat WALTER S. MOORE Republican HARRY P. PEEBLES People s Party L. A. ROSS Prohibition mTu^ - !Toi™th iTTS'siJMjir.YT""' i%'cntic(h Assembly District. Vote for One. SEWARD COLE People's Party SEWARD COLE Democrat H. A. REID Prohibition C. M. SIMPSON Republican —lIIIIMI Hill IWIWII I —— ■ ■ ■ Seventy-first Assembly District. Vote for One. S. N. ANDROUS Republican h. M. LA FETRA Prohibition WILLIAM T. MARTIN Democrat JAMES JEFFERSON WEST.People's Party Seventy-second Assembly District. Vote for One. J. W. DAVIS Prohibition THOMAS J. KERNS Democrat THOMAS J. KERNS People s Party WILLIAM H. WRIGHT Republican Seventy-third Assembly District. Vote tor One. ERANK G. FINLAYSON Democrat JAMES M. MEREDITH Republican ALFRED MOORE People s Party Seventy-fourth Assembly District. Vote for One. C. B. EBEY Prohibition JAMES C. KAYS Democrat C. W. PENDLETON Republican MADISON J. RUSSELL People's Party Seveuty-fiftli Assembly District Vote for One. ROBERT N. BULLA Republican MEREDITH P. snyder Democrat 1. L. SPENCER Prohibition ARTHUR V'INETTE People's Party ■- - - ■■ - --•«••— -..Ii ■! — | ——M~WW SHERIFF. Vote tor One. JOHN C. CLINE Republican MARTIN C. MARSH Democrat WILLIAM ROMMEL Prohibition EDWIN M. WARD ALL People's Party COUNTY CLERK. Vote for One. William b. cullen Democrat P. T. durfy Prohibition Cll \RLES W. SONNEMAN..PeopIe's Party TROWBRIDGE H. WARD Republican AUDITOR. '"" Vote for One. FRANK B. COLVER Democrat TILLMAN HOBSON Prohibition FRANK E. LOPEZ Republican CHANNING SEVERANCE... .People's i'arty RECORDER. ""T^tTTc^Tne" HENRY B. belt Democrat ARTHUR BRAY Republican .1. William GATE Prohibition FRED J. MOLL, Sr People's I'arty TREASURER. Voti for One' JABEZ BANBURY Republican J. DE BARTH SHORB Democrat THOMAS VVARDALL People s Party jesse yarnell Prohibition TAX COLLECTOR. Vote lor One. JONATHAN D. BAILEY People's Party ELDRIDGE E. HEWITT Democrat H. CLAY NEED HAM Prohibition N. B. walker Republican DISTRICT ATTORNEY. Vote for One. W. E. COX Prohibition dENRY 0. DILLON People's I "irtv HENRY C. DILLON Democrat . AMES MCLACHLAN Republican iVbT!ic" a l |"m* I | , "™™tr , aV«\ViT' Vote for One. FRANK M. KELSEY Republican JDDSON It. RUSH People s I'arty JUDSONR. RUSH Prohibition WILLIAM B. SCARBOROUGH. .Democrat COKONER, Voto for One. ROLLIN T. BURR People's Party H. Q. GATES Republican C. J. COOK Prohibition RAFAEL C. GUIRADO Democrat SURVEYOR, Vote for One. C. A. ENSIGN Republican EDGAR SESSONS Prohibition ALFRED R. STREET People's Party ALFRED It. STREET Democrat SUPERVISOR. Second Supervisorial District. Vote lor One. MICHAEL T. COLLINS Democrat A. VT. FRANCISCO Republican ADOLPHUS O. HINCKLEY..PeopIe's Party JAMES JAYNES Prohibition Fourth Supervisorial District. Vote for One. LUCIUS P. ABBOTT People's Party JACOB H. BREWER Democrat P. B. CHASE Prohibition JAMES HAY Republican Fifth Supervisorial District. Vote for One. ELIAS AYRES Prohibition EZRA M. HAMILTON People's Party J \MES HANLEY Democrat W. W. STOCKWELL Republican OFFICERS. ANTELOPE. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. Vote for Two. HENRY S. ADNBY Republican OLOOTTSMITH BULKLEY. .People's Party OLCOTT SMITH BULKLEY Democrat C. W. DODENHOFF Republican CONSTABLE. VoteforTwo. PRANK DOWLER Republican JOHN A. LIDDLE People's Party JOHN H. LIDDLE Democrat MACE A. MAYES People's Party MACE A. MAYES Democrat G. C. MELROSE Republican AZI SA. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE Vote for Two. T. C. BOULDIN Republican !:. FICKETT Prohibition W.J. FIN LEY Prohibition JOHN U. KAISER Democrat JOHN McNISH Democrat JOHN SHELTON Independent H S. SOOK Republican .Mgmw.. ■iiiiimi am I on —^mvtmtm—— CONSTABLE VoteforTwo. G. W. CAMPBELL Prohibition CHARLES W. CRAWFORD Republican A. J. DANIELS Prohibition C. THOMAS PRESTON Democrat S. W. RICE Republican ALVIN WELLS Democrat BALL ON A. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. Vote for Two. W. J. BRYANT Republican JOSE DE LA LUZ MACHADO Democrat JOHN McLEAN Democrat W. P. ROSS Republican CONSTABLE. VoteforTwo. JOHN J. CHAPMAN Democrat WILLIAM T. HOWLETT Republican J. O. LAMB Republican EDWARD SPRINGER Democrat CAHUENGA. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. Vote for Two. P. E. BENEDICT People's Party P. E. BENEDICT Democrat W. B. CARTER Republican D. GILBERT Republican W. M. TAGGART People's Party W r . M. TAGGART Democrat CONSTABLE. Vote for Two. T. W. GILBERT Republican J. C. HANSON People's Party J. C. HANSON , Democrat JOHN LIEBOLD People's Party JOHN LIEBOLD Democrat C. LOPEZ Republican (J A LAB AS AS. .lUSTICE OF THE PEACE. Vote for Two. NATH'N M. RICHARDSON...PeopIe's Party NATHL M RICHARDSON Democrat NEWTON T. SETTLE People's Party NEWTON T. SETTLE Democrat ■^■^—■ CONSTABLE. Vote for Two. HENRY A. BRANSCOM Democrat HENRY A. BRANSCOM People's Party JOHN HAAS People's Party JOHN HAAS Republican COMPTON. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. Vote for Two. ANSEL M. BRAGG Democrat D. M. CRUM Republican J. A. NICHOLS Democrat CONSTABLE. VoterorTwo. FRANK H. CARSON Democrat ELIJAH L. FERRIEL Democrat GEORGE McCOMAS Republican ■!■ IHIIMH » I'll MllliWll lIIMHI—IW || DOWNEY. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. Vote for Two. THOMAS J. ELLIS Democrat HARVEY R. GRAY Republican M. G. SETTLE Democrat CONSTABLE. VoteforTwo. JAM US BROOKSHIRE Democrat JOHN FREEMAN Democrat JESSE B. GRAHAM Republican EL MONTE. JUSTICE OF THK PEACE. Vote for Two. JOHN A. MoGTRK Democrat WASHINGTON 1.. GODMAN.People's Party WASHINGTON L. GODMAN Democrat MAKTTN METCALF People's Party MARTIN METCALF Republican JAMES H. TODD Republican consta lii.io. Vote for two. B. K. DAVISSON Republican THOMAS P. HERBERT People's Party THOMAS P. HERBERT Democrat KKKDKKH'i; .1. I'UI.LEE Democrat FRED J. PULLEE People's Party G. LEE WILSON.. .. m Republican • '• Ml , . . .. FAIHMOXT. JUSTICE OF THK PEACE. Vote Tor Two. 0. L. LIVESEY Republican 1. W. ONG Republican «"!n§ r^m^^^^ mmB '^^ m \^Kv^u<'i^^. MARCUS ANDKADA Republican J. N. HUTTERS Republican LONG BEACH. JCSTICE OF THE I'KACE. Voto for Two. IRA CARTER People's Party E. V. HOWARD Republican RICHARD 11. ROBINSON People's Party RICHARD H. HOIHNSON Democrat E. ROSECRANS „ ...Republican ENOS STRAWN 7 Democrat CONSTABLE Vote for Two. HORATIO A. DA VIES Democrat G. F. HIRSCH Republican NATHAN T. KINMAN People's Party JOHN W. MGARVIN Deniocr.it FRED W. SNELL People's Party D. P. THAYER Republican LOS ANGELES CITY. CITI JUSTICE. Vote for Two. 11. C. AUSTIN Republican AUGUSTINE W. BLAIR People's Party JAMES 11. DUNLAP Democrat GEORGE P. PHIHBS Republican LUCIEN S. SEAMAN People's Party LUCIEN S. SEAMAN Democrat LOS ANGELES TOWNSHIP. TOWNSHIP JUSTICE. Vote for One. GROVE S. BARTHOLOMEW.PeopIe's Party GROVE S. BARTHOLOMEW Democrat WILLIAM YOUNG Republican CONSTABLE. Vote Co* Two. ALLEN P. RICHARDSON Democrat LESTER D. RODGERS Republican SILAS E. RUDE People's Party EUGENE L. SIEWEKE Democrat R. W. STEWART Republican HERNON E. WUITFORD People's Party LOS NIETOS. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. Vote Tor Tito. PAUL B CONANT Republican PAULB. CONANT Democrat CHARLES P. LIVINGSTON Democrat SAM'L OWENS Republican CONSTAISLE. Voto f >r Two. E. A. FISH Republican EDWARD A. FISH Democrat J. M. HAMILTON Republican JAMES M. HAMILTON Democrat PASADENA. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE Vote for Two. ROBERT M. FURLONG Democrat H. E. LAWRENCE Republican J. H. MERRIAM Republican CONSTABLE. Vo,• YEg ' counties, cities, towns, townships, ) ' : boards of education and school j N ~ districts to a year's revenue, ex- V cept by a two-thirds vote.) ) Senate Constitutional Amendment 1 No. 11. (Increasing duties and > YES. nompensation of Lieutenant-Gov-) ernor, and removing limitation on | NO. pay of clerks ln State oftlces.) \ Assembly Constitutional Amend- ) ment No. 5. (Manner in which an > Y ES. officer of the State may incur ade- ); flciency, and prohibiting Legisla- j N0 ture from appropriating money to > Senate Constitutional Amendment j. No. 14. (Manner in which cities > YES. containing more than thirty-five hundred Inhabitants may frame 1 NO. and adopt charters.) TltTlpTKiTKrsi^^ FurTheTlc.'tro'nor by the direct vote of the People. Against the election of United States Sen ators by the direct vote For the San Francisco Depot Act. Against the San rranclsco_DepotAct^^^ Foran educational every voter to be able to write Bis name and read any section of the Constitution ln the English language. Against an educational qualification requir ing every voter to be able to write his name and read any section of the Con stltution In the Engll^hja^guage^___^ Refund ) Refund the Debt wu