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. the high class - Jtis what is k - of New York society men, gilded youths, THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, APRIL 14, 1895. » is about to be Kyrle Bellew tal roughing iton a w Louis James and Fr rated, and James w season. The fourt 1'entertainment of the Stu- dents’ Ge and Dramatic Club of ornia will teke place at d inst. with his ug one, ined force sister but Mr: has agreed to dramatize his te Paroisse,” for the Paris It is to be re hence, e Hading will role. is said, did Mme. Rej professional mi California ranch | e in any w weeks sian e will be she was Modjesks he and the dete EMELY L;ggg(glgu,s | young men gazed upon social mysteries Which are a sealed book to the vulgar berd, and then, instead of respecting the sacred- merican society as it exists in New York and Nt‘\\'{mrt, they conspired | y | Silas Smith, first mate new scenery for “The Power of the Press,” one of the” sets being the exterior of the Manhattan Club. The cast is as follows: Stephen Carson, & shipbuilder. . H. Coulter Brinker Turner Morgan, a counterfeiter. ... E. J. Holden De Witt Norwood. | prothers { Fred J. Butler Harold Norwood. . _J._ Harry Benrimo Mr. Hasford, father of Annie and May. L Frank Sam Freeborn, a shipbulider Sydney Varian, a dude. . Mike (Callaban of the & ves, n pal of Morgan. The Walking Delegate, Ship! Union. ... George Hermance M. Warner, proprietor of Warner's suip v. Harris Tom Wyait, foreman of the Shipyard = ! Captai | A Warden of Sing | Dan, a lame newsboy | Policeman, one of the finest. John, a turnkey... 3. together and presently produced “The | and Edoa Hall Bathing Girl.” EG e Gloasgn the so-called society that is com- | gynie Carson, 5 'yéhars old ulu Waters posed of Anglomaniacs, and that hunts | British titles, and it goes so far as to intro- | duce several recognizable types. The first | scene represents the beach at Newport | during bathing hours, the second act shows a fashionable ballroom in New York City, | where the entire strength of the company is seen tripping the light fantastic as the curtain ri; while the third act res&m- sents the i or of one of the large dry- goods houses on what is known as bargain day. The piece will have the stage settings | and the costumes that were made espe- | lly for it when it was given its first pro- | ction in Denver a short time ago. | ss Dorothy Morton has an entirely different part from her character of Fran- cesca in “The Fencing Master.” In “The Bathing Girl” she is a Boston heiress, much sought after by an English lord, ' “LITTLE ROBINSON CRUSOE.” Some Novel Effeots Planned for Its Produo- tion at the Tivoli. The sprightly talent of the Tivoli Com- pany is well fitted to adorn burlesque, and in to-morrow’s production of “Little Rob- inson Crusoe” these local artists have un- usual opportunities; for distinguishing themselves. Tne new travesty is by J. P. Wilson and Joseph Hirschbach, whose extravaganzas, “Don Juan ad lib.” and “Lalla Rookh,” have been two of the greatest successes the Tivoli has ever produced. Itisintended to make “Little Robinson Crusoe” an elaborate production, as a long run is ) U (0ROTHY MORTON BALOWIN PETER F DAILEY-CALIFORNIA e made a crime, | t attached, for a support to or-| ng | tu- “FRITZ" The First Pro to-morrow with | Bright, frothy | a will hold the | and the Tivoli re- | nelodrama will find | Peter Dailey brings the | ” with new specialties, to | Stockwell’s has a sort of | and the Orpheum is ont with fresh novelties. lander and Gottlob make spec 3 it at Morosco’s rv Bt Manag, their fi venture in partner- ship to-mc ht with the production | of *“Fritz in a house,” at Stockwell’'s Theater. The building will not be re- | christened the mbia Theater and opened in all its glory for some weeks to | come, but “Fri canter undert: ment, and will a sort of preliminary ken by thé new manage- give the public a foretaste of | of entertainment which Messrs. Friedlander and Gottlob intend to provide. “Fritz in a Madhouse”” has had a_ suc-| cessful run of three months at the Four- | teenth-street Theater, New York, and has | won applause all along the route. The | play, by the by, is much better than its | name, which® conjures up unpleasant | images not carried out in the production. | own as a one-character | play, and J. K, Emmet, who is following | so0 closely in the footsteps of his famons father; has so closely identified himself | with the character of the simple, kindly | German lad that he is known as “Fritz” | Emmet. “Fritz in a Madhouse” is as| popular with children as with adults, and | a work that commends itself to children * always has a touch of genuine nature in it. | J. K. Emmet makes his San Francisco | appearance, supported by a_clever child, Baby Spencer Sinnot, and the_following | list of well-known performers: Miss Emily | Lytton, Miss Florence Foster, Miss Laura | 8. Howe, Miss Millie Liston, Hudson Lis- ton, Fred de Vere, Theodore de Vere, Harry Cotfin, Frank Wise, David Rivers, There will be matinees for ladies and chil- dren on Saturday: il 20 and 27. SATIRE ON ANGLOMANIACS. How Two Gilded Youths Wrote “ The Bath. ing Girl” “The Fencing Master”’ company opens at the Baldwin Theater to-morrow night in an up-to-date operatic extravaganza entitled the “Bathing Girl.” . This work has a peculiar interest attach- ing to it. It isthe production of a couple who have been permitted to gaze upon the English-American so-called society. With- out suspicion people of the very best form, in this set, smiled upon Rupert Hughes and Robert Coverley, recognizing only in them an ambitious poet and an aspiring composer who had dreams of becoming the Gilbert and Sullivan of America. | Olna who wishes to share his title with her money. The rest of the cast is as follows: | dscar Girard | n Stephens d Torrence | rihur Lieblee T. OBrien en Society Leaders < 3 ) Floren -+ Loul ave probabl, P (sweet cashgirl grad- | SEa e e Ml W Miss Kamman Produced under the direction of A. M. Holbrook. Signor Tomasi is the musical conductor. Salesladie: uates) A COUNTRY SPORT." Peter F. Dailey's Company at the California Theater. Mirth and laughter will be the ruleat the California Theater to-morrow night, when Peter F. Dailey makes his reappear- ance in John J, McNally’s successful farce, “A Country Sport.” For the present season Dailey has a stronger company than on his last visit. May Irwin and Ada Lewis, the “tough girl,” are both to*be here, and Andrew Mack, who was not with Dailey last sea- on, will be seen on Monday night. Mack, who is a pleasant singer, will be heard in several of his own compositions. Sparks is still with the company, another favorite is Mamie Gilroy. All the dances, songs, scenery and specialties, as well as the jokes have been renewed since “A Country Sport” was here before, so that in many respects the rattling farce- comedy cowmes under a new guise. The following is the cast: Harry Hardy, “A Country Sport”...Peter F. Dailey Con Connely, his guardian .. John G. Sparks B. Jabez Jorkins, his other guardian... 5 ....Harry M. Morse ~Andrew Mack .F. J. Callahan -Charles E. Sturgis James F. Callahan service....... ‘arl Richards Roland Carter Professor Strutt, out for the stuff. “Andy,” doing many things. Huwkshaw Ben Tarlin Pat, the Irishman Arthur Syballs, of her Ma! & fresh old salt | } Michael Cohen, dolng everybody Margie McIntyre, a quiet lady. ... Ada Lewis 3ladys Connely, daughter of Con.....Mamie Gilroy ‘Tiids Walworth, who helps domothing.... [ary Marvelle Ollie Evans Freda Depew yivia Holte ...Cissy Buckley Besta Gett P, 0. P. C." May Irwin gents, members of her service. Mrs. Tom Thompson, a w s 2 Sampson, another ohn Johnson, still an Lone. .. Carry Weighi Elizabeth Alwright, B. Yokels, city chaps, Bow ajest, MELODRAMA AT MOROSCO'S. for the Revival of the “Power of the Pr Easter Attraction, In spite of the popularity which “The Lightning’s Flash” has met with at Mo- rosco’s, it will be withdrawn after to-night and replaced by *‘The Power of the Press,” which is to form the Easter attraction. This will be the second S8an Francisco production of this realistic melodrama, which shows what good may be accom- plished through the agency of a well-con- ducted press. The hero, Stephen Carson, is faisely accused of a crime, and through. a chain of circumstantial evidence is sent to Sing Sing for five years. On the expira- tion ofhis sentence he returns to his home and family. On account of the stain that rests upon his name, however, he is un- able to secure any employment. It re- mains for a New York journal to establish his innocence, and bring the play to a hn!gpy termination. H. Coulter Brinker and Maud Edna Hall will have the leading roles, and the full strength of the stock company will be brought into requisition. George Her- mance, who has been a favorite in this city for eight years, will play_the part of a walking delegate of the Ship-builders’ Union, and Harris, the whildom divinity student, will make his reappearance. For- Unfrowned upon and unsuspected, these rest Seabury has been at work on some Joln @ | and | anticipated. The stage-carpenter and the Eroprnyduaster have been racking their rains to contrive new effects for the last few weeks, and it is said that their in- dustry has been rewarded by several ideas | that are worthy of being patented. The | footprint on the sand is not, as usual, left to the imagination of the audience; itisa property footprint, and Robinson ‘Crusoe holds it up to the public gaze. The diffi- | culty of making Ferris | duet with the property parrot has also been triumphantly.overcome by means of a speaking-tube, and now Polly warbles | with the best of them. There are eight scenes in “Little Robin- | son Crusoe,” and the stage settings are to ihe new and elaborate. Many new songs | are introduced, and there will be planta- | tion melodies as well as an abundance of | catehy duets, topical ditties and rolicking choruses. Tillie Salinger is cast for Robinson | Crusce. Ferris Hartman as Friday will sing two negro melodies—‘Crappy Dan” and “New Bully.” ThomasC. Leary plays the king and sings ‘‘Coon Hollow” and “OI’ Adam.” Gracie Plaisted, in the part | of Polly Hopkins, will introduce Rosina Vokes’ SQHF “His Heart Was True to | Poll.” Phil Branson plays the freebooter, | Captain Will Atkins, and Arthur Messmer | apgears in the role of the sergeant. John | J. Raffael, Alice Nielsen and all the rest of | the Tivoli favorites are in the cast, each one having a solo. VARIETY AT THE ORPHEUM. Some of Manager Walter's New Easter At- tractions. The Easter novelties at the Orpheum will consist of Redding and Stanton, the Rays, and Francis, a character singer. A number of last week’s favorites, including Stewart and the Binns, will also appear in new songs and sketches. Redding and Stanton are refined sketch | artists, foll of fun and up to date. In | New York and Boston they were very | much taken up by society people for draw- | ing-room enterfainments, One of the laylets in which they appear is “The | Happy Pair,” by Thayer Smith, which | represents the conjugal differences of a newly married couple, and shows the ulii- mate triumph of the wife and the subjuga- tion of the husband. The action of the second sketch is supposed to pass in the reception-room of a lunatic asylum, and amusing complications_arise from the fact that a young lady mistakes an invited 5uest of the doctor atthe asylum for a angerous lunatic. | The Rays are humorous comedy sketch artists, Johnny of that ilk being said to | make the sides of the audience ache with laughter at his antics. Binns and Binns, who caught on well last week, will appear in new musical selections, including cornet solos, and Stewart, the popular female im- personator, will give a new selection of songs. { AQUATIO FOOTBALL. One of This Week's Novelties at the Cirous Royal. The Circus Royal and Venetian Water Carnival promises a number of novelties for Easter week, both in the circus and the aquatic Jine. Last week a number of the performers gained the approbation of the public, in- cluding Barlow, the English rider; the four acrobats, the Rosarios and Cora Beck- with, the champion lady swimmer. The Neapolitan quartet did their best to trans- g:n the hearers to Venice by singing rearolles as they floated round the arena in a decorated float, more gorgeous than any the law permits in Venice. B{ the way, the rush of water which fills the arena previous to the carnival would be more effective if the lightsin the rest of the bmldinf were less brilliant. The novelties for the present week at the water carnival include a ballet, an aquatic footl nd Cleopatra game, the artman sing a | O’Brien sisters, whirlwind-dancers, and the Brothers Van Venert on the Spanish rings. Wilson and Hirschbach, ““This is the sixth burlesque that I have written in conjunction with Mr. Hirsch- bach and others for the Tivoli,” said John P. Wilson yesterday. ‘Judging by box- office receipts, burlesques please the public better than anything we put on. “In ‘Little Robinson Crusoe,’” the only thing we have tried to do is to amuse. We are not trying to educate the people—no ‘Second Mrs. Tanqueray’ or anything of | that sort. The om;l el that Mr. Hirsch- ¢ | bach and I have worked for is that people may go home and say: ‘That was an amusing show.’”” When asked how he and his collaborator worked, J. P. Wilson replied: ‘“Well, T ‘.generally write the dialogue and suggest in footnotes where it would be well to have a chorus, solo, etc., then Mr. Hirschbach ets an idea of the music, and I write'the yrics. Of course, as the musical idea is eveloped, the verses may have to be changed. I expectit was over that part of their work that Gilbert and Sullivan fell out. Gilbert said Sullivan spoiled his lyrics, and Sullivan zaid his music was not to be sacrificed for the lyrics.” De Foe’s novel, it appears, did not fur- nish much of the plot for the new bur- lesque. “Of course it supplied some char- acters and situations,” said Mr. Wilson, “but when you come to think about it the novel is very barren in incident that can be used for stage purposes. We have just made the plot as bright and bristling as we could with the usual burlesque disre- gard for probabilities. Friday and the other natives seemed to offer a good oppor- tunity for introducing some unpublished plantation melodies—genuine negro com- positions which Hartman sings. To make the native dances more realistic, we have engaged the little colored touter from the racetrack, ‘Old Folks.’ It will notbe his first appearance on the stage, by any means, and he’s a great dancer.” Benefit for Aotors. The Pacific branch of the Actors’ Asso- ciation of America will take a benefit at | one of the popular theaters at an early date. It is intended to raise a fund to assist distressed members and to return from the road those who through ill luck or bad management have become stranded. It is expected that every member of the | theatrical profession in San Francisco at | the time of the performance will be willing to assist. Further details will be an- nounced when the date of the benefit is settled. INDUSTRIAL ITEMS. The Work That Is Being Done in the Factories and Foundries of This City. Francis Smith & Co. are shipping a large quantity of iron pipe to Alaska for the Hayward mines at Juneau. This com- pany has completed the contract om the Oakland water works, where upward of twenty miles of water mains were laid at a cost exceeding $125,000. Clot & Meese have completed work on a | contract for a new refrigerator and ice | machine for increasing the capacity of a | SBacramento brewery. ‘; The Cyclops Machine Works is making a thirty-ton refrigerating plant for Miller & Lux at Butchertown. The contract in- cludes the tracks, switches and rollers. They have also under way a refrigerating plant for J. H. Wadsworth of Yreka and a | complete ice plant for A. H. Will of 1 Heaflisburg‘ |~ Architect Lillie has prepared plans for a | Jarge sanitarium to be located in Mill | Valley. A company has been organized | for the purpose of making this improve- | ment, and it is stated that $300,000 will be Inxy}»cuded in the work. he Cahill & Hall Elevator Company has closed a contract for a hydro-steam_eleva- tor for the Pacific Meat Company’s new plant at Tacoma, Wash. Paul B. Perkins of the Perkins Pump and Engine Company is perfecting an ap- paratus which mixes air and crude petro- leum oil of the requisite proportion into an atomized condition; it is then conveyed | in pipes having the desired pressure to the grate ?ace under the boiler, where it is 1§nite , and produces a strong, steady blaze at an economy of about the ratio of $2 a ton for coal. This is accomplished by the use of one of their little two-horse- power gas-engines, which lifts the oil from the storage into the chambers and creates the pressure, which forcesit into the fur- nace in the form of carbureted gas. The Union Machine Works are complet- ing the work on a large hydraulic mash machine for the National Brewery. A number of Eastern firms tried to secure this contract, but loyalty to home indus- try by the National people influenced them to give it to a local factory, even at an advance over the Eastern drummers’ prices. Prior to the establishment of the Cali- fornia Ink Company, all money expended for ink went’ to enrich Eastern manufac- turers. This company is now supplyin, such printing-houses as H. 8. Crocker & Co., Francis & Valentine, the Schmidt Label Company, etc., and expects soon to close contracts for supplying one or more of the metropolitan daily pnzers. The Union Gas Engine Company has ;“St finished and launched a 48-foot freight | aunch for river traffic above Sacramento, | and a 60-foot schooner for the north coast | trade. They also have in hand contracts for building a 50-foot launch to be shipped to New Zealand; one for use in the public ! park at Sydney, Australia, and one also | for the technical school at Sydney. | The Pheenix Iron Works are busy filling “ a large order for Woodbury concentrators. | Within the past month, three concen- | trators were shipped to El Dorado County, three to Amador and two to Placer County, | besides a number that have gone out of | the State. These works have also a large | amount of miscellaneous machinery in- tended for different parts of the State. The raise in the price of oil has stimu- lated competition. A very stronfi East- ern company has entered the field and is placing ‘storage tanks in several centers of trade on the coast. The Bay City Iron Works of this city is to build one to hold 110,000 barrels, and others are under con- struction. s The Byron Jackson Machine Works shipped the past week one compound con- densing engine and boilers to Walnut Grove, and several centrifugal pumps of their manufacture to other points. They are now building a large compound en- ine and pump for the Edison Light and ower Company. 4 The Selby Smelting Works are shipping more gold and silver bullion than at this time fiast year. Especially is this true of gold bullion shipments, which for last month showed a very large increase over the corresponding month of 18%4. The Dow Steam-pump Works have just completed for the Standard Consolidated Mining Company of Bodie, Cal., one of the combined e{cctric mine, station and sinking pumps, having a capacity of 150 allons per minute to a height of 750 feet. hey have also just shipped to Amador County one of their sinking pumps having a capacity of 400 gallons per minute to a height of 300 feet vertical, and a similar g‘ump to Calaveras County for use in the horp Mining Company’s claim. They have under way at the present time pumps for the Casey building and the steamer Mineola besises several smaller plants. The Pelton Water-wheel Com any is shipping to Kioto, Japan, a horse- wer plant for operating a railroad system n that city. This company has also just received and commenced work on an tric-power plant for Gnatemala. W. W. Montague & Co. were the suc- cessful bidders for the contract for heating and ventilating the Whittier residence. The Pacific Builder rts the number of recorded contracts in San Francisco for March as 106, aggregating $724,247; un- recorded contracts, 25, amounting to $141,000. ——————— The mortality among ‘‘the oldest Ma- son” is very great so far this year. Professors Soule and Marx at Work on the Foun- dation. THOROUGH TEST TO BE ,MADE. An Investigation by Practical Men. Holmes and the Grand Jury. Another investigation of the work done in the ferry foundations was commenced yesterday. Frank Soule, professor of civil engineering and astronomy at the Berke- ley University, and Charles D. Marx, pro- fessor of civil engineering at Staniord Col- lege, were engaged by the Harbor Com- missioners last week as experts on tllle work, and they have lost no time in entering upon their labors. The two gen- tlemen met President Colnon and Engi- neer Holmes of the board yesterday morn- ing in the commissioners’ rooms and were in conference with them for nearly two hours. Mr. Holmes submitted plans of the foundation and supplied the engineers with all the data in his possession regard- ing the nature of the material through which the piles were driven. He ex- plained that there was no bottom to the mud at the foot of Market street and, in fact, nowhere on the water front except at the hay wharf at Third and Berry streets. The Eiles driven beneath the foundation, Mr. Holmes said, hung on by “skin fric- tion,” but, he added, in no place along the city front had there ever been a settlement of piles where the logs had been driven in bottomless mud. The university engineers will study the plans and data to-day, and will begin the practical work of their investigation to- morrow. What their plans are they are keeping to themselves. “These gentlemen are considered the highest authority in the State,”” said Mr. Colnon, *‘and the result of their work will be most satisfactory to the people. That their examination of the concrete will be a_thorough one I'am satisfied. As to the piles which have been driven underneath the piers, there is no way of ascertaining whether the required number are there or whether the piles are of the proper di- mensions. Each pier rests on a zluster of piles, and in some of the clusters the specifications call for sixty piles. It is hardly possible to reach this piling now, as it is far below the mud line. But the investigation will be prosecuted on the assumption that the piles have been prop- erly driven. “‘That work was done in full view of the public, and under the eyes of the board and its deputies, and if there was anything wrong with it it would have been de- tected. The Commissioners will base their future action upon the investigation of the professors. We have had nothin to do with any other investigation, nng only knew of such from what we have read in the newspapers.” Engineer Holmes said that the experts could easily determine whether the proper number of piles had been driven. “The specifications called for so many piles,’” said the engineer, “‘and the amount of concrete to be put on them was based on the weight they would stand. If there are less or more piles driven than required the piers would show it in settling. I ex- plained to Messrs. Soule and Marx that there was no bottom to the mud under the foundation, and said the case was the same all along the front. ] told them further that the pilesunder all the wharves would show that there never had been a settlement where there was no bottom. The only place where there ever was a settlement was at the hay wharf, where there is a bottom, but in that case the piles had not been driven to hard pan. The Chief Wharfinger has instruc- tions to allow a strain of ten tons to the pile on every wharf, and it was on this test that Architect Brown based his estimate of the depot building and foundation.” The hearing for which Engineer Holmes has asked before the Grand Jury will be commenced early this week. THE THREE EXCUSES. One of Them Is Fortified by a Scientific ‘Writer. Any excuse is better than none. There is a story, which is not in Joe Miller, of three men entering a tavern and calling for brandy, the first because he was hot, the second because he was cold and the third because he liked it. The excuse given frankly by the last is probably a bet- ter one than the others. Atany rate, it has now received. without discreet limita- tions, the public approval of a scientific writer, fortified with the authority a medical diploma confers, who certainly does not discourage total abstinence while defending the moderate drinker. Healthy life is_possible without alcohol, and not impossible with it; for itis, we are told, a useful food and an agreeable stimulant, or a narcotic_poison, according to the dose in which it is taken or the susceptibilities of the individuals to whom it is administered. In plain words, the moderate use of alcoholic spirits will do you no harm if it agrees with you, while teckless indulgence can do mnothing but ill. It is pretty much the same with most things. One may be intemperate, for instance, in the use of language, even in denouncing drink, which is neither an unmixed bless- ing nor an_unmitigated evil. — London Daily Graphic. 3 NEW TO-DAY. KELLY & LIEBES (loak and Suit House, 120 KEARNY STREET. Separcrer gk e §4.50 vaiTar cleing ol 90 04 YRLTE carel e oiig i B0 s b D S1i850 sii $10.00 $16.50 REEFER DRESSES, Tancy che CREPON SKIRTS, organ-piped back, *1 4 00 |rhm, $15.00 ned. 3 LK SKIRTS, ® back, s organ-piped 3 'EXPERTS OF THE STATE| NEW TO-DAY—AMUSEMENTS. O'Farrell Street. bet. Stockton and Powell. April AS. EASTER WEEK ATTRACTIONS. A Bill of Novelties Far Outdoing Iis Predeeessors, 6—NEW BRIGHT LUMINARIES—6 FRANCESCA REDDING AND STANTON HUGE AMERICA’S REFINED SOCIETY SKETCH ARTISTS. ORD T wEaEm & = { RAVS § | | 5] z £ RANCIS = Gotham’s Favorite Comedy Duo. ‘TM e 20 Hontloge I N N AND IN INv I i LECT STUART T EL5cTeC he Male Patti. | __HARDING, KERR, CHALFANT. KERR. MAZUZ AND ABBACCO| LINA AND VANI ARABIAN ACROBATS. i Eceentric Duetists. REALISTIC IRISH _CHARACTER ARTISTS. MATINEE 2 ¥. M. TO-DAY Parquet, any seat, 25¢; Oc, any part of the house. BALDWIN THEATER. AL HAYMAN & CO. (Incorporatec... ..PROPRIETORS TO-MORROW The New Three-act Operatic Extravaganza PRESENTED EASTER T I I I : Bx SPECIAL MONDAY ARRANGEMENT o | BATHING | ew WEEK ONLY. THE FULL MATINEE GI R I STRENGTH SATURDAY. OF THE By Coverley and Hughes. FENCING MASTER OPERA CO. The Pretty Bathers! YOU WANT The Dashing Bicyclists! YOU WANT TO SEE The Demure Shu‘p Girls! TO HEAR The Buds of Fashion! ““The Most Y And just three hundred and three other bright, sparkling, laughable and pic- turesquely amusing feature (Incorp CALIFORNIA THEATER. * dmmed®, TO-HIGHT---LAST TIME ““THE GIRL I LEFT BEHIND ME.” Toranne. TO=MORROW, MONDAY, APRIL 15. BEGINNING RETURN OF THE POPULAR FAVORITE PETER ¥F. DAILBEY THE FUNNIEST MAN OF OUR' TIMES AL HA TN John J. McNally’s Twentieth Century Comedy A COUNTRY SPORT Presented by the greatest aggregation of comedy talent ever seen, including May Irwin, Joha G. Sparks, Ada Lewls, Andrew Mack, Mamie Gilroy and twenty others ¥nder the Direction of CHARLES J. RICH and WILLTAM HARRIS. E. ROSENBAUM... MOROSCO’S GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. ‘The Handsomest Family Theater in America. Manager WALTER MOROSCO...... Sole Lessee and Manager, THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING. “THE LIGHTNING’S FLASH!” MONDAY EVENING ....APRIL GREAT PRODUCTION OF THE AMERICAN MELODRAMA, *“FHE. POWER OF . THE' PRESS.” EVENING PRICES—25¢ and 30c; Family Circle and Gallery, 10c. Matinees Saturday and Sunday. Seats on Sale from 9 A. M. to 10 P. X CIRCUS ROYAL And Venetian Water Carnival, 1 5 COTRET Eddy and Mason streets. CLIFF PHILLIPS. Proprictor and Manager TO-NIGEIIT GRAND CLEOPATRA BALLET! 50—MARCH OF THE AMAZONS—350 WATER FOOTBALL. | OAKLAND VS. SAN FRANCISCO. NOTE PRICES: | Parquet and Dress Circle 25¢ and 50c; Gallery 15¢, | Matinee Daily, 2 0’clock—15c and 256, | RUENING gfi S RUNNING RAGES! RACES! CALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUB RACES, WINTER MEETING, BAY DISTRICT TRACK, COMMENCING SATURDAY, OCT. 27, 1894 15TH. ; i \ | “Y¥a, Dot's So!” STOCKWELL’S THEATER. B‘?fl..;fl‘:';f"flna-’;"ifi.‘h"s‘.mwn':‘:';i'i‘;'.' or Shine. FRIEDLANDER, GOTTLOB & CO......Managers. | 2 Weeks, Commencing Monday, April 15, MR. J. K, EMMETT Five or more races each day. Races st b3 u‘.‘s‘x;up. McAllister and Géary street cars ;‘-: WHALEBONE. PACIFIC STEAM WHALING COMPANY'S (“FRITZ'") = Genuine Shell Whalehone “Ore e AND HIS PERFECT COMPANY |5 ety ristred gy Helegl;samrkn.:?n d S DRESS 600DS AXD CORSET TRADE. All Sizes. Every Package Guaranteed. One trial will convince you of its merits and superiority aver all oiher biands In the market. LA LES 560 cetadtor srates o cnsaie NONEEQUAL T0 OUR “ORCA BRAND.” e!?:ggrbl;:c[nks, most_elastic, lasts longest, cheap- For sale b all the leading dry-goods houses Office and Factory, 30 California Street, SAN FRANCISCO. FRITZ IN & MADHOUSE ‘Which ran three months at the Fourteenth-street Theater, New York. Prices—25¢, 50¢, 75¢ and $1 Night. 25¢, 50¢ and 75¢ Matinees. A Mes. ERNESTINE KRELING Propriétor & Manager TO-NIGHT {(NE WEEK ONLY passsdssnasnssssnnansssaa. { QUINA-LAROCHE veveswwsd BALFE'S OPERA OF SONGS, m%w’u “THE - BOHEMIAN - GIRL !” 16,600 Francs O oy oo™ s Your druggist must have Hoqd not, ‘cend name and E. FOUGERA & CO. 26-28 N. William St. i New York. i Popular Prices—25c and 50c. TESTIMONIAL CONCERT, || ENDERED TO MR. J. W. MCKENZIE, OF Temple, WEDNESDAY EVERING, AphL B4 e, A 1896 “bickets 50 ceats. R v B e o B B e I v