The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 3, 1896, Page 7

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HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1896. 7 . { vee.....APRIL 8, 1896 5 AMUSEMENTS, FALDWIN THFATER. Hamlet.” CATIFORNIA THEATER—“Friends.” CorovmMnra THEATER—“Sinbad.” N orosco’s OPERA-House—"The Red Pocket- bool T1vorr OrERa-Hovs: A ORrREvM.— GROVER'S Alcazar.—-The Homestead.” EA ToRIUM—Corner of Jones and Eddy eorgia Minstrels. M ACDONOUGR THEATER (OAKLAND)—AnnaEva Ay SUTRO CONEY ISLAND—Grand Athletic Exhibi- tion and Concert. £H00T THE CHUTEs—Dally at Halght street, e block east of the Park. oCKEY CLUR.—Races. This day (Friday), 35 Market street, at CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. her prediction for to-day is fair, The weat isk the rich Crocker stake at cistion gave a ball for the order. sioners deny that John D employ. cousin. am-Gibbo) acted as r in Justice Barry’s court str t has not been forgot- n their expenditure of Green, the George the bay mpic Club boxer, was terday and came near ission is receiving returns in est for reports from the State me for the widows and will be erected a t Decoto, ‘denti: lie Greenebsum and Dr. Herbert re married yesterday at the © e meetings at Rescue Home, et. t Frider of the month, charge to the > has been granted to | > amend hool was addressed | C. Plebn of the de-| the University of Cali- who was pro s & few years ago, gthy sojourn in Los ioners yesterday accepted as “McEvoy of ey with a g horses Pepper, Babe censed over a recent dwell of the Western all butinitial the terms of the the Painters Trades Council's {rs. stings. vith Building 1t her well- fornia-street warded Gripman , With $1 50. sociation held two meet- one public and the other both of which the street- on wasconsidered. made by the police yester- fled that Jul Festner of s not the man who strangled Bertha Peradis. this City rec ved yester- Dr.J. D. ety, who is Judge. . Charles- &5 entered by & burglar while the officer was ,and three gold watches and $1 were A Home for Aged People is being erected at Grove. ‘The institution is being erected the expense of Miss Margaret Tennant. She it 10 be & memorial to her dead Two workmen, Tyler and McDermott by have sued & contractor named Bowers pey_due them for work done in the re- 3 e remains of the American Ex- en route from the session of rtof the world at Dundee, Scot- t. on of whether a steelhead is a rout was again threshed out before Judge Joachimsen's court, but as the ailed to agree the defendant pleaded to violating the fish laws and was fined Judge Garber announced in court yesterday hat he differed with his colleague, Mr. Pills- in his interpretation of the doctrine of implied assent of the Government to the e of the Central Pacific to the Southern Pacific. Charl es Herold, a blacksmith of San Bruno ar Army street, comolained to the po- sterday that his residence had been en- tered by burelars om Saturday night and Wednesday night and several articles of silver- ware stolen. H. M. Hafford the bicycle thief, was yester- day sentenced by Judge Josehimsen to three months in the County Jail on the charge of petty larceny, and when that sentence expires ill be tried in the Superior Court on five chasges of grand larceny. Eczema eaey Grew Worse under Treatment of Best 2 Physicians. Tried CUTICURA REMEDIES * @reat Change in Five Days and To-day is Entirely Cured. " My baby had Eczema in its worst form. Oneof the best physicians in the eity attended Ler, bt she continued to get worse all the time. He finally admitied he was at his wits' ‘end. 1 then got COTICURA REMEDIES, and in 8 few days noticed a great change in her con- dition. She contihued to improve and foentirely cured, has nice head of hair, and 4 ively and bear.v. 1spent considerablemoney fordrugsand doctors bills, which was usey, J.B.JACOBS, 2031 Wilkias Ave., Balt., Md. SPEEDT CURE THEATXENT. — Wi the with Cor1- ne re. an o Ut ine great skl cure. and mid doses of CuTiCURA RESOL: Sold_throughout the world. Price. CoTicrRA Me. %, BRZoLTENT. S and 41 PorrEn DECO ARD . Sole Props. £ &~ How lo Cure Every Skin Humor,” mailed free. NEW TO-DAY. | Of course it must be remembered that the ALORG THE WATER FRONT Probable Race Between the Pilot- Boat Bonita and Yacht Coronet. WOULD BE A CLOSE CONTEST, The California Boat Would Make the New York Yacht Club Crack Haustle. Now for a race between the pilot-boat Bonita and the New York yacht Coronet. Fair on the yacht Lucero vesterday. The excursion was a most successful one and a trip up the Sacramento is in contem- lation. The Lucero is in thorough work- ing order. The ship Occidental started for the can- neries yesterday and created quite a sensa- tion. The crew and cannery hands danced a hula hula on the poop as the vessel moved out into the stream, while their wives and mothers cried on the wharf. The Chinese cook left a white wife and | two children on the bulkhead waving him a farewell. BANKS REPORTING. Returns From Loeal Banking-Houses Show Them to Be in Good Condition. Reports from the State banksare com- mencing to come in at the headquarters of the Board of State Bank Commissioners. Three times a year the board sends out blanks, which the banking-houses are obliged to fill out and retuin. In these forms blanks are left for answers as to HOME FOR AGED PEOPLE Miss Tennant Donates a Fine Institution at Pacific Grove. WILL BE A COSTLY STRUCTURE. A San Jose Lady Who Is Giving Her Time and Money in a Good Cause. | The little town of Pacific Grove is about | | to be beautified by a fine Home for Aged rules of admission or plans for conducting the home, but it is already known that in comtort and elegance it will be second to none in the State. Miss Margaret Ten- nant, the donor, is devoting all her ener- gies to the completion of this beautiful memorial to her brother, and it is hoped that she will long be spared to direct the fortunes oi her home for aged people. —— MILLIONAIRE MNALLY. The Chicago Publisher Here After a Rest on His Olive and Lemon Ranch. Andraw McNally, the great publisher of Chicago, arrived here from Southern Cali- fornia yesterday, where he has been since November. Mr. McNally owns a mag- nificent residence at Pasadena, and also a fine ranch of 2300 acres at Altadena. The ranch was purchased some five years ago, and is devoted to growing olives, lemons and barley. Mr. MecNally estimates that in five years more, the wav his trees are thriving, he will produce 300 carloads of fruit a year. He intends to make a specialty of mar- The Pilot-Boats Gracie S, America and Bonita as They Appeared Yesterday. The Gracie S Is Running Are on the Wind. Free and the America and Bonita When the latter was entering port the Bonita had the best of the run into port. | Coronet was just at the end of a 118 days’ | runaround the Horn and wasnot in racing trim. Then again, the Bonita has not been on the drydock for many months, so both vessels were in about the same con- dition. The Coronet beat the Dauntless in an | ocean race in 1386 and the Bonita has| beaten any thing pitted against her on the | Pacific Coast. The yacht Lurline has held | her own against all comers and these | three should make one of the prettiest | races ever seen in Pacific waters. The | pilot-boat America has many friends, and | in any race she certainly would not be the | last boat. 1f a match can be arranged the Coronet, America, Lurline and Bonita will | probably be the contestants. Inzanyevent the pilots are more than willing to back their crack against the New York yacht, | and are configent that a Pacific Coast ves- sel can hold her own with anything pro- duced on the Atlantic. In speaking for theg)ilot! yesterday all Captain Barber would say was: “‘li the owner of the Coronet will accept a chal- lenge for an ocean race we will put the Bo- nita on the drydock and at once prepare for business. If the Lurline will enter the contest we will get the America ready also, | and thus we could have a four-boat race. The Coronet is a fast ocean racer, but I am | illing to back my opinion that both the Bonita and Lurline can hold their own | with her.” All three of the cracks owned by the | pilots were out yesterday. In the accor- | panying cut the Gracie S (No. 3) is run- ning free with her light sails set, and the | Bonita (No. 7) and America (No. 11) are on the wind. They were in this position when sketched by a CALL artist yesterday. The late Captain Charles Mathews’ in- terests in the Gracie S, Bonita and America were sold at auction yesterday in the Merchants’ Exchange. "A one-six- teenth siare in the Gracie S brought $1375. Another sixteenth in the Bonita brought $1200, and the same interest in the Amer- 1ca went for $1175. The three sixteenths were bought in by Captain Barber for the Associated Pilots. At the same time a one-ihirty-second in- terest in the schooner William Bowen was sold for $1125, a similar interest in the schooner Lyman D. Foster brought $1225, and a sixteenth interest in the schooner R. W. Bartlett brought$1750. The vessels all brought good prices, and in this way the value of the dead master pilot’s estate was enhanced. Cousins’ drydock has changed hands, and in future John D. Spreckels will hold the controlling interest. The plant will be imcfmved and the piace will be at once placed on a paying bas:s. | George Green, the pugilist, came near | losing his life yesterday. He is in train- ing for the coniing Olympic Club exhibi- tion and wanted some exercise on the bay. | He went out_to Long Bridge and secured | the loan of Bob McArthur’s shell. When off the sugar refincry he capsized the boat, but managed to hang on for a while. Then | be tried to swim ashore. He was making little progress when a boat from the Brit- | ish sbip Ellsmere went to his assistance | and picked him up. : The steamer Alameda was to have sailed yesterday for Australia viz Hawaii and Samoa, but the non-arrival of the English mail caused a delay, The pas- senger list is not a heavy one, but the steamer could not take away all the freight that was offering. She has aboard uver 1000 tons of floar and 900 tons of general freight. People who were late for the mail were treated to a surprise. When they | presented their stamped letters to Purser | Sutton the latter refused to accept them, saying that new regulations bad been estab- | lished by the Custom-house and that a regular Government envelope was neces- sary for late letters. In consequence the cigar-stand owned by Henry Christensen | at the bulkhead did a thriving business | in stamped envelopes. The first load of fish-plates and rails for the Santa Clara Valley Railway was shipped “on the schooner Carrier Dove yesteraay. They will be unloaded at Al- viso and the work of construction will at once begin. Guvernor Budd was the guest of Charley | wil | nine seconds, won the (each State bank’s assets, liabilities and Bonita put Captain Meyer aboard and | general financial status, and the banks are | then the two vessels had a brush and the | OPliged to fill them out and forward them | to t e commission within two weeks, The blanks were sent day before yesterday and thus far only the City banks have re- sponded. To-day it is expected that re- ports from the country banks will com- mence to arrive. Thus far the reports in- dicate that the banks in the vicinity of the City are in good condition. HE TACKLED A SHELL. George Green, the Olympic Club Boxer, Has an Experience in a Racing Boat. George Green, better known as Young Corbett, the boxer of the Olympic Club ! and member of the South End Boat Club, undertook to master the art of rowing racing shells yesterday afternoon, and came near ending his existence in the attempt. He started from the boathouse and pulled along admirably until he got out into the tide, when his frail craft became unmanageat'e and Green, losing his equi- fibrium, took a header into th~ bay. When his boat tipped over his feet, as | is the custom when rowing a racing shell, were tightly strapped to the foot rests of the boat, which caused him to hang head downward. After great exertion he extricated him- self from his perilous position, and started to swim astiore. The tide at this time was running like a mill race, and Green, who is a strong swimmer, battled nobly with the current, but made little headway and would have probably been drowned had | itnot been for a ship’s boat crew, who | People, which Miss Margaret Tennant,a | San Jose lady, who now resides at the | Grove, is having erected asa memorial to | | her brother, the late John Tennant. | The building, which will be in the old | colonial style, issurrounded by fiveacres of | itsown land. Tle site is outside the town | of Pacific Grove, near the northern end of | the seventeen-mile drive, and the | grounds are at present covered with vine; trees. When the building is completed ilk is intended to arrange beautiful flower | | gardens around the house. while the re- | mainder of the five acres will be utilized for vegetable gardens, a miniature park | and accommodations for horses, chickens and cows. The building will command a beautiful | view of Monterey Bay. Work has already | | commenced, and it is expected that by the | early autumn this home for aged people j will be ready for occupancy. The founda- | tion rests on bedrock three feet deep, and the concrete wall rises from three to seven feet above the ground. The exterior will be of wood, while the inner walls will be | of the finest cement. The chief archi tectural feature will be the fine two-sto: portico, twenty-two feet in length by six | feet in width, with its two Corinthian columns and enriched cornice, support- | ing a corresponding balcony on the second | tloor. | The reception hall, which opens from | the portico, will be twenty-two feet square; | opposite the estrance of the hall a broad open staircase will lead up to the second | floor. The reception hall will be used as a | sitting-room and will be heated by a pic- turesque open fireplace. Beyond the re- ception-room is to be the dining-room. This story will also contain seven bed- > THE JOHN TENNANT MEMORIAL HOME, WHICH IS NOW BEING ERECTED. | P————— fortunately saw the accident and came to his rescue. After returning to the boathouse with his water-filled shell, Green got out of his wet garments and in an hour after was | none the worse off for his ducking. He is by no means undaunted by the accident and will tackle the frisky shell | again if he gets ducked every day. ——— At the Lurline Baths. The second entertaicment of the California Swimming and Polo Ciub given at the Luriine baths last night attracted a large and ap- parently appreciative audience. In the 220- yard championship of the Pacific Coast, open to ail emateurs, E. Stalle won; time, 2:59 3-5. The 100-yard dash. open to all Pacific Coast amateurs. proved to be tne most exciting event ot the evening. Dan Renear covered the dis- tance in 1:05 3:5, breaking the world's record ot 1:08 3-5, made at Chicago in 1887. In the leu-lzl_\ztm handicap, C. 8. C., Stalle, winner of the 2! ard_championship, came out ahead; time, 3:{3 2-5. Cornell, on an allowance of four-lengths handicap, in 1:07 3-5, the scratch man. Renear, covering the same distance in 1:02. The evening's en: tertainment ended with an exciting polo match, in which the “White Caps,” so called, proved victorious. A ———————— Ask Mr. Havens of Con. Virginia what Mitch. ell's Magic Lotion does for sprains. - rooms, as well as Kkitchen, panfries and | storerooms. The second floor will contain eight bedrooms and the attic an equal | | number. The house is fifty feet in front by | seventy-five feet in depth, with two full | stories and attic, besides a laundry and | cold-storage room in the basement. When | finished the house will contain about | thirty rooms and three lavatories. In the interior decoration light colors will pre- vail. * Ivory white will be the prevailing tint for the woodwork. The building is seventy-five feet from the seventeen-mile drive and it is destined to be the central one of a group at some futurz date. The John Tennant Memorial Home is to be largely directed by prominent Epis- copalians. It is under the supervision of a board of trustees composed of Right Rev. William F. Nichols, Bishop of the diocese; Rev. Dr. Wakefield of San Jose, Rev. C. 8. Facken- thall of Pacific Grove and Miss Margaret “Tennant. Also a board of directors, as fol- lows: Right Rev. William F. Nichols, Rev. C. 8. Fackenthall, Mr. and Mrs. James P. ent of Monterey, Mr. and Mrs. War- . Porter of Watsonville and Miss ren Margaret Tennant. The endowment, after the home is com- pleted, will probably be about $30,000. Nothing definite is settled with regard to | would rather plant a tree any day than | W. F. Chipman, who has been in com- | Hall, and it proved to be a dismal failure. | oificer. keting rive and pickled olives. He is en- thusiastic about California and the pro- ducts of the tree and vine. He says he take a big contract for printing. Mr. McNally has, by his investments in the State and by talking its advantages to his Illinois frienas, brought many people and a large amount_of capital to Califor- nia. The firm of Rand, McNally & Co., which has grown and expanded witih Chicago, does a great publishing business. They employ 700 men steadil TROUBLE IN COMPARY & Alameda Militiamen Want Cap- tain W. F. Chipman to Resign. It Is Alleged That Inspecting Officers Regard -the Captain as In- competent. There is disruption in the ranks of Ala- meda’s Company G, N. G. C. The cause is the alleged incompetency of its captain, mand since the company’s organization, two years ago. It was last Thursaay evening that the members discovered that they were and had been in the hands of an incompetent drill master, and the discovery has re- sulted in the production of a petition which is to be presented to the captain | asking that he surrender his commission ’ and resign from office. On the night in question the inspection of the company took place in Armory All the members were present, and for at- tendance Company G received 100 per cent, but in the drill the company was handled in such a style that the inspect- ing officers could not help making adverse comment in regard to it. The conduct generally, it is asserted, was palpably poor. The marching, use of arms, aj pearance of the men and evervthing else was at wide variance with the correct, and partook of a farce. During the examination of arms, accouterments, etc., on the morning fol- lowing the inspection, Captain Chipman received, in the presence of a number of the members of his company, a rebuke from Captain Carrington which he perhaps did not very well like. Captain Carrington asked him if he had not better get out and do something, which was understood to mean that Chipman was incompetent and had not come up to expectations as an The words gave the members who heard them the cue, and they soon had a petition drawn up as stated above. GAVE A SEALED VERDICT, The Jury Said to Have Decided Against Warren E. Price. FOR SELLING INDECENT BOOKS. On the First Ballot There Were Eleven for Conviction—Religious Issue Raised. What: You .NeedT A great cry for help goes up at this time of the year from thousands of people who | are suffering from what is sometimes called “spring weakness.” Nature re- quires assistance and they must have help in order to regain strength and vigor. The best thing to take for this weak, de- Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey The trial of Warren E. Price on the | because it builds up the system, purifies charge of transmitting obscene literature | E - : through the United States mails was con- | "¢ 0100 8nd stirs up the circulation. It tinued before Judge Morrow in the United | takes away tired, languid feelings, tonesup There was a business meeting of the company last night. The words said to have been uttered by Captain Carringw\n were denied by Captain Chipman. The latter gave his version of them, and con- strued a different meaning. He feels con- fident that the members of G will stand by him and he shows no signs of weaken- ing. Some of the members declared, after the meeting, that the end is not yet and that there will be more developments. ————— That ‘‘Fal Footrace. The preliminary examination of J. W. Flynn and James Ryan, charged with grand larceny in swindling A. H. Steil out of $1000 a week ago by a “fake” footrace in Golden Gate Park, ‘was commenced before Judge Low yesterday afternoon. Prosecuting Attorney Madden and Attorney Peter F. Dunne appeared for the State | and Carroll Cook represented the defendants. Three witnesses—Duncan, Mclvor and Steil— were examined for the prosecution and the cage was continued till to-night. No new facts were elicited. States District Court yesterday. All the evidence was submitted and the case went tojithe jury, but the verdict will not be known until Saturday. After being out a the digestive organs, and makes sound, healthy flesh. It is something thatshould be kept in every household. Avoid worth- short time the jury returned for funher] instructions, and later reported that an | agreement was improbable. Judge Mor- | row inquired of the foreman how the jury | stood, and was told that the ballots showed | eleven to one. Then he sent the jury| back, and said that a sealed verdict could | be handed to the Marshal, in case an| agreement was reached, and the report could be made to the court on Saturday 1 morning. | ‘The jury reached a verdict just before 6 o'clock. It is thought to be against tbej defendant. | The case occupied the attention of the | court during the entire day, and much in- | terest was taken in the proceedings. As- sistant District Attorney Slessinger ap- | peared for the prosecution and Attorney B. G. Haskell represented the defense. At | the outset the defense asked to have the | publishers of the Report cited for con-| tempt for printing certain matter reflect- | ing on the accused and tending to preju- | dice the jury in the case. The mmion'l however, was denied by the court, and | Postal Inspector Erwin was put on the | stand. He testified that he had learned that Price was sending obscene literature | through the malls,and in the performance | of his sworn duty he detected him and | bad him arrested. | From the evidence it was shown that | Erwin sent Price a decoy letter to his book- | store at 1203 Market street and in return | for a money order received some spicyl reading throngh the mails. The letters | which he wrote Price and which werere- | ceived from the latter in reply were placed | in evidence. He aamitted having had a| conference with Frank Kane, president of | the Society for the Suppression of Vice, re- | garding the Price matter, but declared | that he had no prejudice against the pris- oner and was solely concerned in the case | at issue in preventing any violation of the | postal laws. | T.J. Ford, G. 8. Asmussen and W. W. | eiil, postal clerks, testified to having | seized the books sent by Price to Erwin | while in transit. Erwin had assumed the | name of “Schwartz” and represented him- | self as a country dealer at C rescent City. Mrs. M. V. Thomas, mother of the ac- cused, E. Levy, a bookseller, Clerk Miller, who works for Price, and the prisoner | himself were the witnesses for the defense. Mrs. Thomas swore that she assisted af the Market-street store, and if indecent literature had been sold there she would bave known it. Miller and Price testifled to about the same effect. Price himself entered a vigorous denial against all the | charces made agamst him, and said that | Kane and the Catholics had conspired to drive him out of business because he pub- lishea the A. P. A. Magezine. He ad-| mitted huving answered the letters sent by | “Schwartz,”” but denied that he had | mailed or caused to be mailed the obscene | books sent through the mails and sub- | mitted in evidence. He testified that he | bad never sold vile and indecent litera- | ture to schoolgirls and children. He ad- i mitted that he sold “vulgar books,”” but, he added, “‘they are not indecent.’’ Assistant District Attorney Slessinger addressed the jury on bebalf of the Gov- ernment. Attorney Haskell made an eloquent plea for the accused. “This prosecution,” he | said, ‘‘is an attempt to railroad Price to | prison on account of his religion.” | Jundge Morrow instructed the jury asto | the law 1n the case, and said that it had | been decided by the Supreme Court of the | United States that postal inspectors were | justified in sending decoy letters to detect violations of the postal laws. NEW TO-DAY. LLLELLLL LS “This is hot stuff,” as the man said who was especially pleased with the coolness of the MANTELL Cigar KL Pure, undrugged, natural fla. | vor Havans, makes a cool, Be guided by that little tag on each cigar. Q) 243 tragrant smoke. The Wertheimer Company, Pacific Coast Agents, S. F. NEW TO-DAY—AMUSEMENTS. PACIFIC COAST JOCKEY CLUB (Ingleside Track). AIN OR SHINE.) FIRST RACE AT 2:00 P. Il. ADMISSION +00. Take Southern Pacific trains at Third and Town- send streets Depot, leaving at 12:40 and 1:15 p. 3. Fare for round trip, including admission to grand stand, 81. Take Mission-street electric Line direcs 10 track. A.B. SPRECKELS, President. FIVE O:‘ MORE RACES DAILY. W.S. LEAKRE, Secretary. SHOOT THE CHUTES Afternoon and Evening. ADMISSION (Adults) 10 CENTS. CHILDREN—ADMISSION, 5c: CHUTES, Sc. Ladles—Chutes, Week-Day Afternoons, Sc. WALTER MOROSCO, less imitations and accept no substitute. All grocers and druggists sell it. NEW TO-DAY—AMUSEMENTS, L MAYTIN AND Co, INCORP'D HEATRE N\ PROPS. ——TO-NIGHT! ———TO-NIGHT! — s#iesO'NEILL 1~ “HAMLET!” Saturday Matinee VIRGINIUS Saturday and Sunday Nights........ vose seen ..MONTE CRISTO EXTRA—SEATS NOW SELLIN: NEXT WEEK-—Second and Last Week of MR. O’NEILL. Monday and Friday ..VIRGINTUS Tuesdsy and Sun Matinee COURIER MO OF LYONS TE CRISTO .~ HAMLET Wednesd Thursday ALEom MEATRE e & Co |NCORPD PROPS. LAST The Always Welcome 4 Comedy Drama, TIMES! [0 ,” —aveme | “FRIENDS MATINEE By Edwin Milton Royle. SATURDAY. Management of Arthur C. Aiston. NEXT The Creative Comedian, " DAILEY In “THE NIGHT CLERK." ——SEATS NOW SELLING.— FRICDANDLR.GOTTLOD & o+ LE53E3 ATD MANAGLRS -+ YOUR 1S TIME SHORT 1IF YOU WANT TO SEE SINBAD® OOME QUICK—4 MORE TIMES! Nothing Like It Since *‘Ali Baba.” | Next Monday—FRANK MAY ) in “PUDD'NHEAD WILSON."” TIVOLI OPERA-HOUSE MBS, EENESTINE KRELING, Proprietor & Mansger LAST NIGETS Of Richard Stahl’s Romantic Opera, «SAID PASHA!” SEATS NOW ON SALE ——FOR—— NEXT WEEXK! The Spectacular Easter Burlesque, “BLUER BEARD! All the Latest Fads in Song, Dance and Humor. “RAYS OF LIGHT!"" The Latest Terpsichorean Novelty. Popuiar Prices—25c and 50c. MOROSCO’S GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. The Handsomest Family Theater in America. Sole Lesses and Manager THIS EVENING AT EIGHT, e Romantic French Melodrama, “THE RED POCKETBOOK ! Adapted from the French by Louls Imhaus. A Magnificent Production’ New Mechauical Ef fects! Sixty People on the Stage! EVENING PRICEs—250 and 5% Famlily Circie and Gallery. 10z Usual Macinees Saturday and Sund: ORPHEUM. O'Farrell Etreet. Between Stockion and Powsll. | TO-NIGHT AND DURING THE WEER An Unparalleled List of Notables! THE 3 MARVELLES, SEGOMMER, THE NAWNS, BRUET AND RIVIERE ——AND—— A SUPERB VAUDEVILLE COMPANY! Reserved seats, 25c: Saicony, 10c; Opera caales and Box seats, 50c. GROVER’S ALCAZAR. To-night—Matinees Saturday and Sunday “THE HOMESTEAD.” LEONARD GROVER JR.’S HIT. LORAINE AND HOWELLS, BROWN-DAVIDSON TRIAL. | PRICES—10c, 15¢c, 25c. Reserved Orchestrs, 28e MONDAY-RANCH 10, THE AUDITCRIUM. Corner of Jones and_Eddy Streets. Friedlander, Gotllob & Co. Lesseesand Managers Your Last Chance! —This Week Only! 2 Matinees—Saturday and Sunday Afternoons. THE FAMOUS GEORG1 A MINSTRELS! Ieaded by the Great BILLY KERSANDS. FREE CONCERT infrontof the Theaterat every performance by the fines: Band traveling. PRICES—15¢, 25¢ and 50c. MACDONOUGH THEATER (OAKLAND), d Saturday and Sun. Evgs. To-night, an Crowded Houses! “The Fair Mahatma,” ANNA EVA FAY. Secure Seats—Prices, 25c, 35¢, 50c—No higher. SUTRO BATHS ——AND—— PLEASURE GROUNDS! THE MAMMOTH FIRTH WHEEL ALWAYS RUNNING. FREE SWING FOK CHILDREN, HAUNTED SWING, MYSTIC MAZE and PUNCH AND JUDY Constantly in Operation on MERKY WATY. BATIES Open from 7 A. M, Until 11 P, M, Daily,

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