The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 17, 1896, Page 10

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10 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1896. SHALL THE LADIES HAVE THE BALLOT? Mrs. Cooper and Dr. Voor- sanger Discuss the Question. TEE SEXES ON A LEVEL. According to the Rabbi the Family Is the Unit of Society. MISS ANTHONY THE REFEREE The Vetcran Suffragist Predicts the Speedy Advent of a New Era for Wemen. “Ought women to vote?”” The spacious auditorium of the Young Men’s Christian Association building was thronged to the doors last night with people anxious to hear the latest answer to this much vexed question. Nor did the fairer portion of humanity preponderate. The tyrant, man, was there in force, to hear himself berated or defended,.as the case might be. The atfair was 1n the na- ture of an informal discussion between Mrs. Sarah B. Cooper and the Rev. Dr. Voorsanger, Miss Susan B. Anthony act- ing as referee. At 8 o’clock Dr. Voorsanger, in faultless evening costume, escorted to tne seat of henor on the stage Miss Anthony, who looked a picture of graceful old age, her clear cut, classic features wreathed in sil- very locks arranged in the fashion of a half century ago, and her spare, erect figure clad in & plain but elegant costume of black brocade. Mrs. Cooper, in black nun’s veiling, with a corsage bouquet of tea roses, took a seat next her rabbinical antagonist, and Mrs. Ada Van Pelt, Mme. Louise Sorbier, Mrs. A. A. Sargent, and other well-known lady suffragists occupied chai! either side of the stage. “Why do I believe in woman suffrage?” commenced Mrs. Cooper. “I answer that woman has to obey the law, has to pay taxes and is amenable to all the vicissi- tudes to which men are subject. Hence 1 believe woman should have a right to say something as to the administration and enactment of the laws. And, besides, it seems more in accord with our grand American ideal that all the rational beings who have to submit to the authority of the government should have some voice in the government. ““We are told that women do not wish to vote. Soralso were we told that the ne- groes did not wish to be freed. Yet when they were liberated none of them elected to remain in slavery. When they were freed tney voted. Why should we con- sider the wife, the mother or the sister less worthy to approach the polis than the negro? T know that St. Paul—the dear, stern- browed old bachelor—says that woman should keep silent in church and in public assemblies. But what would he think of the jewels and the graceful, elegant clothes worn by the ladies of to-day? The truth is that he wrote for the pagan women of old, whose morals were at a low ebb. Hence, the great apostle wished his converts of the fairer sex to be distin- guished by their modesty in dress and de- meanor. “Napoleon I once asked Mme. de Staet why women persisted in meddling with politics. ‘Sire,’ she answered, ‘if you men will persist in hanging us, we ought at least to have the right to ask the reason why.' Taxation without representation is tyranny. Yet women are taxed in this free country without anything in the shape of representation. “Does this seem right and just? To be sure we are told that women are better than men because they have been kept from politics. Well, if this be true, then why can we not disfranchise the men and see whether that step will make them any better than they are. “As at present situated woman labors under many unjust discriminations. Now, ifa motherdies, there is no confusion in the family—a new wife comes, new children are born, and nothing is upset. Bur let the father die, then the inheritance is divided among widow and children, and in many cases we find children complain- ing that they have to ‘support their mother’ out of the property which she helped to accumulate. Is this just? “I am a convert to the doctrine of woman ‘suffrage. Some years ago I even ‘wrote against it, but of late years I have come to regard the matter trom a differ- ent standpoint. A day is coming when those whom God hath joined shall not be put asunder. Man and woman shall enjoy an equal independence, bear an equal por- . tion of life’s burdens and recognize obli- gations which are reciprocal. The day is coming, and we may live to see it.” A burst of applause greeted Mrs. Cooper as she took her seat, a number of hand- some florai tributes being handed to nher over the footlights. Dr. Voorsanger in his reply said: “We hear that women are equal to men. ‘There is very little to say in answer to this since itis true. There are in fact too many men who ought to be keptout of politics and obliged to stay at home. Who could look for a more disgusting state of things than that which surrounds the ovallot-box at the present day? This condition it is that keepsso many good men opposed to women voting. The at- mosphere of, ignorance and - corruption which pervaces the pollsis unfit for a good woman to breathe. “One thing I must, however, say: If woman goes out into the devious ways of government the home becomes imperiled. We know what took place in ancient Rome when women, who should be mentioned only in terms of pity, were at the beadof politics and letters. A woman who be- comes & wife and a mother gives to the state a certain security that she will aid in the formation of good and worthy citi- zens. The question of woman suffrage would never have arisen had not-men forced woman to cry out for justice. The ancient Jewish law gave to a woman hav- ing no male representative a civic equality with men. But this applied to single women. The wife and mother and daugh- ter need not vote, since they have hus- band, son, brother or father to plead their cause and represent them at the polls. The unit in the sum of the stateis not man or woman, but the family, of which the husband and father is the accredited representative. ‘I believe the giving of the ballot to woman in the present state of society would be a menace to the home and a calamity to the Nation. Woman is man’s equal in birth and station; she is his superior in virtue, but she cannot cope with bim in the arena of politics and public life. Give me a century of women free from paint, powder and false modesty and then we will have a race which will consist of units in a grander and nobler civilization than earth hasever yet known. These families, or units, will not guarrel about the ballot, but the family itself will vote through one or other of its noble heads, either the kingly man or the queenly woman. “I contend that the men alone should vote, for the present. The men, I say, and not the loafers, not the corrupt, degraded beasts who walk on two feet. The true men should vote, and if they alone wielded the power of the ballot, women would need it not.” Miss Anthony then summed up the merits of the two adaresses: “Rabbi Voorsanger,” she commenced, “seems to think that the woman is to grow up into an equality witi man, though she yet remains in bonaage. It seems like not allowing a boy to enter the water until he has learned how to swim. How can the boy learn to swim or the woman learn to be man’s equal until both are free to take the necessary steps for the acquirement of the knowledge which they seek. “It 1s said that woman suffragists are scolding viragos; but I nave known the loveliest women to be prominent in this movement since its inception. Think of Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Caay Stanton Lucy Stone and so many elegant, culti- vated and noble women who have graced this grand concerted effort for woman's emancipation. I could go over the rabbi’s objections, but it is hard to buffet against the air.” “I am not sufficiently advanced yet to contradict a lady,”” interposed the rabbi. SPRING EXHIBIT OPENS, Many Good Pictures,and a Few That Are Bad and In- different. ART INSTITUTE RECEPTION. Open House at the Hopkins Mansion to Members and Their Friends. The spring eghibition of paintings at the Art Institute was inaugurated last night by a reception to members and their friends. The rooms were charmingly decorated for the occasion with palms, ferns and quantities of natural flowers. There was a large attendance at the re- ception, so large, in fact, that at times it was difficult to obtain a view of some of the most interesting pictures, in conse- quence of the block in front of them. During the course of the evening a musi- cal programme was performed and re- freshments were served in the university extension lecture hall. The picture exhibit is interesting, al- though not very large. Some of the works the fall of the year, although most people would feel that the distant mountains lacked some of the delicate autumn haze so characteristic of this region. Taken altogether the picture is good in color, but lacks the feeling of excitement that would | surely take possession of a crowd of peaple coming suddly and unexpectediy upon such a grand xight as the bay of San Fran- cisco. TLe figures seem a little **posey.” But there is no disputing the fact that the picture depicts what it is intended to. Mr. Keith's picture is certainly one of his best efforts as a work of art. It is full of an intense drampatic interest and magnificent in color. %e ky is grand and every figure—the composition is filled with life. There is movement and excite- went everywhere. The distant waters of the bay flash in the sun. But considered historically there is little about it to tell that it is what it pretends to be. The fiz- ures are only “‘indicated,” and of no value to show the character of the people or the costumes of the period. On the top ofa hill in the picture there is a large cross that under tge circumstances would be an impossibility. In factitis so gigantic it would weigh many thousands of pounds and could not be put into position without the aid of derricks and steam engines. As a pictonal effect it is grand, but as a fact of history it is an absurdity. Mr. Pissis’ picture isa creditable piece of work in many ways. He has selected his subject to show a time after the first fall rains have come. This of course is all right, but unless a person knew this he would most surely take it for a spring scene, so fresh and green are the hills and trees. The distant mountains are splen- didly f*num,ed and produce a most pleas- ing effect. The figures are not 8o good. | They are poorly drawn and have little ex- pression. The costumes are ali right ap- parently, and as far as the picture goes it represents the subjact selected. The “Ah, how crvel!” rejoined Miss An- thony; *‘that one expression containsin it all the tyranny of past barbarous ages. Men will not argue or dispute with a woman because they consider her beneath them in intellect. But the day is coming, and not all the powers of evil can post- pone its dawning, when woman will force the earth to recognize her as the equal, socially, intellectually and politically, of man. When that day dawns the ballot will come with it; and, women of Amer- ica, we bave not long to wait.” MY INDFFERENT SERVIE Potrero Heights People Angry With the Sixteenth-Street Line. A Road That Has No Beginning and No End—Transfers Net Given by the Cempany. The residents of Potrero Heights are in- dignant. They are angry. They talk of mass-meetings, injunction proceedings and other things not so miid. The object of all these verbs is the abortive and almost useless system of electric-cars that incon- venience the residents of that district daily and hourly. This is the Sixteenth- street electric line extension, This line has, or is supposed to have, a starting point on the bay, near Fillmore street, thence to Church and Sixteenth streets, and along the latter to Harrison. Here the Southern Pacific Railroad Com- | pany’s steam line puts a stop to the lelec- tric-car’s continuation, because the road- bed of the steam line is several feet beiow grade. At this point the passenger bound east or west must alight and cross the railroad tracks on Harrison street at the risk of his life. Should he get across with whole { bones and if a car should happen to be | there he re-embarks anu coatinues his | journey. If there is no car in sight—well one can walk or one can wait. From here the car runs to Bryvant avenue, where it stops short and a connection with another car is made that continues on Sixteenth street to Kansas. The track runs one block on Kansas street to Seventeentn, and this thoroughfare is traveled for six blocks to Connecticut, and along the latter to Eighteenth street (formerly Solano), and along this street to Kentucky street. This is the route, but to travel over it on one of the electric-cars as they are now run will take over one hour, besides the inconvenience of transferring at the points mentioned and running the risks of being ground to pieces at the crossing of Harri- s0n street. Persons living between Bryant avenue and Kentucky street in order to reach Third and Folsom streets have got to walk either to Kentucky street or take the Six- teenth-street car going west and transfer to Bryant and then make the best of the rest of the way, as the company will not | give a transfer from the Solano-street line to Kentucky going north, but only to those going to South 8an Francisco. Again at the junction of Sixteenth street and Bryant avenue passengers, when trans- ferring, must wait_for fiteen minutes, as the Solano-street line runs at those inter- vals only. — - Libel Suit Decided. United States District Judge Morrow yester. day handed down an opinion in the libel case of the Esrnmoor Steamship Company against the New Zealand Insurance Company. The opinion says: Libel in personara to recover pro rata of a gen- eral average adjustment. Two items allow: by adjusters as general average disallowed by the court. They were: (1) The allowances for dam- age to the wrecking ouifit of Peter Wright & Sons, incurred in rendering assistanceto the stranded ship Earnmoor. (2) The allowanceof profit paid to the charter as a conalition of relinquishing the voyage. The remalning items were allowed and a tll;té;eo entered in favor of libelant for the differ- After deducting the items disallowed, th judgment stands for about $88! 2 ————a California-Made Goods. The secretary of the Manufacturers’ and Pro- ducers’ Association yesterday sent a letter to the Board of Public Works of Oakland request- ing that the board in purchasing supplies f the Oakland Fire Department give th}; pe:eleorf ence to California-made goods. In conclusi the writer sta tes: o “The Fire Department of this City is now purchasing California-made goods exclusively, and by so doing is keeping in circulation in this State large amount of money that would otherwise go East. Permit usto add that if jour orders are placed with California manu- acturers the assistance that you will thereby render tothe industries of the State will be greatly appreciated.” —————— Arrested at Los Angeles. Detective Ross Whitaker left for Los Angeles yesterday afternoon to bring back two men ar- rested there on Wednesday. One is G. W. Per. sons, who is wanted on the charge of obtain. ing $25 by false pretenses from John Bennert, 27 Santome street, a few days ago. Persons home is in Cincinnati, snd the police say that he belongs to a highly respectable family. Tne other is J. A. McLure, who passed a Jorged v A. check for £150, purporting to be signed by A. 10 Front street, on the Kelly E. Brooks Ridley, & Donohoe Ban —————— > Made Goods. The Manufacturers’ and Producers’ Asso- ciation in its search for information relating to theamount of convict-made goods shipred from the East 1o this State has sent letters to its members in which the followin are asked : g questionsg ““Who handles prison-made ds in line in this City or State?” mc ellal!?‘(lg ’ b Emne Pass % / Some of the Pictures Seen at the Spring Exhibition of the Art Institute. |Reproduced from the originals by a “Call’’ artist.] are exceedingly good. Many have been painted by artists who have aimed at a great deal and have only succeeded in achieving mediocrity, while a few of the works are noticeably bad. The paintings that attracted most inter- est and comment last nigat were those entered for the Phelan competition. The offer of $1000 by Mr. Phelan for the best victure illustrative of certain important events in the history ol California evi- dently was little inducement to the artists of the Golden State, as only four of them responded with paintings. They are bung in the conservatory and in the daytime especially can be seen to perfect advant- age. Three of the artists—Mathews, Keith and Pissis—selected the subject, ‘‘The DisooveBy of San Francisco Bay by Por- tola.” On the whole the three pictures are disappointing. In the first place they are “‘studio’’ pictures; but this. of course, can be overlooked, considering the fact ibat the bad weather of the past winter prevented outdoor study. Every one of the three pictures has a great deal of merit and the artists deserve credit for their efforts, but, each has also a number of shortcomi Pictures of this character cannot be sim- ply considered as ‘‘pictures.’’ but each almost mechanical detail must be weighed to see how they conform to historical which they are handled?” ‘‘the prisons from which they are imported?” “and such other in- formation as you may have.” ————— Ask Mr. Havens of Con. Virginia what Mitch- ell’s Magic Lotion does for sprains. ot facts. In this respect Matthews' picture comes nesrest to the requirements. Every detail has been carefully studied, and no doubt it would be impossible to find an error of fact in the whole composition. The landscape 1s decidealy Califor:ia in horses in the in color ana tically no way some distance of close to the W. Best picture are very poor, both in druwing. There is prac- ‘‘anatomy’’ to them and the back in the picture instead foreground. selected his subject, “En- trance of the ‘San Carlos’ into the Bay of San Francisco,” but the work can hardly be counted in the competition. There is scarcely anything about it to suggest the subject and the painting is so execrable as to be unworthy of consideration. ’!ll‘g Test of the exhibit consists of oil vainiings, water colors and pastels, in each department of which there is somo good work. There are also a very few etchings. Jules Pages’ “Un coin de cui- sine 2 Montmartre’' is one of the best oil paintings shown, for the drawing is ex- cellent, and out'6f the apparently hum- drum subject of an old-fashioned French kncb_ep the painter has extracted some exquisite color effects. Robinson’s“Fish- in: Boats at Twilight” isin bis usual style, the waves and sand are particularly good. _Eraest C. Peixotto shows a portrait of a girl in a yellow dress against a green back- ground. The colors are cleverly handled and the girl's head is strong, but the draw- ing of the figure leaves something to be desired. Peixotto's nursery scene, which hangs in the entrance hall, has some good qualities, particularly in regard to color, but it is banal in sentiment, and the way in which the mother has her finger ls‘ldkngnnut her nose hardly suggests a wink. There is nothing of the studio picture in which they are painted should be | %lbcut Joullin s studies of sand dunhes. i They are replete with the tints and atmos- | phere of the open, the color values being | particulariy good. No.100—“A Study’'— | 1s one of the 1aost charming landscave bits in the whole exbibition. Yelland’s | pictures are all in his usual sryle. One of the most noticeable is ‘‘Evening in the Hay Fields,” with the red glow of depart- ing day illuminating the iandscape. William Keith is well represented, and his.pictures aroused the usual amount of interest. “Summer Twilight in Sonoma Valley” is a work which one seems to see into, so excellently are the distances painted. “The Oaks” has nothing par- ticular to distinguish it from Keith’s other oaks, but ““‘April Showers” is_rather more panoramic than most of Keith's work. Some especially good canvases are shown by Arthur X(athews. “Pan- dora” is a work that contains consider- able dramatic expression, and both the drawing and flesh tints of the figure in the foreground are strong. ‘‘Hagar and Ish- mael” is an interesting study of figures and landscape. Landscapes predominate in the exhibit, and in the fignre canvases, apart from the portraits, the artists seem to have chosen DETAIL FRoy AFMATHE W COMPETITION-PICTURE their models for their homeliness rather than their beauty. One of the fine fancy sketches where beauty is apparent is Nellie F. Binckley’s “Study.” Among the landscapes Latimer has some notice- able work. His oil-painting, “A Smoky Morning,” is good, but the water-color, “*A Gray Day,” is even better. The work of £. M. Pissis attracted favor- able comment last night. His '‘Portrait” is an interesting study of a girl's head, and No. 55 is a very effective bit of Wwood- land country. John A. Stanton shows a good study of a grisette sitting at the outdoor 1able of a cafe. His “‘Evening Scene in Brittany” is weird and peculiar. It represents a Cali- fornia landscape with a Brittany sunset— the sunset of a country with long twilight, which leaves an afterglow. There is a rudely sculptured cross in the foreground, near which sits a peasant woman of excep- tional ugliness, whose big sabots are ag- gressively in evidence. : “Blue Gums and Poppies” is a rather clever imitation of Monet, by S. Me- Crea. The purple mountains and trees and vivid green grass have a touch of truthfulness to California scenery in early spring time. “The Landscape,” No. 19, by Mollie G. Hutchinson, is anotber rm,he‘r clever work of the green-and-purple schoo.,.' Miss Helen Hyde’s *Happy Thoughts’ is a candle-light stnay with some good color effects; her portrait of Mrs. David Bixler is a darinr calor design, but the re- sult is a tryingly crude background; the drawing of ‘the tigure is not good, but the artist has succeeded with her head, which is a good likeness. Cadenasso shows a pre! Mrs. Older. - 5 5 Among the many other interesting oil aintings, Mrs. M. T. Menton’s “Mending %illy's oat’’ shows good quality. = Sidney Armer’s ‘‘Foz on the Lupins' is a preity study in greens and grays. Some good work is to be found in the water colors. Mrs. L. K. Mathews has an especially good siudy of sky and sand at Santa Barbara; and Gamble exhibits sketches around the bay which are deli- cate and artistic, as well as being a trans- cription of nature. Ugo Fischer’s work is in his usual style, a little more conven- tional perhaps. Pauline Dworzek has some pretty work. In the pastels Mrs. Alice Chittendon shows & portrait of Mrs. Irving M. Scott, which is exceliently done and is a striking likeness. There are a few works whose presence in the exhibition can only be explained on the grounds of -a temporary mental aber- ration on the part of the hanging commit- tee. No. 124, for instance, has neither sentiment nor technigue to recommend’it. The canvas represents a lady with features askew gazing at an album in an impossi- bly green interior. On either side of her isa wooden child. No. 146 seems like a hysterical attempt to invest a cabbage garden with dramatic qualities—that is, if the chunks of green in the foreground are tty portrait of cabbages. A weird tree of a variety un- known to naturalists rises in the middle distance and the ckground is leit en- tirely to the beholder’s imagination. Itis hard, too, to tell why No. 145 was hung, for the drawing is bad and the colors are impossible. There is much, however, to console the | beholder for a few bad pictures. Some of the work done by the students is especi excellent. J.Martinez's‘*An Indian Sc tor’’ is an_especially clever study. M. Froeiich has also a good study. Throwing the Discus. Discus-throwing was a later and more | retined form of hurling the stone. In Homeric times, and even at Olympia, a stone or maos of iron was first used for the purpose. This was beld by a leathern thong, swuug in a circle and hurled as far as possible. A circular or lenticular disk of bronze was used at least as early as the beginning of the fifth century. A stand- ard weight must, of course, be assumed for the great vames. A discus now in the British Museum, which secms to have been used, weighs eleven pounds nine ounces, but whether this was the standard weight or not is not definitely known. The | thrower took his stand npon a slight ele- | vation of limited circumference, where he | could have a secure foothold and was pre- i vented from running; then, with a swing | of the arm and a corresponding movement | of the whole body, be hurled the discu far as possible. i movement was recognized by the scnlpmr Myron in his famous statue ‘‘The Disco- bolus,” and is understood by the modern | goll. As hayllus, he discus even when he makes a drive at for records at discus-throwing, s as | The value of the body | athlete when he swings the hammer, or | Your Face shows the state of your feelings and the state of your health as well. Impure blood makes itself apparent in a_ pale, sallow com- plexion, pimples and skin erup- tions. If you are feeling weak and worn out and do not have a healthy appearance, you will derive great benefit from taking that invigorating stimulant Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey which will purify your blood, quicken your circulation, build up your system and give you new life. It promotes digestion, cures constipation and arouses the glow of health in every part of the body. Try it! Sold by all grocers and drug- gists. | | again, is said to have thrown ti ninety-five feet.—*“The Old Games,” in the Century for April. A lobster’s skin when shedding splits down the back and comes off in two equal parts. The tail slips out of the shell like a finger out of a glove. NEW TO-DAY. ) e A WHOLE SHOW hereat 750 Mission. Furniture-land stands aghast at our prices: Rockers,$3; Ladies’ Desks, $6 50; Bookcases, $5; Chiffoniers, $8. All of them in oak, mahogany or birch, Come and enjoy the performance. INDIANAPOLIS FURNITURE CO. 750 Mission St. RAILROAD TR\AJVEL‘ 'SAVFRANCISCO & NORTH P CIFIC RAILWAY 00, Tiburon Ferry—Foot of Market St, | San Francisco to San Rafael. WEEK DAYS—7:30, 9:00, 11:00 A.M.: 12:3! P Thrsdass_Extra trig . Saturdays—Extra trips a¢ 1:50 | 0.9:30, 11:00 A..; 1:30, 3:30, | 3 | | i : San Rafael to San Francisco. WEEK DAYS—6:15, 7:50, 9 11:10 A w.; | " 12:48,3 10 7. x. Saturdays—Exira trips Pu. i 5, 9:00, 11:10 A M.; 1:40, 3:40, 5:00, 6:25 P. M. | Between San Francisco and Schuetzen Park same | schedule as above. | Let Arrive | san Francisco. | 10efet | gan Francisco. | 1896, SuN- Sun- | WEER 7180 AM| Novato, |10:40 AM| 8:4) AM | ;.xg ) Petaluma, | 6:05 Py 10:10 AM 8:10 rx|5:00 Px Santa Rosi.| 7:30 rx U:15 r | Fulton, \ 1 7:30 Ax Windsor, 10:10 Ax | Healdsburs, H Geyserville, | 8:30 #[7:30 ax| Cloverdale! | 7:30 rxe| 6:157x ! Fieta, s Hopland & AM| 7:30a%| Ukiab. | 7:30 vu| 6:15»m 0 ax| 10:10 Ax 7:30 Ax|Guerneville. | 7:30 px Px | 6:15 Pu [7:30 AM| Sonoma |10:40 AM| | 0 rx|5:00 Pxc| and | Glea Ellen. ¢(7:30 AM| 0 Pac | 5.00 pa| Sebastopol. Stages connect at Gloverdale for the Geysers. Stages connect st Pleta for Highland Springs, | Kelsevville, Lakeport. Stages connect at Uklah for Vichy Springs, Blas Lakes, Laurel Dell, Upper Lake, Booneviile, Green- wood, Mendocing City. Fort Bragg, Usal, Westport, Cahto, Willetts, Calpelia, Pomo, Potter Valley, John Day's, Lively’s, Gravelly Valley, Harris, Scoia snd Eureka. Saturday to Monday round-trip tickets at reduced rates. On Sundays round-trip tickets to all polnts oe- yond San Rafael ¢ half rates. Ticket Offices. 650 Market st., Chronicle buflding. H.C. WHITING, R. X. RYAN, Gen. Manager. Gen. Pass. Agent. NORTII(PACIFIG C0AST RAILROAD Via Sausalito Ferry). From Saa Franciseo, Comm: n-Ing March 26, 1896. WEEKDAYS. For Mill v-ue\l and San Rafael — 7:00, *8: *9:15 10:15, 45, A. +1:45, 3 B30, 000 85 2. k. tra trips for San Rafael on Mondays, Wednes- and Saturdays at 1190 £ o0 SUNDAYS. | For Mill Valley and San Ratael— *9:00, *10:00, 11:30 A, 3.3 %512 8, *1:30, *3:15, *4:00, §:80, 645, B:30 ». h. Kxura trip to Sausalitoat Tra'ns marked * run to San Qu **13:: -3¢ does not run to Mii Valse e 2 HROUGH TRAINS. 148 P. M. weekdays—Cazadero and way stations. azadero aud way stations. olnt Reyes ana way statlons. A. w. Sundays— P Olympic | TUnder one roof is what we've got down E VERY Bl:i ONE Tu ! L'your eyes and fit tnem to_Spectace | glasses with instriments of his ow | wLose superiority bas not been eq | cess has been due to the merits of Ottice Hours—12 10 4 P. 3. EXAMINE s and Eye D, OXR. I Y A, T, SATURDAY APRIL 18, And Every Fifth Day Thereafter. Leave from S. P. Co.’s Ferry landing, foot of Market st., at 8P, x. | 5 0 —Including Berth in Pullman Tour- i B ist Sleeper. | First-class tickets, inciuding rst-class tickets, including berth tn Q7 (). Puliman Standard Siceper. - $10:20 SPECIAL NOTICE. This train will not stop 1o deliver or take on pas- sengers at intermediate stations, nor will tickets be so'd or baggage checked to such points. Through Tickets for Puget Sound B its oo Bnle ot adneca Rates. sarther information apply at 613 MARKE RE (Grand Hotel Ticket Office), San Francisco. RICHARD GRAY. T. H. GOODMAN, affic Mgr. Gen. Pass. Agt N IPACIFIC COMPANX. (PACIFIC SYSTEM.) ue to nrrive at SAN FRANCISCO, Triins lenve nnd ar Frox Mancu 2, 15% 3 len and ! Maryssil ¥ epted Oroville. n | 0r Martinez, San Valicio, i Napa, Calistoga, LI Verano and Santil Rosa. 4:00¢ Benicia 5:00 Santa T Ltoute, Atlantic for Mojave aud East. Vallejo. opez aywards, NI 17:00¢ Vallejo . 7:00p Oregon Jixpress, Sacramento, Marys- lle, Redding, 2 Portlan Sound and East . €10:05p “Sunset Limited,” Fresno, Los Angeles, El Paso, New Orleans .. $12:452 Narrow Gauge). A Simta Cruz Excursion, Santa Cruz s ‘and Principal Way Stations ... 18:052 8:154 Newark, Centervillo, Boulder C 5:508 Stations. % #2:159 Newark, Centerville, San Jose, New Almaden, Felton, Boulder Creek, Santa Cruz and Principal Way Stations 4:151r Nowarks San " COAST DIVISION (Third & Townsend Si 6:45 San Jose and Way Statious (New Almaden Wednesdays only)....... 8:154 San Jose, Tres I'inos, Hanta Cruz, cilic Grove, Paso Robles, San iis Ohispo, Guadalupe aud Prin- pal Way Statious ts.) 0 San Jose, Gilroy, Tres Pinos. & ta iniz, Slizas,Monterey aud Pactllo 1 Melrose, Seminary Park, Fitchburg, San Leandra and Haywards. $:99% | ¢ Rums through to Niles. $t11:15p ) ¢ From Niles. CREEK ROUTE FERRY. From SAK FRASCISGO—Foot of Market Street (Skip &)= 5 ag 11:00a.0. 1100 4200 $3:00 *6:001 From OZKLAND—Foot of Broadway.— *6:00 8:00 $2:00 *3:00 34:00 10:00a.x. $12:00 *1:00 *5:00e.M. A for Morning. P for Afternoon. * SBundays e!cepudf + Saturdays only. $ Sundays only. Tuesdays only. Y 1 Monday: Thovadny and Saturiss mistis onir. 2 Atlantic AND Pacific RAILROAD Trains leave from and arrive & Market-Street Ferry. SANTA FE EXPRE>> To Chicago via A. & P. Direct 1_!". Lenves every day at 5 P. M, carryinz Follman Palace Sleepers and Tourisc Sleepers to Chicage via Kansas City without change. ADDex cars fof Denver and St. Louis. CHICAGO LIMITED, From Los Angeles to Chicago. Solid Vestibule Train Daily, with Dining-cars, under Harvey s management. ‘onnecting traing leave San Francisco at 9 A. and P. M. daily, The best rallway from California to the East New rails, new ties; no dust: interesting sceneryj and good meals in Harvey's dining-roem or dining ™ Tioket Ofice—G44 Market Street, Chronicie Bulld)ug: tion of a famous French physician, wi “CUPIDENE" NHOOD RESTORED.:<zniisss Il quickly vous or discases of the generative o S LTS Ipsomnia, Painsn the Bk Seminal Ertatiin, Rotrae s &"flfigj arry, austing ns, .Varicocels Constipation. It stopa all losses b > quick pessof discharge, wilch it ot ehecked oot 15 Bermmtonis AUk, BEFORE ano AFTER all the horrors of Impotency, CUPIDENE cleanses theliver, ihe kidneys and the irinary organs of all {mpuritice. 4 SUPIDENE sirongthens and restorea small wait organs, e80! ferer, are nof Y cent B Rl Loty s makey Sttt BTl et v loney return e $15002 box, Six for §5.00, by Atk " Bond for raaarmed 1f s hd fesrimmontafet Cllect & permanea Address DAVOL MEDICINE CO., 1170 Market street, San Francisco, Cal. For sale by BROOKS' PHARMACY, 119 Powell street

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