The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 27, 1897, Page 7

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E AT T —— SRR AT S gy ' THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27. 1897. AMUSEMENTS, PALDWIN THEATER —*Shore Acres. CALIEOBNIA 1HEATER.—Sousa’s Band. R At the French Ball* cka - House.— 10,000 Miles ATCAZAR THEATER - “Saints and Sinners.” OrEra HOUSE — Galate 1c8’ PAVILY Bathing and 1 erformances. ES AND BEight street, one block PACIFIC CoasT Joc AUCTION SALES. BY INDIANA ATUCTION Co.-This day, February 27 'Furnijure, av 1067 Market st., s 11 o'clock. BY P. J. BARTH 27, Fur- pifore, 418 McAll OITY NEWS IN BRIEF. sm Keesing has sued L. E. Keesing for ‘A fair, warm Saturday is promised by the Weather Bureau. Up 0 date there have been reported 797 cnses of measles this month. The police have begun & crusade against the pawnbrokers who buy stolen goods. John M. Fitzgibbon died y of heart diseuse. has beea granted a ans for desertion. anniversary ball given by or, N. 8. G. W., last night was a | eant Blaache Thy eleventh Stanjord Pg V. H. Hall has left London for | At devise & water systen for mine- | waers of the Rand. The two United States gunboats now being eonstructed at the Union Iron Works will be | launchéd March 18. | A, Harrington, one of the founders of Circle | and owner of valuable placer mines near ero, is in tae City The Iroquois Club was interested last even- ffg- by » paper on Natfonal Postal Savings Banks, by S. E. Moffetr. ng exhibition of the Century Club | s well attended. Many beautiful exhibited. mation was filed in the United States | Court yesterday against five Chinese | ged with illegal mining. | A tiew opera, “The Bride ect,”” by John | n ot “El Capi- | soon be produced. | 11 of the Tivoli is going up to | ning 1o assist the mauagers of n their arrangements. aer Heacock gave his decision in redition proceedings yesterday, prisoner on both charges. | Twelve Ohio peopie, headed by J. W. Thew, | o They are looking into the iruitin’ and are thinking of buying land. es at Ing track yester- Anabasis, Neoula, Basquil, n Mil ncorpor: ¥ g Chung, Hoo e Fun, Gin Hong and Chin Jim. | | ncisco Labor Council will send ns to Washington urging that | n toe new Postoflice be begun st 1e Supervisors after all, to pay tor th 3 will not abor Council last even- utterances made and reso- | recent Labor Law Con- | and John W. Ruggles havi rthe probate of the will of | es, deceased. Her estate is pson, convicted of stealing s has a chance to be He is probably a victim of | 1 Mission, under the aus- pal’ churches, was g with an entertain- | ce gave & decision yesterday ning Police Judge Cempbell’s decision 1 ing John Giyan $100 for ranning a downtown poolroum . Greenway says that the dissolution of | day N t Cotilion Club ie imminent. local leaders expect 10 make the Terpsi- | choreans the fasnionable club. Judge Coffey has reduced the fees of Execu- tdr Cr. he Thomas Mootry estate by cut- % 2, and has also lopped $500 off i Attorney M. Mullany. reet Commttee listened last night to rguments of contractors and quarry s in favor of red and biue rock respec- and will report its decision 1o the U t attached to an express wagon be- | 5 Norman Dunne, ran away last eve purtially wrecked a Mission-street ry Ellis, s passenger, was slighly | the Carson fight, while Chicago has :d jour trains of twelve cars each. ot 7000 tickets are aiready sold for the pavilion.: The Grand Jury for chi | ars have already been engaged here | | | sterday found an ind entagainst Jacob L. Thurston for shoot nt George H. Peitis with intent to kil G. Lapisanto for stealing a ring’from 3 iiva. John Lyn Folsom street jursy of “sellin B saloon-keeper, Twelfth and was yesterday convicted by a quor to a minor, and his ut- cadwell, was.fined $25 for con- court. riving his name as John Hagan and dence as 33 South Fark, sustained a wound of the leit breast last night. | he fell from a Jounge upon a carving ich he had in his hand. ‘Attorney James Crittenden’s contempt case 11 come up before Judge Hebbard to-day. If « petitioner is not ready to proceed tae writ &s corpus wi:l be dismissed, and the will be remsnded to the custody of reriff. Chafles Clawson, convicted of receiving stole a to serve ate Prison | at §an Qu u, and Thomas Corawell, & burg- | jar evas sentenced o a similar term in the < game prison. The case of Nicholas Brennan, charged with ynious assauit, has been put on the reserved calendar in Judge Wallace’s court, to be re- stored on motion. Brennan will be tried on the charges of extortion and {aking & female by inducement for immoral purposes. Phe laaies are maintaining the greatest| sccreey regarding the gowns they will wear at the Marai Gras bail. Tne beaux and leading _ peofessional and business men of the City bave ordered jor \he occasion costumes famous in history, literature, the drama and the opera. Tiie unemployed have established an_em- oy t office at their headguarters and are property, has been sentew ing supplies irom their meager larder eve the distress in families dependent many ot those enroiled upon the books the organization, which numbers about 2000 men out of work. aland literary entertainment is to en by the Van Ness Fraternity for the fit of ‘the Second Unitarisn Church, at ion *Music-hail, corner of Twenty-first a"Howard streets, Friday evening, March 5. exceil:nt programme has been arranged, ¢ followed by dancing and refreshments. Thursday afternoon, Marchd4, there will & mass meeting in the Chamber of Com- : composed of the members of the two of Trade, Manufacturers and Producers e Merchants' Association and the Cham- { Commerce. The purpose is to drait a on 10 the suthorities of Washington to possible for the speedy construction of iew San Francisco Postoflice. be property-owners on Liberty Heights. at J/ & meeiing held February 23, organized under the name of the Liberty Heights Im- provement Clun, The following officers wero d o serve for one year : President, Horace first vice-president, Rolla V. Watt: A mu Yot ice-president, John W. Ruggles; sident, Johu Elder; secretary and treasurer, Jobn J. Woodhouse. An executive commitiée of five mewmbers will be eiected on ch 2. The large and enthusiastic member- promises well for the development of this rapidly growing district, | crafis in the bay. | the 'Menlo, as she will probably be called | the capt | Ceylon and | they i | got in | Santa Clara, | make sure MORE OPPOSITION FOR THE S, P. |A New Steam-r Ccmpleted for the Vallejo Route. Later She Will Run to Alviso in Connection With the Santa C'ara Rai way. Louis Hansen’s Attempt to Save His Hat Nearly Cost Him His Life on the Pi.dmont. The stern-wheel steamer Grace Barton has been practically rebuilt and is now as good as a new vessel. An upper house has been built on her and in it will be cabins and waiting-rooms for passengers. A tank has been put up near the wheel- house and there will be running water through the vessel in conseguence. On all the otber bay and river steamers the water is supplied from pitchers and water-buckets. The cabin will be a very pretty one, and when ali the alterations are compieted the new steamer will be one of the bestof her class in the bay. ‘Her name will probably be changed to Menlo, as in the near future she will probably be running beiween here and Alviso in connection with the Santa Clara Valley Railway Company. The Piper-Aden-Goodall Company was forced to purcnase the steamer 1in self- defense. They are running opposition to the Southern Pacific, and some time ago when they wanted to lay the Sunol up for repairs they found what that opposition meant. They could neither beg, borrow nor steal a vessel, as Manager Pryor put it yesterday. Anagentof the railroad had been around to every owner of a stern- wheel steamer in the bay, and the result was that noi one of them could be hired for love or money. It was tgen the firm determined upon purchasing the Barton, and now they have one of the handiest The Grace Bacton, or Iater on, will bave ber trial rip on the | bay some time next week. There is consideradle rivalry between | ns of the barks Mohican nudi the barkentine W. H. Di- When they discovered that ere all to sail about the same time | ch was at once made. The Mohican | last night, making the run in | twenty aays, not fast time, considering that the J. D. Spreckels has made it in ten days, but nevertheless the other boats | have not vet been reported. Louis Hansen, a sailor, created a sensa- tion on the ferry steamer Piedmont yes- terday. He was leaning against the rail | on the upper deci when the wind took his nat,and ina vain attempe to getit Hansen went overboard. The vessel was stopped | and a boat lowered, but Hansen persisted in swimming after his hat. “You see,” he explained afierward, “'it was the only hat | 1 had and I wanted to save it. I work on | schooners and was over at Oakland Creek g for a job, and was on _my way hen I fell overboard.” When the captain of the steamer saw that the man had been picked up he proceeded, and the boat, landed the man at the Clay-street anding. There Officer Dowd took him in charze, but when the matter was ex- plained Captain Dunleavy sent him to his home at 711 Mission street. Tue British ship Port Logan will sail probably to-day for Caye Town with a load of wheat. She is only 1833 tons reg- ister, yet her capacity issuch that Captain Pierce has been ablo to stow away 3150 | tons of wheat in her holds. A number oi vessels are going to Cape 'Town, bur, mond. | sirange to say, there seems to be no de- mand for wheat in India. The gypsies have been driven out of Marin County, and thev are now on their way to San Jose, via Menio Park. They | tore down halt the fencing in Mill Valley to use for firewood; chickens jand other domestic animals mysteriously disap- peared, and any loose article thai was left Iying around by the residents cou'd never be found when wanted. Finally the residents of Marin County rose in their wrath and drove out the invaders. Two constables took them in charge anij, brought them all to San Francisco. Thers were eight wagon-loads of them, and-when Sergeant Mahoney saw them coming off the Sausa- lito ferry-boat he at once telephoned the Habor Police station for assistance. Two officers were sent down and the gvpsies | were told that they would have to move on. They asked if they might go to and the serzeant said he dian’t care where they went so long as they got out of San Francisco County. To that they did not lose their way a mounted policeman was sent along to show them the San Mateo boundary line. There seems to be some doubts about the movements of the batile-shipOragon. It has been stated that she will leave next Thursday for Seattle to go on the drydock, but some of her officers assert that she will remain here for at least two months. She certainly needs a cleaning, and the chances are that next Thursday will see her under way. 800N TO CLEAVE THE WATERS. Two Gunboats to Ge Launched at the Union Iron Works. The two United States gunboats, Wheel- ing and Marietta, being built at the Union Iron Works, are now nearly finished. It is expected that they will be launched March 18. Among those who will be present at the Iaunching are representative citizens of Wheeling, ' W. Va., and Marietta, Ohio, from which places the boais have been named. Invitations have not yet been issued, but will be shortly, and a pro- gramme of exercises for the launching will also be prepared. —_— WE take great pleasure in calling the at- tention of our readers to the fifty-first an- nual report (published elsewhere) of the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Com- pany. Itis, taken as a whole, one of the most satisfactory and assuring accountings made public this year. The Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, as the report of the president shows, is con- ducted on conservative lines., It works solely for the large financial benefit of its members—in other words, for all those who are insured in the company. Presi- dent Greene in his report very aotly illns- trates the differences between the s called progressive, or as he terms them, the “rushing’’ members of the insurance profession, who push forward their busi- ness simply for the purpose of aggregat. ing it, without any relation to its ahsolute cost. The Connecticut Mutnal Life's ex- pense, it is said, is less than that of any other company, and only sbout half of that of the great ‘‘pushing” companies. Its resulis to policy-holders are larger than the others, and its stability is greater and more conservative. President Greene's report is one of the most interesting that has been put out for many years, and he takes & very vital and practical view of the insurance question. ————————— It has been computed that between 36,- 000,000 and 37,000,000 babies arrive each | year. _ The Reconstructed Steamer Grace Barton Which Will Probably Be Renamed the Menlo. When the Santa Clara Valley Railway Is Completed She Will Run in Connection With It Between San Francisco and Alviso. In the Meantime She Will Be Put on the Vallejo and Mare Island Route. DEATH CAME 10 HIM SUDDENLY Police Sergeant J. M. Fitz- gibbon Expired Yes- terday. Stricken With Heart Disease as He Alighted From a Cab'e Car. A Veteran of th: Force Who Never Knew a Day cf Sickness—Twenty- Nine Years on Du'y. Police Sergeant John M. Fitzgibbon, one of the veterans of the force, died sua- denly early yesterday morning. He left his home at 545 Howard street to 20 to a restaurant at 9155 Howard street, where it was his custom to eat his break- Pigeon Society will be held this evening at 7:30 o'clock in room 15, 632 Market sireet. The subject of discussion will be the racing events 1or the ensaing year. g OHIO VISITORS HERE. They Are Examining the Fruit Districts and Think of Settling in California, A party of twelve persons from Marion and La Rue, Ohio, zre at the Russ House. They have been in Southern California for about a montn and are now going to visit some of the fruit districts in the vicinity of Sacramento. “We are thinking of buying land and engaging in raising fruit,” said J. W. Thew, one of the visitors, yesterday, “‘and we are now studying the resources of the State. We saw some beautiful fruit lands in the south. Now we want to see what the fruit ranches are like in this part of California. Several of us are thinking seriously of locating here because of the superior chances for getting along. Then it is not cold, as it is in Ohio.’’” The pariy in full is as follows: J. W. Thew and wife, Mrs. John Kishler, Miss Mayne Adams, Miss Clara Reber, Mr: Lewellen, Miss Lewellen, Mrs. Hudson, Mrs. Cusminger, of Marion; Paut F. Frank, Mrs. Emma Frank, Cristline; A. Kridle, La Rue. e ————— FINISHED ITS WORK. Federal Grand Jury Was Discharged by Judge Morrow Yesterday-. The Federal Grand Jury filed its final report yesterday .and was discharged by fast, and on alighting from a car was seen United States District Judge Morrow. POLICE SERGEANT JOHN M. FITZGIBBON, Who Died Suddenly Yesterday Morning. to put his hands to his chest in a manner that indicated te was in pain. From the street he staggered into the restaurant and sank into a chair. A physician was hurriedly summoned, but within a few moments and without hav- ing utfered & word he was dead. Death was doubtless from heart disease, but the Coroner’s office was notified and the body taken to the Morgue. Deceased was a native of Ireland, 64 years of age, and had been on the police force twenty-nine years lacking three days. He had always been in robust health, and it wasa matter of pride to him that be bad never missed a watch through sickness while in the public service. Sergeant Fitzgibbon was appointed to the police force on May 1, 1868, the same day on which Captain Dunieavy became a atrolman, and he was always held high I the esteem of his superiors and fellow officers. He never saw the Board of Police Com- missioners in session—a distinction en- joyed by few of those who have been so long a period in the Police Department. Two years ago the deceased was ap- poiuted to the position of sergeant, but he continued to keep his watch on the Pacific Mail dock, where he had been stationed previously. During his long public service Sergeant Fitzgibbon had accumulated quite a for- tune, his savings being invested in real estate at times when prices were low. In addition to his home at 545 Howard street he owned a large lot on Liberty street, three dwelling houses on Fel! street and ranch in S8an Luis Obisno County. His e taie is valued bout $50,000. Deceased was a widower and had two daughters, one being the wife of William E. White of this City and the other of The report states that twenty-eight in- dictments for offenses against the Federal laws have been returnea during the term, two informations being returned without action. The chairman called attention to the remarkable attendance of the members, only twenty-two vacant chairs being noted during the term out of a possible 575. Thanks were returned to United States District Attorney Foote and As- sistant District Attorney Bert Schles- singer for courteous treaiment during the term. The jury was organiz'd on November 24. 1896, with the appointment of M. P. Jones as chairmas A RIOH PI(K-UP, Engineer William H. Hull Golng to South Africa on 0 $25,000 Fee. ‘William Hammond Hall, ex-engineer of the State, who laid out Golden Gate Park, and who has recently been in London, has left there for Johannesburg, South Africa. He has gone. it is given out, at the in- stance of Cecil Rhodes, who has agreed to him $25,000 to make a scientific ex- amination of the water conditions of the country, preparatory to getting what water 1s necessary to operate the it mines which Rhodes, Barnato and others own. He is also to perfect a plan for an im- mense reservoir. Mr. Hall is recognized as one of the greatest engineers of the country. He will ounly be in Africa three months. Then he will return to London and perfect his plans. ————— Mate Reed Released. Mate David Reed of the American ship Frank E. Moore of Santa Barbara. The Pigeon Society. A special meeting of the Pacific Coas ! Willlam F. Babcock, who wes arrested for cruelty to a seaman named William Percival while on a recent voyage from the Atlantic goast, was releated yesierday on §50 bonds arn James M. Carr. shed by ex-Supervisor Joe King and ) THIS WILL WAKE SOCIAL HISTORY Greenway's A-Weary of the Dance and May Lead No More. The Quiet Passing of the Popu'ar Friday Night Cotillon Club. Not Enough Animation Left to Appeint His Worthy Successor. The dissolution of the fashionable Fri- day Night Cotilion Club is imminent. E. M. Greenway, the dictator of the swell set, is suffering, according to his own diagnosis, from a severe cold and the many evils tnat overtake a man enjoying his lucrative position. ! Succinctly he says: “Thers is a lotof | money in my business, but it kills a man.” And what with thinking of hiss| cold and his business that kiils and his | rheumatic knee, he does not even care if | the slowly dying- Friday cotillon ever re- vives again or not. The leader is a-weary. With his own hand he proposes to remove from his fevered and aching brow the dictator’s crown, and is not even interested enough in the social destiny to appoint a suc- cessor. This lingering death of the fashionable organization will neither shock nor sur- | prise the smart set, for it was itself that dealt the fatal blow. Little by little the attendance at | the cotillon has fallen off until at! the last meeting there were only | fifty-five couples on the floor, against | nearly 150 coupl:s the year previous. Greenway sought to account for the lack of interest in every way. Itcould not bs bard times, At last the disagreeable truth | had to be acknowleiged. Society, cold, | cruel, unzrateful, and above all fickle, | gave the .ever-faithful friend the go-by. | The cotillon arranged to take place just | before the Lenten season had for lack of | application to be postpon-d, and it is ex- tremely doubtful if the usual Easter cotil- ion will take place. It is more than probable tnat the two | dancing classes, the Friaay Fortmghtly | and the Monday Night class, have usurped | the exclusive patronage of the Friday nights. Th- Monday night dances have been extremely popular and the Friday ! fortnightlys, with their extremely smail dues, are financially away ahead, and the | attendance is so large that.ci the last two dances invitations had to be limited. However, in spite of all the distressing circumstances attending the last hours of the Friday Night Club, Greenway is chary about promising the solemn ‘‘rest in peace.” Like a caretul doctor he stands, and with his finger on the pulse, counts the last throbs and wisely shakes liis head. | In spite of his lack of interest in all social matters, the self-deposed leader predicts that the Terrsichoreans is 1o be | the coming swell orgenization. And | though he sighs and protests he is weary and wants (o rest, "I wouid iike to man- age the Terpsichoreans,” he saye. The Friday Night Cotillon Club was organized some' fourteen years ago. Its first leader was E. H. Sheldon. . The initial cotillon was he.d at the B. B, Hall on Eddy street, Sneldon. leading. with Miss Louise Tevis, now Mrs. Fred Sharon. For 1wo years Sheldon directed the des- | tiny of the club, and then Allen St. John Bowie assumed contro.. Bowie looked after the welfare of the club but. for one season. He led his first cotillon with Mrs, Latham as his partner. After Bowie's brief reign came Green- way, who Las ever since directed the for- tunes of the ciub. At the first Greenway cotillon Miss Tessie Fair, now Mcs. Her- man Oelrichs, was the leader’s vis-a-vis, Rauer Sues Welburn. J.J. Rauer, as assignee of the Wasp Pub- lishing Company, has sued O. M. Welburn, Collector of Internal Revenue, in the Justice court, in his individual capacity, for $48 for advertising. ‘fhe United States Distriot Attor- ney’s office will request that the case be trans- ferred 1o the Uniied States District Court, on the ground that the suit is properly against Mr. Weiburn in his offieial capacity. NEW TO-DAY. jone of the pawnbrokers. Abraham Davis | Qur Regulir Prices! Telephone for seats. Biack 991 RECEIVERS OF - STOLEN GOODS Chief Crowley Intends to Land Them All in Jail, The Recent Raid of the Tehama- Street “Fence” Is Only a Beginning. Harp:r, One of the Seif- Accused Thieves, Has Off:red to Confess to Save His Wife. The crusade against the pawnbrokers who are doing a rushing businessin stolen goods has begun in earnest, and .Chief Crowley has instructed some of his best men to foliow up all cases reported to the source of disbursement. That is usually a pawnshop. Some of these have been doing a lucra- tive business with thieves. Lacesand dry goods the “fende,” as the pawnbroker is called, sells at private houses through the medium of peddlers, but all jewelry is melted ap and sold in nuggets to the Mint. The sensational arrest made by Police- man Ryan Thursday night at the home of Mattie Frawley and Rose Harper on Tehama street was the first successful attempt of the kind that has been made here in years, Yesterday afternoon Detective Cody. who is working on these cases, arrested was booked on a charge of receiving stolen property at his place.of business, 1150 Market street. He is accused of receiving and melting up a gold waich stolen by Burglar James Lee, who appropriated it from the person of Benjamin Hughes. ‘W. Warden, C. Harper, Mattie Frawley, Rose Harper and Elizabeth Keane wers all booked yesterday afternoon at the City Prison on charges of burglary and receiv- 1ng stolen goods. Harper declares that until about six months ago he was a stranger to crime and had always been an industrious workman, He seems to be very much at- tached to this woman Rosi **She had unot been what you would call a good woman, perhaps,” he said, with a touch of pathos, “‘but she was trying to do better and I think this was partly due to me.” Unhke Warden, Harper is not addicted to morphine, and though he undoubtedly assisted in numerous burglaries and petty larcenies, bis story of the motive which prompted hini to the crimes is described in a manner that prompts belief. He re- | fusesio say anything that wiil implicate Warden, but offered to assist the detec- tives in locating stolen plunder if they would refrain from prosecuting the woman { whom he calls ms” wife. He insists that she bad no complicity in the affairs, and 0 far only a charge of vagrancy has been placed against her. SUIT FOR OVER A MILLION, P. G. Galpin Going to Portland to Pros- ecute 3t Against Executors of William S. Ladd The suit of Mrs. D. Albert Hiller of this City against the executors of the last will of William 8 Ladd of Porland, Or., which has been in the United States Cir- quit Court of that city for the past two years, is to be argued on next Monday. The suit is one brousht for $1,500,000 for the funds arising out of a sale of stock in the O:egon Steam Navigation Company belonging to_ the estate of J. W. Ladd, who was the first husband of Mrs, Hille; The will of J. W. Ladd was probited i the Superior Court o this City and County, and in the procecdinss the stock was not inventoried nor was there any order ever made by the court suthorizing its sale. William S. Ladd of Oregon was the exec- utor. The amount of the stock was 7600 shares. No accounting was ever made of it, and the suit is brou-ht for the recovery of the value of the stoci. P. G. Galpln of the firm of Galpin & Zeigler, who are the attorneys for the plainuff in the -action, left for Portland last evening. It is expected that *he ar- gument will occupy the greater part of next week. E NEW TO-DAY. We saw some tea the other day—tea sold in San Francisco—so highly col- ored that a spoonful,washed in cold water, left an ugly green powder, one-six- teenth of an inch deep, on the bottom of the cup. Not all tea is colored like that of course; some tea is colored anly a little. Sc/z/- ling's Best is colored not at all; and that is the tea to buy—for several reasons. ASCI;“HH;‘& Cf{nymnv NEW TO-DAY—AINUSEMENTS. TIVOL! OPERA-HOUSZ= MR KRNXSTINE Knwrox o, Proprietor & Manager The Gilbert & Sullivan Season! LAST TIMES, — TO=-NIGEIT — GRAND DOUBLE BILL! Von Suppe’s Beautiful One- Act Operotta, THE LOVELY ‘GAT. ATEA" AND——o Gilber: & Sullivan’s Escheti= Two-Act Opers, “PATIENCE.” ——NEX’ WEEK. STEIE MIK ADO:!” “TEE MIKADO!” Popular Prices———25¢c and 50c¢ 'E) | THIS AFTERNOON CAZAR| ™5 EVENING ! GRAND SUUVENIR M TINEE TQDAY! 250 h Performance by the Company—250th ! ‘Tne Great Artistic Flay, SAINTS AND SINNERS! GEOHGE OSBOURNE, FRANCES JOLLIFFE, HUGO TOLAND und the Entire Company. METROPOLITAN TEMPLE. SUNDAY EVENING _.8 0 clock —ADMISSION FRER Address on Christ’s Second Coming. JAMES B. DAVENPORT, Evangelist of Cath. oli¢ Apostolic Church. - Not Second Adventism. DISEASE DOES NoT [ =SEASE ' UOES NOT STAND STILL. Every one is either growing better or worse. How 1is it with you ? You are suffering ‘rom KIDNEY, LIVER or URINARY TROUBLES. Have tried doctors and medicine withe @ out avail, and have become disgusted. DON’T GIVE UP: Sazeire § Thousands now well, but once like you, 8 say so0. Givean honest medicine an hon # est chance. ' Large bottle or new style smaller one at your dr{ gi(:;"s. \{:‘flte for h:é) Lr&nr: ment blank loy. Warner's Safe Co., Rochester, N, Y. XEW TO-DAT—AMUSEMENTS. BALDWIN THEATER. e o ALHAYMAN &CO. (Ineary - Propa Another Big House Last Night! JAMES A. HERNE As NATHANIEL BEERY in “SHORE ACRES” Direction 02 HENRY C. MINEX A5 Seats Now Selling for Next Week, Second ana Last But One. CALIFORNIA THEATER. THIS AFTERN TO-NIGHT! Sundav Mat Night. GRAND POPULA 2 Tromuona Z uege nora . $1°00 and$1 50. 100, nee—50c. 'TRICBLAMLR.GOTTLOD & Co+ LE3SES ANOMATAGLRS -+~ FIRST ‘ WITH MATINEE DAINTY —FANNY RICE— THIS A¥ NOON— The Splendid New Version of MOR’O‘SCO'S GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. WALFER MOROSCO...Sols Lessee and Managas SPLEND! REVIVAL. Of Oitver Byron's Sensational Melodrama, 10,000 MILES AWAY, Presented With a_Splendor Never Before Attempted ina San ¥raocisco Theater. BEAUTIFUL SCENERY ! TIRRING SITUATIONS} merous Clever Artists. Many Specialties by Evening Prices—10c, 25¢ and 50c. Matinees Saturday and Sunday. e’ Royal Hunzarian Court.Or y atter the evening perform- ance in the Orphieum Annex. Ctgion “O'Furrell street, uear Siock 0a. San Francisco's Fumily Concert Hall, A MAGNIFICENT SUCCESS ! HOUSES CROWDED TO THE DOORS! HERR FERDINAND STARK, The famous Hungarian Violin Virtuoso, and his Brillia: Organizatio A ORUHESTRA. ery Evening ai 8 o'clock, INTERNATIONAL TUG-OF - WAR TOURNAMENT. MECHANICS’ PAVILION FEBRUARY 27 TO MARCH 9. 10 NATIONS CONTESTING. UNITED STATES, CANADA, IRELAND, SWEDEN, GERMANY, FRANCE, NORWAY, ITALY, DENMARK, SCOTLAND. All the Teams Wi.l Pull Each Night. ADMISSION 50e SEA EVERY AFTEENOON AND EVENING, BUSCH, the Golden Vamvire; BRESINO, Wire Waiker, the ANIMATOSCOPE A Host of Attractions at Night. SPECIAL! ——SUNDAY AFTERNOON AND EVoNIN BRISTOL’S TRAINED HORSES! ADMISSION 10c. CHILDREN Sunday Afternoon Free. PACIFIC COAST JOCKEY CLUB GNGLESIDE TRACK). The only Yeriec: Winter Raceirsck il Ameriea. RACING aB3gBe RACING Racing From Monday, Feb. %2, to Sature day, March 6, Inclusive. Five or More Races Daily, Rain or Shina, FIRST RACE AT 2 P, M. Take Southern Pacific train: as Townsend sts. depot, leaving as 1 and 3 ¥are for Round Trip, inciuding Ade mission to Grounds, 31.00. Take Mission-s: “electric line direct to tracz. The Most & Chandon White Seal Stakes Mon- day, Februncy 22. ‘i he *chreiber Stakes Saturday, February 27, Thie Crocker Stakes Satuiay. Marc 6. A. B. SPRECKELS, rresidens W. 8 LEAKE, Secretary. SUTRO BATHS. FINE PROGEAMME, Grand Concert Every Sunday Afternoom General Admission, 10e; Okiléren, oo THE 2 Grand C 1ces

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