The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 7, 1899, Page 7

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Y THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1899, = HE ARITONA FROM MANILA WITH SICK MEN Many Were Wounded in Battle. SOME ARE CALIFORNIA BOYS | | 9 + ¢ *+ ¢ + § ® . ® + ® + ¢ 3 ® . b ¥ S +* ALL THE OFFICERS AND MEN{ WERE INVALIDED HOME. | S e Very Few of the Returned Ever Want . to See the Philippines Again. ! & The Arizona to Go Back e at Once. tes transport Arizona ar- Q00 9 o o © ] B +6+0e90 0+ +0+0+0-0000 FIRST OF “THE YIREN PLEE] o HE steamer Del Norte, under charter to the Alaska Exploration Company, will be the first vessel from this port to reach the vicinity of St. Michael this year. She is taking north a large quan- tity of supplies and seventy mechanics. These are ship carpenters, joiners, calkers, engineers and firemen, and they will complete the building of the company’s vessels that were not finished last year. These river boats are at Dutch Harbor, and the men on the Del Norte are expected to have them ready for the spring opening of the Yykon. f ! 00C0Q000000CO00000C00000000000000000C0000000000000000 o O O R e IS SRCHR R s S ] { 2000000 1 | apEmm MAGURESS BANDUETED B1 HS FRIERDS GO GHRY BAY e "A:EDemocrats Gather at| the Board. | THE “LITTLE GIANT” DOES NOT | | WANT OFFICE. | | Lafe Pence Made the Statement as a Feeler and the Guest of | the Evening Con- | firmed It. The banquet given last night to James Maguire at the Poodle Dog r uran s )ang-up” affair, that could give | 1 spades” >ffersonian sim- beat it hollow. Fully a hun-! Company L, First ompany D, First | npany A, = E. von Honsen, T. Horsman, Com- n G. Beckman, | ington; O. lorado; R4 © 4 @ + N4 : ] @ EX-CONGRESSMAN JAMES G. MA urteenth TiP27% | dred guests sat down to the board in the top floor banqueting hall and proceeded | through the menu with practiced hand | that would not have faltered had the sim- plicity cost twenty “‘plunks’” a plate. All the leaders of the party and some of the led were there. Hon. Charles Edel- ! man presided as toastmaster, and strung | in a long curving line on his either hand | | were familiar faces. Ex-Governor Budd | | was there, flanked on one hand by Major | | Harney and on the other by W. H. Alford, | | the tail tamarind of Tulare. Congressman | | Castle of the Seventh District had come | all the way from San Diego to participate. | Beth Mann sat next to the guest of honor, | who cccupled a chair to the right of the toastmaster. On the other wing was Lafe | Pence. late of Colorado. There were oth- e orghmel | ched | ers, but among them was not Mayor Phe- e din: Svans, Company | lan, who had promised to attend. It was nfantry, was the sick-| said that his Honor had been obliged to He is a cripple with | go to San Diego, for which reason he was a very sick | not present. As some of the banqueters | had seen the Mayor near the City Hall | at 6 o'clock last evening, and as the train | for San Diego left at 5 o'clock, the sus- | picion arose that his Honor had another | reason for remaining away. ‘The proceedings weore opened about 9:30 | o'clock after the guests had been seated, | when Dr. Edelman recited a short grsvel s Ar- A. Utah ighteenth in It took the Arizona a long time to dock, | but as soon as she got alongside Pacific wh the steamer General Me- took all the soldlers aboard and rred them to the Presidio. Every the boys has a souvenir of the | es in his possession, and one audl in ragtime to the accompaniment of an orchestra of strings. He remarked that fervently pray they may never see slands again. | duced to respond to the toast | tion, it was an innovation at a Democratic ban- quet. It was received with applause, fol- lowed by a charge in phalanx on the good things in sight and a general interchange of political confidences that heightened the relish of the green turtle soup, the pates a la financiere and the ‘‘spring chick” and put the final seal on the sim- plicity. Late Pence, who_had been associated with that other Jeffersonian, W. W. Foote, in securing during the day a suc- cessful verdict in a murder case in Oak- land, and who seriously meditated deliv- ering his unflushed argument for the de- fense as an eulogy of Maguire, was pre- vented at the last moment and was in- “Our Hon- t. He spoke of his assocla. tion with Maguire in Congress and eulo- ized the ‘Little Giant,” taking, inci- entally, occasion to remark: “The more I study Gage, the srcuder i am that 1 supported Maguire. - California is a big State. It is long and wide; has a lot of bottom and a heap of top. It is a broad State and should not have a nar- row-gauge Governor.” 2 Before concluding Pence welcomed Ma- guire into the “Has Beens,"” saying with sovernor McDonald of his own Hoosier State that the private station was the post of honor. Some of Pence's hearers were inclined to take exception to this unceremonious relegation of their idol to the private sta- but it transpired later that he seemed to know that of which he was talking. The guest of honor, James G. ored Gue Maguire, when he arose next to respond | “Thomas Jefferson,” he said, “with to the toast, ully bore him out. “I am pleased to-night, the splendid representat citizenship of the State of which I id to be a citizen. Suggestion was our toastmaster that some of ical opponents have been un- v concerning themselves about banquet. So far as my political am- ons are concerned, their fears m: quiet. I have no personal ambition to be z candidate for any office now or at any time in the future of which I have any present thought. I believe that I can in B oo 04906 e0e0ie 06 ede e i-e0eoteoe@ GUIRE AT THE JEFFERSONIAN BANQUET. private life, in the private station, do more for the cause than by being either a candidate for office or the occupant of any office to which I might aspire.” In his stcceeding panegyric of Thomas Jefferson and the principles hé enumer- ated the speaker grew eloquent again and again. only to be interrupted by cheers, and concluded amid a deatening | uproar of approval. Mr. Maguire was followed by William H. Alford, who responded to the toast “The Outlook for the Future”; BSeth Mann, who responded to “Democracy,” and Judie E. A. Bridgford, who respond- ad to “The Financial Question in Poli- cs.” The guests present were: Ex-Congreseman James G. Maguire, ex-Gov- ernor James . Budd, James V. Coleman, Charles H. Castle, Isidore Gutte, James H. Barry, E. L. Fitzgerald, Bart Butke, Judge William P. Lawlor, Harry Wilson, Lafe Pence, Robert L. Mann, 'James Mahoney, James J. Flinn, Robert Day, E. A. Bridgford, Herman Guttstadt, F. G. Fallon, Dr. D. F. Ragan, Gabriel Cohn, Willlam H. Alford, C.’ A. Rey- nolds, Jeremfah Deasy, Dr. E. E. Hill,.John Burke, Walter Gallagher, Patrick Loughran, Hugo Asher. W. J. Bryan, Charles H. Hol- comb, C. Kohne, Joseph Gassner, Louis Metz- | | ger, Samuel Wailer, G. Groezinger, Captain O. Luders, Oscar_Hocks, Leonard. Stone, Charles E:‘lelmln, L. M. Manzer, W. L. Ashe, P. C. O'Dowd, James J. Flynn, Gaston Ashe, H. L. Blenfeld, P. J. Harney, in K. Lane, J. J. Dwyer, Marion De Vries, R. Porter Ashe, e character of | this gathering, representing as it does the | B B R AR R = William Broderick, Wardell, W. C. | sraves, T. F. Bonnet, Edward Wilson, Seth Mann, Joseph Leggett, Isidore Danfelwitz, A. D. Miesezaes, E. J. Hanlon, Willlam Clack, Frank Malloy, C. C. Cq J. F. Bennett, a5 Joseph Rot! er, Edward Rock, Bert Schlesinger, Abe Jacobs, L. P. Ward, | Thomas J. Martin, s J. Maher, George | Cabanis, Edward T. , Lawrence Hoey, | T. B, Treacy, Jack Kavanagh, Edward God. chaux, A. L. Lemon, Dr. M. Magnus, Rudolph | Luders, James L. Gallagher, Dr. Charles A. | Clinton, William Hinton, Kinne, J. J. | McDadsé, George D. Gillesple, Willlam Abbott, | L. Michel, Charles F. Burgman, Henry Ryan, | Fred Raabe. e FOR MURDERING HER CHILD. The Motion to Dismiss in the Case of | Mrs. Minnie Adams Argued and Judgment Reserved. The argument on the motion to dis-| miss in the case of Mrs. Minnie Adams, charged with the murder of her child, was held before acting Police Judge Ba Ty vesterday afternoon. | tion of the Odd Fellows’ Home at Ther- | | malito and make such recommendations | | as it deemed necessary. | Lodge next month, for the committee is | | and Loggie and the other with Chairman | Flint. Attorney Caldwell made the motion, and contended that the prosecution had utterly failed to prove the corpus delicti | and there was not sufficient evidence to | hold the defendant to answer before the Superior Court. He argued that no mo- tive had been shown; that Drug Clerk Pulenky had failed to {dentify the de- fendant as the woman who purchased a bottle of carbolic acid, and he pointed man Herlihy and Gripman Cox as to seeing the defendant. He believed that the policeman was mistaken and that Cox was not telling the truth, but wanted to | | pose as a_would-be policeman and ama- | teur hawkshaw. He also paid his at- tention to Wilson Gray, the father of the child, whom he characterized as an apol- | ogy for a man. | v | Prosecuting Attorney Carpenter replied | | briefly and logically. He contended that | the corpus delicti_had been proved cir- cumstantially and inferentially, and a | motive had been shown in the very fact L e S R R I SECR SR S Y that the child was the outcome | | Fefations Sotween chay s ome, of Mictt | | He contended that sufficient evidence had | been adduced to hold the defendant. Attorney Sweeney replied for the ~de- | fendant, and’ the Judge said he would | | reserve "his decision till next Thursday. | | T R AR TR | | $50,000 Insurance Wanted on a Jer- | | sey Bull. | Application has been made for insur- ance of $50.000 on the famous young Jer- | sey bull, Merry Maiden’s Son, owned at | | Hood farm. Lowell, Mass. This is the | highest amount of insurance ever asked | for on a bull or cow. Merry Maiden’s | Son s believed to be the most famous Jersey bull living, as he is the son of | Merry Maiden, the champion sweep- stakes _cow in ‘all three tests combined | at the World’s Fair, and his sire is Brown | Bessle's Son, whosé dam won the 9 days’ and 30 days' tests at the World’s Falr. Thus Merry Malden’s Son unites the blood of these two famous cows, and great results are expected from his progeny. —————— Ian Maclaren Sees the Sights. A party consisting of Tan Maclaren, his wife, Major Pond, his manager; Mayor Phelan and several other ladies and gen- tlemen left the Palace Hotel -yesterday | morning at 11 o’clock in a four-horse drag i on a sightseeing trip. | They were first driven through the prin- | | cipal streets of the city, the Mayor point- | ing out the prominent buildings and oth | places of note. After that the party was | sped on its way to the park, CHff House, | Presidio and the other points which have made San Francisco famous. They re- | turned to the hotel at 5 o'clock, and Tan | | Maclaren, who has a keen senke of the beautiful, expressed himself as delighted | with the' interesting sights he had wit- | nessed. ——— Trunks, valises, pocketbooks and dia- . Best goods, best values at Sanborn | ail's. 2 —_———— | | Widber’s Shortage. | | A judgment was handed down by Judge | Hunt yesterday in the action of the cf | and county against A. C. Wlidber, the | defaulting Treasurer, now doing time in San Quentin. The city is given judg- | ment " against Widber for the sum of $17,528 72, which amount will be realized | out of defendant’s property. | ————— “89" Cleveland bicycles, $40 and $50; *99" Crescents, $35. Leavitt & Bill, 309 Larkin.® —_——— Wants Heavy Damages. Suit swas filed yesterday by Mabel Townsend against the California-street Cable Railway Company to recover $10,500 damages for personal injuries. It is al- legeg by 1herph:’ln}tlm that while she was in the act of al ting fro; = fendant's cars nf O‘anrrelrln ?alxlx% olJog:s streets on February 7 last the car sud- denly started, threw her against the d&rsnmy seats and fractured two of her ribs. ————— Bishop Spalding gives advice on | the education of women, in next |18 hot and dry in summer and cold and out the difference in time between Police- | F | new | for the representatives of the 30,000 Sunday’s Call NOT SATISFIED [TH THE 000 FELLOWS' HOME Two Reports as to lts| | | Goodall Company’s er Brothers wants the owner for a i igeon with | the tag W 565 on its leg. Yesterday the | Brothers was salling_ down San Pablo Bay when Captain Pohl saw a_ hawk chasing a pigeon. The latter flew for the Condition. ‘ IS URGED ITS REMOVAL THE GRAND LODGE IS ASKED | TO ACT. | Division of Opinion in Relation to | Soil and Climate—A Sugges- tion to Sell the Place. | At the sesslon of the Grand Lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows held in this city in 1888 Daniel Flint (chairman), Samuel F. Smith and J. J.| Loggie were appointed a committee by the grand master to report on the condi- The committee has performed its labor | and will present two reports to the Grand | divided. The majority will be with Smith Both reports go into details as to the | home, the land upon which it is located, | the climate, the improvements that have been made, and each makes suggestions. The majority says: | The soil of the uplands (all except twenty- | five acres in the river bottom) is a red clay, | interspersed and underlaid with gravel; it varies from twelve inches to twenty-four inches in depth, is non-productive and sterile, being deficient in lime, potash and phosphoric actd; it is not adapted to or suitable for general farming purposes or the ralsing of hay, grain, deciduous fruits, berries or vegetabies, and cannot be suc- | cessfully used for the growing of those things most needed at the home, without being strengthened by the addition of strong fertilizers, and loosened by being mixed | with large quantities of sand. | According to instructions received from | Professor Hilgard samples of the soil were sent him, and after examination he wrote to Past Grand George H. Morrison: It is certainly not a desirable tract to lo- cate an agricuitural colony on, or any insti- tution that desires to grow its own supply of vegetables. I should add that I have seen much bet- ter soil samples from Thermalito Colony, and was not aware that any portion of it was &0 little adapted to agricultural use as is indicated by the samvles sent. As to climate, the report says that “it dry in winter, the thermometer ranging from 26 degrees Fahrenheit in winter to | 112 in summer.” There is also consider- | able malaria and the majority report says that ‘'we cannot otherw report than that the home is located in a mala- rious district and one which is, for that reason, not adapted for a home for aged brothers.” There is also some complaint as to distance and cost of trans which ig $9 for the round trip from San rancisco. The conclusions of the ma- Jority are: First—That it should be & healthtul loca- tion. Second—That the location and soil should be such that all the vegetables, fruits, ber: ries, hay, grain and other produce requi by the institution might be raised at t home, with the help of the inmates there- of, thus reducing the expense to a mini- mum. 3 Neither of these requirements is realized at the home at Thermalito. Malaria is revalent to such an extent as to make the fome an undesirable and uncuitable place of residence, and the soil is of such a na- ture that it is not adapted for the raising of those things most needed at the home, and can be made o only by a larger ex- penditure of money than would be justified undar _the circumstances. Were the home located on a farm with a fertile and pro- ductive soil, with the labor of the inmates who are willing, able and anxious to work, devoted to the raising of vegetables, fruits, hay, grain, . hogs, etc., most, If not ail, of such 't needed could be raised on the premises, thus reduc- ing the cost of maintenance from one-half to two-thirds of its present cost, and under such conditions it is even probable that suf- ficient surplus produce could be raised to make a home practically self-supporting, or if not wholly self-sustaining, requiring but little assistance from the Grand Lodge. Such a location can be obtained at such a price that it will be true economy to aban- don the present location and to secure a new one adapted to our needs. The majority recommends that no more lands be purchased at the present site; that no more money be used in making improvements on the present holdings; that the purchased lards be put on the f market and the proceeds be placed in a “home fund,” with which to purchase a site; that the trustees enter into negotiations with the donors of the prop- erty whereby the property may be sold, it not, to rent the property to the best ad- vantage after a new home shall have been | bride’s two daughters and one or two | for led off the wharf and when in front of the chief whnrfinger's office made its escape. It caught sight of Burns from under the board and charged. Johnny escaped by | taking refuge under his express wagon. | The animal then saw Sergeant Mahoney and charged again. The police officer quickly put a telegraph pole between him and the infuriated brute. Then began a retty game of tag, and the sergeant was | ept dodging around that pole until his collar was wilted and the perspiration was pouring off him. Finally the bull was | lassoed and tied up behind a wagon so that it could do no more damage. The sergeant and Johnnny ‘“Rats’ will not forget yesterday’s experience in a h Captain Paul Pohl of the Piper, Aden, schooner, but before it could reach safety the hawk struck it. Both birds fell, and had they struck the deck would have been instantly killed. They struck the main- sall, however, and that broke the'r fall. | Captain_Pohl' seized the pizeon and the ship’s dog tackled the hawk. The bird | made the dog's fur fly and soon drove him | off, after which it flew away. The pigeon was wounded around the . but in a | few minutes recovered and is now well as ever. A QUIET WEDDING AT THE COLONIAL as | Mrs. Bell Spafford was very quietly mar- | ried yesterday afternoonin her apartments | at the Hotel Colonial to R. W. Wellington, a railroad contractor of Chicago. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Robert Mackenzie, in the presence of the | intimate friends. The details of the wedding were so quietly arranged that the utmost secercy | was preserved up to the very hour of the | ceremony. | Mr. and Mrs. Wellington left on the afternoon train for Santa Cruz, where Mrs. Wellington has a charming home. They will spend two weeks there and then go to Chicago to reside. e Chinatown Gamblers. When the cases of thirty Chinese ar- rested by Lieutenant Esola and posse at Washington street and Waverley place | were called in Judge Mogan’s court yes- | terday the lieutenant did not appear, but ADVERTISEMENTS. Prescription Accuracy— Drug Purity—Lowest Prices. These three‘items receive the greatest attention in our daily business. There is nothing too good for us in the Drug Line. Cuticura Resolvent Vin Mariani Peruna . : Todd's Sarsaparilla Aver's Sarsapa Chichester Pennyroyal Pill Kilmer's Sw Injection B Bl ol Santal Midy 3 7 Sutherland Siste; Hay's Hair Health. Mellin’s Food ... Herlick's Malted Pierce's Medical Discovery. £ WE GIVE TRADING STAMPS. - T\RGENTAGE H;EE,’DRIJG }”/ 949-951 MARKEIST NEXT TO_HALE BROS. — Use the WORLD FAMOUS snt Sergeant Christiansen, who ed for a continuance till to-morrow. The | continuance was granted, but Attorney | Coffey, who appeared for the defendants, | made a demand for the return of the $4750 illegally seized by the police at the | time of the rald. The Judge said he | would render a decision on the matter | to-day. The five Chinese arrested- by | | Lieutenant Price and posse for visiting | an opium *““joint” were convicted by Judgas Mogan terday and ordered to appear morning. it ADVEIRTISEMENTS. o G OR OLD, WHO feel themselves going backward, whose vital force is declining as a re- sult of mistakes and carelessness of the past; to men who want more vim, confidence and “merve,” I offer to send, closely sealed, free, a book telling how these elements may be restored. It i3 full of those things a man ltkes to read; full of encouragement and hope [or men who are weak. Ask for it to-day. M. A. McLAUGHLIN, 702 Market an Francisco. For the Best $10 Suit VIN MARIANI Marianl Wine Tonic Marvellous Results in Cases of SPRING FEVER FOR SALE AT ALL DRUGGISTS' EVERYy WHERE. AVOID SUBSTITUTES. Portraita and endorsements free. MARIANIL & CO., 52 W. 1 NEW YORK. AMUSEMENTS. COLUMBIA THEATER. LAST WEEKS OF THB BOSTONIANS. LAST 2 NIGHTS. MAT. SAT. Victor Herbert's tuneful opera, The SERENADE NEXT WEEK-— The ever popular ROBIN HOOD. SEA-S NOW SELLING. CALIFORNIA THEATER. LAST LECTURE THIS AFTERNOON AT 3:30. “IAINN MACLAREN.” RESERVED SEATS, $1 and $150. CHILDREN, Z5c and 50c. to order you must go to JOE POHEIM. For $25 you can geta fine, well made and well trimmed suit at JOE POHEIM’S. Will cost elsewhere $40. All-wool, styl'sh-cut Pants tn order from $4 to $12 at JOE POHEIM’S, 20:-203 Montgomery St., Cor. Bush, 1110-1112 Merket St., S, F, secured; that a small annual per capita tax be collected from the jurisdiction to | be added to the home fund to purchasé a site when the fund shall amount to $20,000, and when another $20,000 shall be raised | efther by surplus after purchase of site or otherwise to erect a new home on the | site; that pending the establishment of a new home the sanitary conditions be im- | proved and shade trees be planted, and that the orchard be fertilized to make it | more salable. | The minority of the committee has a different opinion as to the soil and ex- presses the opinion that “it responds lib- | erally to a dressing of manure and a lib- eral supply of water.” He does not think that the trustees made a good business stroke in purchasing certain lands near the home and suggests that they be dis- posed of at the earliest opportunity. He does not agree with the majority as to malaria, for he says: Some of the members, high up in author- ity, have stated that It was criminal to keep the home at such a malarious place as Thermalito. It hardly seems that a person with cool judgment and an investigating turn of mind would make such a rash statement. We have to admit that there is more or less malaria in every county of ths State, and in certain climates and under certain_conditions it develops soomer and more severely than in others. From the high elevation of the home, on the bluff, eighty feet above the river, it would hardly scem that malarfa could maintain its existence | amid the gentle breezes that waft the | fragrance from the orchards of the lemon, | orange and olive. In conclusion the minority says: After receiving the munificent gift that the home has from the colony, and the kind feelings manifested and expressed from the citizens of Oroville, the amount that has been spent by the order in fitting up the bufldings and improving the premises, and making things attractive, convenient and homelike, we say, fully holding ourselves for the responsibility of this report, it would be the height of folly and unbusiness- Iike methods to attempt its removal at pres- ent. We_ cannot urge too ‘strongly upon the grand lodge the duty of electing trustees, and the trustees a superintendent, that will apply_strictly busginess methods, and fully in sympathy with the home and its loca- tion. Every movement, purchase and im- provement shonld look well to the future. These reports will cause a lengthy and | exciting debate during the gran sessx(l)ond,w d Fellows in the State are about evenly di- | vided on the subject of the home, which | has already cost the order $37.526. Ocean Water Tub Baths. 101 Seventh st., corner Mission. Salt water, direct from ocean. PURE, HEALTHY, FRAGRANT. The unnatural odor from per- epiration and all other impurities are speedily and completely removed and the entire body given a pure, healthy, fragrant tone by the dally use, in toilet and bath, of Fa Soap and WOOD- WOODBURY'S 1 BURY'S Faclal Cream. 0,00000000000000003 ™" PALACE 25 SGRAND HoTeLs S o SAN FRANCISCO. Connected by a co o 1400 Rooms—900 All Under One M. <] NOTS TEE PRIOES: [+] Eurnpenni‘lnn.sl_.fl() per day and upward @ American Plan.£3.00 per day and upward 0 Correspondence Scllcited. 4] 5] JGHN 0. KIRZPATRICE, Manager. & GOBTINOCOBOOOBDO00 Kestores VITALITY NRVIT LOST VIGOR, | —————=mr AND MANHOOD | Cures Impotency Ni!gh! Emissions and wasting | indiscretion. A nerveon:c and blood-builder. Brings the pink glow to pale cheeks and res | stores the lire of youth. By mail 60o per box; 6 bores for $2.50; with o writiea | guarantee to cure or refund the moncy. | 1128 Market, Owl Drug Co., Sole Agts. S. F. Big € {s 2 non-porsonore | remedy for Gonorrheeay | Gloet, Spermatorrhoea Whités, unnatural dise ged, or any inflamme- | tion, irritation or ulcera- tion of mucouk mem- | '“EEVMSQH“,N,‘(;O_ branes, Non-astringent. | Rgg oo R Sold by Draggists, | or seut in plain wrapper, | # Dby express, propaid. foi | L &g‘,“nr 3 bottlos, $.75. " | 2 0T 890T Ok T02TIS% W. T. HESS, NOTARY PUBLIC AND ATTORNEY-AT LAW, Tenth Floor, Room 1015, Claus Spreckels Bidg. Telephone ' Brown 3L Residence, 521 California st., below Powell, £an Francisco. - THE BULL AND THE SERGEANT. A Bovine From Stockton Makes Trouble on the Water Front. ‘When the Stockton steamer landed at Clay street wharf yesterday among her cargo was a Hereford bull which was labeled dangerous. from its horns in front of its eyes, and to this fact Bergeant Tom Mahoney and Johnny (“Rats’”) Burns owe their escape _Ufrom serious injuries. The hull was bejog | 11:35 a, m., L 8 and 5 o m. A board was hung | CONCERTS AND RESORTS. EL CAMPO, THE POPULAR BAY RESORT. Now open every Sunday during the season, Music, Dancing, Bowling, Boating, Fishing | and other amusements. prices. Fare, round including admission to grounds, THE STEAMER UKIAH-—0 Will leave Tiburon Ferry at 10:30 a. m., 12:10, 2 and 4 p. m. Returning, leave El Campo at § discases, all cffccts of selfabuse, or cxcess ang | T Reroita edical €o., Glinton & Jackson ste., Ghicagy, | 52 TWO GREAT HITS! MARSHALL P. WILDER, ; World's Greatest Monologuist, ~——AND—- KARA, *“THE GREAT,” World's Greatest Juggler. JOSEPHINE GASSMAN and her Pickanin- nies. HENGLER SISTERS, Parisian Danseuses. POLK & KOLLINS, THE MATWEEFS, MANNING & WESTON, PANTZER BROS. Reserved Seats Balcony, 10c; Opera Chairs and Box Seats, 50c. MATINEES WED., SAT. AND SUNDAY. ALCAZAR THEATER. LAST FOUR TIMES. MATINEE TO-MORROW. Belasco & De Mille's Comedy Drama, THE CHARITY BALL. NEXT WEEK— Roland Reed's Farcical Success, ELLTDEEET G GRAND OPERA HOUSE. Morosco Amusement Co. (Inc.)..........Lessees IMMENSE SUCCESS OF THE SOUTHWELL OPERA COMPANY: LAST THREE NIGHTS OF | “THE BLACK HUSSAR” e Greatest Singing Charus in Largest Orchestra in the City. Forgott America. An Ensemble Never to Be A §$2 Production at These Poj Orchestra Chairs.. Dress o (Reserved) mily S T and_Children. 5 Nothing Higher. Another Big Production—'THE HAND: “HIEF." Prices—1ie, Monday N s |Q TIVOLI OPERA-HOUSE. Mrs, Ernestine Kreling..Proprietor & Manager ——THIS EVENING A DELIGHT FOR YOUNG AND OLD. OUR EASTER EXTRAVAGANZA, BEAUTIFUL GOLDEN LOCKS. MIRTH and MAGIC—FUN and FROLIC. MERRY DANCERS—— SEE THE CRYSTAL STAIRCASE. MATINEE TO-MORROW AT 2 P. M. BRING THE CHILDREN. POPULAR_PRICE, and 50c. Our_Telephore Bush 9.

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