The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 13, 1899, Page 7

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THE SAN FRANOISCO OALL, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1899. . P, DIRECTORS DEFER O THE LIDUOR ORDER Last'Week’s Meeting a Hot One. e OBJECT TO DISCRIMINATION | e | THE PUSH OPPOSED BY THE| MORE LIBERAL MEMBERS. | e C. P. Huntington Runs Against a Snag in the Place He Least Expected to Find One. g gt Huntington, entering upon reformer, proposed doing oons along the line of | e evidently expected some oppo- | rotest from the outside. Other- ve signed the order him- | stead of making a ca v out of that his action in cut- booze would u friction | lirectors | oy which, ction ion,qand | At the last g of the| matter, together with the pro- liquor mer- | was brought | -hot meeting he Hunt- v the wholesale e other distinction. Bu the big liquor ipplied and themselves, many afford to ignore, walkers ouples are entered treet buil the ig Montgomery- through the now topic of where it 1 RAN DOWN A Charles Lutz, Driver of a Delivery Wagon, Imperils the Life of Tiny Laura Allen. recklessness of a driver Laura H. Allen, a child of 4 vears, was | run over on Kearny and Sutter streets yesterday. The child, accompanied by Lutz drove up. Before his vic- ysed dis- 1, smile and both wheels passing over her chest. Her mother, almost crazed by the acct dent to her child, hurried her to a near- e she was he was suffering y a the_ shock, evidences of injury. her home, 306 Laurel riage. Ltz was was first treet static avenue, in arrested by Office taken to the 1 thence to Ce: Hunti attend. d ) the present in 1or matter S iscus. | tion at the City Hall. After hearing his s nISCUS- | Statement of the occurrence Judge Mogan e Boiall | released him on his own recognizance the matter ——————————— : ugh talk to| Advances made on furniture and word ‘‘quarrel” all | or without removal. J. Noonan, 1017-102 | ¢ © THE MAN OF THE HOUR. A MAGNIFICENT PORTRAIT OF ADMIRAL DEWLY IN. TEN COLORS (Size 14x2! inches) WILL BE GIVEN AWAY BY THE CALL To every one Inserting and paying for a WANT ADVERTISEMENT in NEXT SUNDAY’S CALL. THIS PORTRAIT & o e i o vt st 1n famous French style of color-plate work. ~ An ornament to any library or drawing- room. BEARS THE AUTOGRAPH OF ADMIRAL DEWEY. Cannot be had else- where in San Francisco than at the Buslness Office of THE CALL, where sample copies may be seen. 0 ©-9-0-99-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-6-0-0-0-0-0°0-9 0000 0 0-60-0-0-0-090 6000 0-0-6-0 "~ " 0000 000009000000 0660000006000e0606eed0ce060060e600069 are preparing \ ‘ | - THE GREAT DALY - her mother, had left a Kearny street car when L. escape she was struck down, MiSS Bates Gets | the ha | Who ARTISTIC CAKE-WALKERS READY FOR THE CARNIVAL R e S o o S S S S o e o o o g e O e o S SO e o e exhibit Daily gation to aturday of talent up: which is bound to furnish plenty of enter- am man has not yet gone into training, but he is al- in a creditable manner. PUISORED BY PARTRKINGOF CANNED COFFE Narrow Escape of the Caroline’s Crew. T SAILING OF THE MARIPOSA e ) TRANSPORT CITY OF PARA TO DEPART FCR MANILA. B Battleship Wisconsin May Have Her Trial on Puget Sound—Ship Aryan Now Due Here Is Leaking. T L Four of the crew of the steamer Caro- line were poisoned yesterday and only re- covered after suffering excruciating agon. quarantine The vessel had been over to the station to bring back the Charles Veilbaum and Ed Abbott, deck removed to the Harbor Hospital, where they were attended by Dr. Morrison. The coffee for breakfast had been made in an old pot and an examination of this uten- sil showed that there was some verdigris in it. This was what c: d the poison- ing. Veilbaum was very sick and could not be removed from the hospital, but the others after being treated were as well as eve The transport City of Para will get away for Manila to-day with companies A, F, H and K, Twenty-fourth Infantry, and troops D and K, Fourth Cavalry Colonel Gilbert S. Carpenter and Colgnel ‘William H. Bisbee and istant Sur- geons S. Chase de K C. Schultze, J. C. Le Hardy, James V. SO Harris and R.” P. Robbins will go out on the Par: The steam collier Washtenaw and the schooner Free Trade were in collision off Point Bonita last Tuesday night. The schooner's main boom was smaghed and one of her crew hurt, so Captdin Thor- son came back for repairs. The Washte- naw proceeded. Some people seem to have a grudge against the steamer Cottage City and every chance they get start a rumor that some accident has happened to the vessel. their accomplishments in Mechanics' Pavilion during the gg|About a month age they Dad he e e e g el and racing with the Humboldt. here rearsals are being held in the roomy annex, and g | %8 not acword of truth in either state erday another story to the ef- fect that had struck on a rock while en route to Dy as put in circulation, when the fact of the matter is the vessel nt. A meager conception of is prepari F: unsuspecting public can be gained from the fact < i Tor ide th whart at el 1 ALt e ey e e T e 4 s alongside the wharf at S e, being in the various prize contests, including champlions from all parts of the country. g overhauled. Sich storics arc itciouE e X & i hould be stopped, the vessel car- S DA DA DDA ~EHEE big crew and crowds of passengers OUR BLANCHE OK D T, DA Right Down to Work. T EVER GRATEFUL TO FRAWLEY . SIGHS FOR LONDON AND RUSSIA ' TO CONQUER. ST Will Play Rosalind, Madame Sans Gene, Lady Gay and a Play Especially Written for Her. gk Our Blanche has come! Miss Bates got in at 5, registered at California, got a bite to stay her fasting spirit and went to rehearsal. There was no time for the greeting of the many frie ; just a warm, hearty hand- shake, a radiant smile and the California star disappeared to report to the man- ager she adores .and fears—T. Daniel, once Tim Frawley As the three-sheet posters have already , our Blanche is the same old | Happy, merry, absorbed in her sses first and foremos theatergoe umphs the girl West to_electrify the It was onl , i was not a case of New plauding but of New York surprised. They were so astonished that some one | had” developed e a little bit without ge and—consent. o New York—that I do not ame. When London and St then and then Petersburg approve shall I consider myself famous. , she has a al E cut_no al—which she Is b ter of all high ari—will applaud an _English-speaking actres: maintaining they need not understand a | word, ‘vru\ ided only she speak to them | in_the d language of art. | "rhe petty annoyances that sent Miss | Bates from out the artistic atmosphere | of the great Daly Theater are now nearly forgotten and altogether forgiven. The death of the foremost of America's man- according to the woman who is ly destined to be the foremost of an actresses, has wiped out all hig its. “He wa a great artist, art is first and foremost. company represented to epping stones to one glorious artistic ensemble. He did not look upon them as people but as things to be ordered about in the name and pur- suit of art. “To me, 1 believe, he took an instant dislike, for no other purpose than because Miss Rehan liked me and was extremely kind to me. He would allow no individ- uality. When I suggested a bit of busi- ness that the emotions inspired by my role prompted he object “You are to feel zu, Russia’s capit: consider the ¢ “‘and said, The peaple in his him only mar nothing,’ he said. ‘You are simply to be | | my reflex artistic image.” That is the | decree that caused our separation.’” Miss Bates finds it impossible to speak of her progress and success without tender grateful words for the man who, accord- ing to herself, “made her.” “I can never do enough for Mr. she said. owe evervthing to him. Who would ever given me the chances he has? would have worked with me as he has? Talk of Belasco and his hair-pulling course of instruction! What about Fraw- ley at rehearsal? He has sent me home in disgrace. He has made me repeat and Trepeat and again repeat. And, oh, more stinging of all, he has questioned my in- telligence.” ‘When Miss Bates finished the recital of her suffering at Frawley’s hands she sighed and then laughed merrily. The manager himself, who was standing by, smiled down upon her with admiring eyes and said: ‘““Yes, 1 have been your most severe critic.” Then Frawley laughed and Miss Bates laughed, and star and manager exchanged a quick, warm glance and clasped hands. The repertoire for Miss Bates' engage- ment is full of good things, and, further, contains one great surprise. “London As- surance” will be presented, costumed in the period in which it was written. Miss Bates will make her initial appearance in “The Last Word,” and will appear in the gur rise—a new play written especlally or her. —_———————— A Vecation’s Sad Ending. The body of little Corinne Splivalo, nds hear the stories er of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Splivalo, quick] | daught, 2 ed nearly to death in conse- | was brought to this city vesterday morn- | | ing 1 _ake Tahoe by the sorrowing | steamer Umatilla_sails for the parents. next Saturday and will connect Mr. Splivalo had taken » with_the Roanoke for St. Mich- | I for the summer. A f pe Nome. The Umatilla is one | ved ughter s symptoms finest steamers on the) = e | “Captain Gielow has taken command of the steamer Santa Cruz, as Captain Ol- | CAPTAIN TURNER BLAMED. |ccn has gone north to take command of | United States -i;;;nictors Tolles and'| the Orizaba. The latter steamer is go- |~ Bulger Suspend His License for | dynamite and combustibles. The battleship Wisconsin will go on Sixty Days. Hunters Point drydock next week to ive her propeller put on. All the bar- United States Local Inspectors Bolles | poive armor is in place on the battleship, and Bulger filed an opinion yesterday sus- | but her armor may not be here for pending for sixty days the license of Cap- | months. When the latter has been put | tain John Turner of the fishing steamer | ;m the “1 ”'mll n w\)ll lv-!: u?ul;le }u d-;]ck : > " | here, and that is why she is having her Henrjetta. The Henrletta ran upon Dux-| wpedi put in now. - There is a possibility bury Reef on June 15 in a thick fog and | of the Wisconsin having her trial trip was slightly damaged. In rendering their [ on Puget Sound. She will not be ready opinion the inspectors say | for her government test until the first of | After a careful consideration of the testi- % | ne ind by that time_she will be : ocking & her mony In this case we are of the opinion that ook ok | Captain John Turner was negligent and un- ain. on the only dock that wiil be able k ee ate he e P | skiliful e lsiiie Yhe stsaie: Siaieres | 0 sccommotiats Ter will be Tofk OEer | at full sneed in a thick fog and not sounding and if she has to g0 there she will r | full aneed 1n & AN ofhned no definite de | main on the sound and have her govern- B ot e ha used Bl jead Inseat of trust. | Ment test there instead of on the Santa ing, as he testified he did, to get his position e e Barbara channel. Theé fine American steel ship Aryan is | | by hearing the whistling buoy off Duxbury | Toet he would have discovered that the vessel | causing_her owners some anxiety th | *as in shoal water, and he could have avolded | days, She is now_ out twenty-six da | striking the reef. from' Honolulu and_the Irmgard, Stand- n are out from x to thirty-one day Still, if the n came along everybody would be | ased, while Lo fears are entertained for | the other vessels. When the Aryan came | here five years ago on her maiden voy | age there s a leak somewhere that ated. That leak has kept until it vot so bad while el was in Honolulu that her char- ad to_be canceled (she was to load ew York). A diver was sent verything possible done to lo- leak, but all efforts failed, and the Aryan is coming to San Francisco to | 0 on the drydock. That is why her own- ers will be glad to hear of her arrival. The chances are that the American ship George Curtis, now at Honolulu, will come | to San Francisco and be added to the sugar fleet. The vessel is for sale, and | an offer for her by a San Francisco house Went down on the last steamer. The offer Will probably be accepted, and the Curtis will fn tha! nt come here instead of go- en and Mohi of such negligence and un Bendix ave this ¢ uspended Cap ‘master and pilot of steam ves- | A sels for 60 day |MYSTERIOUS SHOT STARTLES J. CLAUSSEN | | sugar for down and cate the W, could not be lo on getting worse, | HE SUSPECTS W. DASSMANN JR. OF FIRING IT. | Thinks That an Attempt Was Made | to Murder Him by the Son of a Rival Grocer. John Claussen, a grocer, doing business at the corner of Howard and Thirteenth | | streets, believes that an attempt was |ing to New York. 5 | made to murder him a few days ago.| The steamer Mariposa sailed for Sydney, via Honolulu, Apia and Auck- <{'night. She carried an unusually rgo and the following passenger: Honolulu—Henry Alferitz and wife, M. W. He was standing behind his counter, when | he was startled by the shattering of his show window. On investigating he found that o bullet had pierced two panes of | glass and a five-gallon can of coal oil. Anderson, wife and two children. A. 'D. Bald- i |~ The telephone is a foot away from the | win. Baldwin, C. L. Beal, W. S. Belfield, oint where the bullet entered, and it is ] D D o e | fortunate that no one was using it at the | man, €. D.Clarks J & Cloure S o heodore | time, as he would have undoubtedly re- | §™riuny, L. J. Frank and wife, Mrs. Robert | cefvéa the bullet in his head or face. | T Yiiliard, A. F. Jones, wife and son | Claussen strongly suspects that William | orge F. Kimball, Miss Kimball, W. T. Dassmann Jr., Son of a rival grocer on the | Lucas, R. W. McChesney, J. L. McLean, wife | opposite side of the street, fired the shot. | and tiwo children, Miss Martin, = G. Mauer, | He draws his conclusion’ from the fact | that the positions of the two bullet holes | in the panes of glass are such that the | E. shot was fired from the Inside of Dass- | man’s store. The boy, who is 17 years of | | age, has been in the habit of using a 22 James A. Miner, Mrs. E. M. Moore, R. B. Mul- jen, Robert Owens, wife and two children, Mrs. Potter, J. 8. Schweitzer, Dr. M. Senn, D. . C.'D. Vincent, J. Waterhouse, S. vife, two children, maid and valet, aves. | caliber air rifie to shoot birds with in the | c Baume and wife, W. Gentry neighborhood, and the bullet found by | Bingham, D. Craig, A. Duncan, Miss B. C. Claussen in the coal oil can is a No. 22." | Izard, A. Keiller, John B. Teal. Claussen says that Dassmann Sr. has| Sydney—H. A. Benson, Mrs. Henry Bratnob- | borne him i1l will ever since he moved out |of Dassmann’s premises. His five-year | lease expired three years ago and Da mann refused to renew it except at much higher rate, so Claussen moved | across the street. Dassmann started up a | grocery store on his own premises. Offcer Potter investigated the case, but | the Dassmann boy strenuously denied that he fired the shot and no arrests have been made. Some time ago the boy broke a | pane of glass with his alr gun in a bakery | near by, but his father settled the dam- ages. er, T. J. Bush, D. N. McBride, H. Murdock, W. C. Peacock, Miss H. Ralph, Professor E. H. Rennie and wite, J. P. Richardson, George A Stonter, H. A. Thomas, wife and child, Edgar E. Turner, G. H. Woodbury. “Join at Honolulu for Auckland—Captain B. F. Join at Honolulu for § F. C. Taylor, Captain T. G. Tay kR 4 Vanuxem, Mrs. E. K. Vanuxem, Miss Florence Vanuxem, Miss Mary Vanuxem, Hugo Wilck- ens. Senator C. D. Clark of Wyoming is on a pleasure trip to Hawail. Mrs. Robert Grieve is going back to Honolulu with the PP009P0000000600060006000060000000060C0600000 A Lame Back ‘With pein in the region of the Kidneys can be speedily relieved and cured with a Belt like the one shown In this adver- tisement. It conveys the electricity through the body right to the spot and does the work “like light- ning.” With a good Belt you will have no use for drugs or quack doctors. Call or send 2c in stamps for ‘‘Booklet No. 2. Ad- dress: 620 Market Gtroot, Opposite Palace Hotel, San Francisco. steerage pas s of the Nippon. After landing the Chinese at the Mail dock the Caroline went back to Clay street whart | and tied up. The men then had thelr breakfast, and shortly after that were taken violently sick. Four of the men— Oscar- A on, mate; P. Guerrero, hands—were so bad that they had to be | and, though doctors from S: g gold hunters are go- | Tan > summoned to_attend her, | ing up on in doze attle the | the trouble increased and on Monday she | miners will join the sport Roan- died. oke and will go almost direct to the Cape | The funeral will take place to-day from | Nome fields, as only a short stop will| the Splivaip home in Belmont. be made at St. Michael. ing to make a special trip to Alaska with | | | remains of her husband. They came to California on a visit to friends and while here Mr. Grieve died. J. N. 8. Willlams was a planter in Cuba for flve years, but ran the blockade during the “war and reached the United States. He is going to Hawali to settle down. —_————— VALLEY ROAD ELECTIONS. Annual Meeting of the Directors, Which Is Set for Tuesday Next. On Tuesday next the directors of the Valley road will hold their regular annual meeting for the purpose of going over in a general way the business of the year just passed and of electing officers for the year to come. Owing to the absorption of the Valley road by the Santa Fe system it s proba- ble that E. P. Ripley of the Santa Fe will be elected to fill the vacancy which will be created by the resignation of Claus Spreckels from the presidency of the road. ‘Aside from this it is not expected that the present executive staff will be very materially altered, though in some of the minor positions many changes may take place. —_——— ALASKA MATLS. Steamer Portland Will Leave on Sat- urday for St. Michael and Yukon River Points. The next dispatch of mail, including second, third and fourth class matter, for Dawson City and other Yukon River points will be by the steamer Portland, which will leave this port for St. Michael about next Saturday. That will be the last dispatch of Yukon River mail from this port this year. Mail will leave Seattle for St. Michael and Yukon River points, including Daw- son City, on July 20 and August 20. Mat- ter for these trips should be deposited in the San Francisco Postoffice at least three days earl Mail for St. Michael will be shipped whenever received, but the postoffice authorities will not guar- antee that any mail will go up the Yu- kon River after August 20. Letter mail exclusively. which goes by way of Juneau and Skaguay, will be shipped once a_week, as usual, and will be forwarded whenever the overland route is passable. ABAZEE’;I‘IL:EMENTS. $10 Invested Has Often Made $1000 In Oil. THR CALIFORNIA FIELDS ARRE rivaling those of the world as fortune makers for the lucky investors. Union Consolidated Oil and Transportation Company, 323 PARROTT BUILDING. Has a perfect title to 2160 acres of fully tested oil-bearing lands in this wonderful belt. 5000 shares of the Treasury stock will be offered for a few days at $3 PER SHARE. This stock will certainly advance quickly. GET IN ON THE GROUND FLOOR. PROSPECTUS FREE. ATTENTION, REPUBLICAN CLUBS! The presidents and secretaries of In- dependent Republican Clubs are invited to meet the Executive Committee of the Central Republican Committee at their headquarters, Grand Hotel, on THURSDAY EVENING, July 13, AT 8 O’CLOCK, For conference as to the plan of select- ing delegates to the Municipal Conven- tion. Z. U. DODGE, Chairman Executive Committee. JAMES A. WILSON, Secretary. Money at 6 per Gent Money to loan at 6 per cent per annum, on City Real Estate Security, by THE HIBERNIA SAVINGS AND LOAN SOCIETY AMUSEMENTS. ALCAZAR FOUR MORE PERFORMANCES of Alexander Dumas’ Play of Intense Emotion, CAMILLE! FLORENCE ROBERTS AS CAMILLE. THEATER MATINEE SATURDAY. PRICES.. . . . . ... ... . 15, Z5c, 356, 5%. NEXT—THE NEW MAGDALEN. CHUTES AND 200! EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. THIS IS OUR POPULAR AMATEUR NIGHT! 3-Great Big Shows—3 Show No. 1—High Class Vaudeville Artists. Ehow No. 2—BIg Amateur Varfety Company. Show No. 3—Ladies’ Wood-Sawing Contest. IN THE Z0O, THE OLD MAN KANGAROO Steiner 1851 Telephone for Seats, ON SALE FOR ONE WEEK ONLY. 6 Admission $1.00 Coupon Tickets, Transfcrable, ——FOR THE— International Cakewalk Carnival and Fair. MECHANICS' PAVILION, JULY 15 to 22. At the Following Leading Stores and Places of Business: The Emporium; Hale Bros. & Co.: M. A. Gunst & Co., Market st.; Cineograph Parlors; Dan P. Carter; The Zeno Mauvals Music Co.; and other stores. These $1 tickets will be withdrawn from sale July 'ULAR ADMISSION, . Liberal proportion of carnival ne-lxu siven to the ‘‘California Soldler Boys' Fund.' T DR. KILMER’S REMEDIES. DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT Is Not Recommended for Everything But if You Have Kidney or Bladder Trouble It Will Be Found Just the Remedy You Need, Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, discourages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor and cheerfulness soon disappear when the kidneys are out of order or diseased. Kidney trouble has become s0 preva- lent that it is not uncommon for a child to be born afflicted with weak kid- neys. If the child urinates too often, if the urine scalds the flesh, or if, when the child reaches an age when it should be able to control the passage, and it is yet afflicted with bed-wetting, de- pend upon it, the cause of the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first step should be toward the treatment of these important organs. This unpleasant trouble is due to a diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. So we find that women as well as men are made miserable with kidney and bladder trouble and both need the same remedy. The mild and the im- mediate effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold by drugglsts, in fifty-cent and one dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle by mail free, also pamphlet telling all about it, in- cluding many of the thousands of tes- timonial letters received from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., mention the San Francisco Daily Call. AMUSEMENTS. CALIFORNIA THEATER. S. H. Friedlander, Manager. ENGAGEMENT EXTRAORDINARY TO-NIGHT. Mr. Frawley takes pleasure in presenting MISS BLANCHE BATES And COMPANY OF PLAYERS, In the late Augustin Daly’s Most Sucessful Comedy, THE LAST WORD. THE COMPANY—Hope Ross, Mary Van Hu- Edith Miller, M Mound, Katheleen Chambers, Belle Vaney, Rose Whitney, Mrs. Bates, Augustus Cook, Harrington Re: nolds, Charles W. King, Alfred Hickman, Har- Wilmot, J. H. Amory, J. Frank Mathleu, ey and T. Daniel ry Turnbull, Frank George Gaston, B. J. C. Ril Hollis, as Phillips, and_ COMPANY OF DANCING GIRL.” COLUMBIA :: ALL THIS AND NEXT WEEK. CHARLES FROHMAN PRESENTS HENRY MILLER A SPECIAL COMPANY - First Time in This Country Outside of N e I LORD AND SRLLED LADY ALGY A BRILLIANT COMEDY By R. C. Carton, Author of *Liberty Hall" GRAND OPERA HOUSE MOROSCO AMUSEMENT (O. (Inc.), Lessee. ALL THIS WEEK. Magnificent Revival in English of Bizet's Charming Opera, “CARMEN” STRA FLOOR. Reserved, 350 and S0c. CIRCLE, Reserved, c. Reserved, isc. ORCHI DRESS FAMILY CIRCLE, GALLERY, 10c. MATINEE SATURDAY At the Matinees the Best Reserved Seat can be Purchased for %c. Family Circle 150 Gallery 10c. Telephone Main 532. NEXT WEEK—"OLIVETTE MISS MINNIE PALMER (The Original My Sweetheart.) In the Dainty One-Act Play, “ROSE POMPOM." Assisted by FRANCIS JERRARD, Late of The Haymarket Theater, London. GEORGE WILSON, Premier Monologist. THE RIXFORDS, Acrobatic Wonders. MILLIAN AND SHIELDS, Comedians. HAYES AND LYTTON, MORIE, THE FAR- RELLS, GARDNER BROS. Reserved seats, 25c; Balcony, 10c; Opers Chairs and Box seats, S0c. Matinees Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday. TIVOLI OPERA-HOUSE. EVERY EVENING THIS WEEK A HOT SHOW THE LAUGHING TRIUMPH The Spectacular Extravaganza “BLUE BEARD" |In summer attire.) GREAT CAST SUPERB SCENERY BEAUTEOUS COSTUMES NEW SONGS, DANCES, SKITS. Matinee every Saturday at 3 p. m. POPULAR PRICES...25¢c and 50c Our Telephone—Bush 9. FALL OF THE BASTILE! French National Celebration. ... FRIDAY, JULY 14,1899 ALL DAY! ALL NIGHT! AT THE CHUTES! LITERARY EXERCISES, CONCERT, GAMES, PYROTECHNICAL SHAM NAVAL BATTLE ON LAKE. FIREWORKS, GRAND BALL. ADMISSION 25 cents. CHILDREN 10 cents. GROUNDS OPEN A b N AT 10 A. M ALL NIGHT ELECTRIC CARS, CONCERTS AND Battle of Manila Bay! — SUTRO BATHS. OPEN NIGHTS. OPEN DAILY FROM 7 A. M. TO 11 P. M. BATHING FROM 7 A. M. TO 10:30 P. M. ADMISSION, 10c. CHILDREN, 5o RESORTS. Those who were thers say the Panorama is a correct representation. Lectures by Prof W. G. ROLLINS _after- noons and evenings. Market st., nr. Elghth, Admission, 50c. Children, 35c. Bathing, including admission, 2ic; dren, 20c. Weekly Call, $1.00 per Year

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