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% A nvxnnszxnm LLEBENS, Go. 222-224 SUTTER ST. gerators, all sizes, . TELEPHONE C orders solicited CIAL PRICES” i Hotels. SPECIAL REDUCTIONS MONDAY—TUESDAY—WEDNESDAY. Butter, finest Creamery sq 20¢ Chesse, finest Cal Cream glb 1k Tea, 10 dlflerent kmd> Ib 40¢ Wmdow Llrcens to Sum- Reg 20c oak and best GUARAN- ning Reg. 300 50c m and Sky- Shawl S'rapé from 10¢ to $1.25 Favornf de Cal. Claret dz qts §3 25 net recommend (7 pts $2.16 ght le wine. Iie:)\a'l\ $¢ dozen Gin, qu and e bot 76¢ Co.’s imported Reg. Pubber Drmkmg Cups 552~ ea 10c the thing for picnics and t it in your vest pocket Hamamglls qt bt 40c, pt 25c, hf pt 16¢ Hezel, for poison e tin 16¢ en. 002 $1.78 any imported, Frene S5¢ tin B¢ 20c Ginger Kle, “Puritas” 5% dz $1.20 Root Beer, “Puritas” 3¢, dz $1.10 $1.20 e and life and of deli- enormously in- on return of a sores, Garden Peas, “New Era” Regn Re: al te Muchrooms French bi Tiow We empties GARS—"Plamalion," Mexican : . T for 25¢ EXYR‘ THU3 SDAV “‘SPECIAL." telephone or mail o for our Thursday spec 5 cakes 20¢ Limit—3 1 i — uses. embody Broken Eyeglass icated for $1.00 and best quality. ns filled. Factory on Phone, Matn 16 K CiANS Puar. QGRA aPH IC APPARAYu)I SCENTIFIC 542 MarKeT ST. InsTRUMENTS Catatocue Frre MICLE B NG | »DALACE HOTEL«~ Francisco who make at these hotels en- nd venjences not to elsewhere. Desirable loca- r attacnes and unequaled American ahd European plans. sorre CURES MCBURNEY Kidney*d'ne" A lhmfl(h cunh pains in the back, BRIGHT'S DISEASE, 2% femsle troubles, incon- lfcace of urlne, brick dnst deposits, bed- wetting of children, gravel, gall dropsy, disbetes, and rheumatism. —FOR SALE AT— age Drug Co., $45-851 Market Drug Co., 214 Kearny st. stamps to W. F.eMcBurney, Los Angel nt. Prepaid $1 50. D: YRMON BISHOP'S PILLS been in use over fifty the leaders of the n Church and their fol- Positively cure the ses in old and young from effects of self- nfitness to Mar- Vericocele or Con- rvous Twitching . “re immediate CENTS jicncy to every despondent; a cure is at undeveloped merve centers; A written guarantee with 6 boxes. Cir- ISHOP REMEDY Co., neigen, Cal. GRANT small unded “re ess ¥ PeeceeeseTIeVs visitr DR. JORDAN'S crear ;IIISEIII OF ANATOMY # 1051 KAREET ST. bet. G:2a7:3, .F.Cal. The Largest Anatomical Museum in the World. Weaknesses or any contracted disease ponitively cured by the oldest Specialis: on the Coast. Est. 36 years. DR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN Consultation free and strictly private. Treatment personally or by letter. A ¢ Cure in every case undertaken. MARRIAGE, vaiuable book for men) (4 ¢ ' DE JORDAN & ©0., 1051 Market 8t.,S. F. [ e e e e o o o e s W, T. HESS, NOTARY PUBLIC AND ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Bfl CROSSMANS SPEGIFIC MIXTURE. GONORRHEA, GLEETS, analogous complaints of the . For sale by druggists. VIM, VIGOR, VITALITY for MEN | ation, excesses or | Educational THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, APRIL 15, DARTMOUTH’S PRESIDENT PREACHES AT FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH| THOMAS IN PORT Rev. Dr. Tucker Talks Eloquently to a Large Audience|Louis Smith, Cabin Boy, Son and After the Services Greets Many Graduates of the Institution of Which He V. DR. WILLTAM J. TUCKER, president of Dartmouth College, occupied the pulpit in the First Congregational Church at the morning service yesterday and delivered an eloquent sermon on “A Man’s Soul and His Worl In anticipation of a sermon by the distinguished educator the church was crowded, and during the whole of the discourse Dr. Tucker held the complete attention of the congrega- tion. The entire sermon was devoted to his text. At the conclusion of the service r. Tucker held an informal reception and introduced to many Dartmouth grad- | uates wha reside in this citv. Rev. Dr. | Tucker preached in part as foilow | *“The questoin of personal salvation is | not what we are saved from but what we { are saved to, what we take up with us in | the process of our salvation. You send | your ship to sail the sea. It comes back o you almost a wreck, the cargo lost, and with only enough of its crew left to REV.DR, WILLIAM J. TUCKER - S Is the Head bring the dismantied hulk to port. That j may be a grand sight. It may tell its own | tory of suffering and herolsm. A whole city may turn out before it in_ welcom. { But that was not the object for which . = 3 | | Sou sent your ship to sall the sea. You waited its return freighted with the riches NGU. o) F 0T D COLLEGE W e for which you bullt your ship and picked DISTINGDISHAD HEABOF A EAMOUS OF1 DEROR S oo Sor Whith JpuRIE PIED THE PULPIT AT DR. GEORGE C. ADAMS' CHURCH YESTER- God sends a soul into this world and DAY MORNING AND PREACHED AN ELOQUENT SERMON. it comes back almost a loss. alone, and | empty-handed. That may be a grand = * | L It may tell its own story of tempta- nd struggle and victory, a scarred and who their struggles of living men, but of living forces. The | soul, but saved. All heaven may turn out it more po ave ours. world mez ganized power. Men call | to give it welcome. But that was not the ror to them and gratitude and it the power of the church or state, the | end for which God sent that soul into the But those who come to mind at power of the the power of the world. He waited its return rich with the hour and give us assurance and apital, the poweg of earnings of the years of time “Heaven, it is a_common saying. is re- | served for those who fail here. Men may fail here that there is no place in | heaven too high for them. But men may so succeed here as to enrich heaven. T read in the vision of the holy city® “They | shall bring the glory and the honor of { nations into it.’ " That is the honorable, the legitimate, the actual contribution of earth to heaven. “Who can compute the earnings of great souls? Your roll of honor may disclose hereafter the names of those who have saflors along the water front for the lasc two months and the boarding masters have been driven to many an expedient in order to secure men to man the grain fleet. In several instances vessels have gone cut with “green” crews while the salmon fleet took away the best men ‘“‘on | the beach.” When the Otto Gildermeister was towed |in here in distress from San Diego she | had a full crew of A. B.’s aboard. All the men had from 37 to $100 coming to | them, however, and not one of them could at first be induced to desert. They wanted their money and If Cap | willing to pay them off they would agree | to accept a passage tv New York instead ]of to Germany, | say they should be paid off. This the captain would not agree to. If the men wanted to leave the ship well and good: if | they elected to stand by until she was | ready for sea again also well and good. This state of affairs did not suit the boarding masters, however. Each man was worth $40 “‘blood money” to them and | as much more as they could get out of the first month’s advance. They there- fore concocted a seheme to get the men to de:on A lad known as “Snake” Hennesy pressed into service, and after a | caretul training was smuggled aboard the Otto Gildermeister. A few days later it was whispered along the front that tho dismasted German was haunted. Fully half the crew had seen the ghost of a dead and gone comrade capering around the forecastle while the other half had heard him groaning in his last agony. “Snake” did his work well and Inside of three days | There has been a great scarcity of | | there was not an able seaman on the Otto | Gildermeister who would not swear that the ghost of Hans Peterson, who fell from aloft and was killed, was haunting the ship. The trick of the boarding masters now began to bear fruit. First two of the men slipped quetly away, leaving $150 in pay behind them and tweaty-four hours later they were on their way out through the Golden Gate on one of the grain fleet. Then two more got ashore and were shipped north on a steam whaler. An- other brought suit agamnst the captain to recover his wages but was rushed aboard a ship that wanted one man to comvlete ‘her crew and the lawyer has been com- | pelled to drop the case. The ghost did its work well. The Ottc | Glldermeister is left with only a counle |of A. B.s and the boarding masters are | richer by | B ! The Wellington’s Narrow Escape. The colller Wellington had a narrow es- | cape in Oakland Creek yesterday. She | wes leaving Taylor's whar and the tug Redmond was assisting her. Captain Sal- mund was giving.the signal “half-speed astern” when the indicator broke at “half- speed ahead,” which order the engineer obeyed. While trying to rectify the mis- take the indicator moved around to “full speed ahead.” This signal was also | obeyed, and in a few seconds the Welling- ton was speeding for the wharf, with the Redmond doing her best to hold her back. The first officer made a flying trip to the | engine-room and had the engines reversed just in time to avemt the threatened col- liston. s e ‘Water Front Notes. There WAS &n enormous amount of travel across the bay vesterday. The new- Iy appointed railroad detectives were in i evidence for the first time, and all the nic- l‘mughl for their souls as men fight for in Wilmsen was | where the ship’s articles | who in_th Their stamp up who widened the path , who led the w: iship, who rning and religion into dark land consecrated wealth by their methods of gaining it; m 'w their honest g rights in the v\orld and dared to maintain them, who forced their w across_dis- puted territory, and held the ground for us to occupy when we are ready to ad- vance. A church stands from generation to generation for this forward movement into the world. There is a world not only nic trains carried four or five of them. The | regular police found little to do, as everv- body was orderly. rived at the Delaware breakwater, ing the run from Liverpool in the fast time of nineteen days: The Kenilworth is to load for fan ncisco, which will be good news for Captain Taylor's family and relat here, The fi pment of this season’s dried apricots came from southern ports on the | steamer Queen yesterday. She brought | up 1300 boxes, and as many more will | come on the Santa Rosa. g il Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. Sunday, April 14. Stmr relca. Stmr Stmr port. Stmr Crescent City, Crescent City. Stmr Luella, Eureka, Jepson, Alcatraz, Bonita, Carlson, from —. Nopander, 6 hours from New. Payne, 29% hours from Iadsen, 16 hours from Caspar. Stmr Gipsy, Leland, 27 hours from Moss Landing and way ports. Stmr Queen, Thomas, 46 hours from San Diego and way ports. U 8 stmr Thomas, Bufor nila, via Nagasaki 22 d Ship Columbia, Mau=0n 21 days from Hono- 29 days from Ma- g luly S | r Jennie Thelin, Jensen, 7 days from Grays Harbor. Schr Newark, Beck, 12 hours from Fisks Mills <c1u- Monterey, Beck, 58 hours from Coos Sehr Chas R Wilson, Aherdeen G, Wheeler, Wheeler, Nehatem Rivi SAILED. Sunday, April 14, Br stmr Wellington, Salmond, Chemainus. Stmr Santa Rosa, Alexander, San Diego. Johnson, 7 days from 4 days from Stmr W H _Kruger, Ger stmr Pentaur, Petersen, way ports. Ship Two Brothers, Wilson, Bristol Bay. Br ‘ship Drummuir, Armstrons, Port Town- send. Bark Goalinga, Olsen, Bristol Bay. Schr Queen, Nielson, Puget Sound. Schr Archie and Fontie, Hunting, Stewarts Point. Schr Mary Etta, Nyman, —. TELEGRAPHIC. POINT LOBOS, April 14—10 p.; m.—Weather thick; wind west, velocity 12 miles per hour. DOMESTIC PORTS. BATTLE—Safled April 13—Stmr Victorian, SE. for Siaguay; stmr Dirlgo, for Skasuay. TACOMALSailed April 16-Stmr Ditigo, Alaska, EURBKA—Arrived April 14—Stmr Alliance, hence April 12; stmr Pomona, hence April 13. 0OS BAY—Sailed April 14—Stmr Arcata, for San Francisco. Hamburg and for SPOKEN. Per _ship Columbia—On April 10, lat 37.52 N, lon 13312 W, passed bark C § Allen. OCEAN STEAMERS. YORK—Arrived April 14—Stmr Tau- Sailed—Stmr Georgian, for NEW rie, from Liverpool. Liverpool. ‘Arrived Avril 14—Stmr Astoria, | gow and Moville. N §L]“f¥’3!ied April 14—Stmr trom New York, for, Liverpool. LILARDvPasud April 14—Stmr Minnehaha, from Glas- Cevie, trom New York, for London. A\T“ERP—Anl\ed April 4—Stmr Fries- LONDONDERRY—Sailed April 14—Stmr Tau- | i GOL”I‘HAMPTON*SM]EG April 14 — Stmr 1 QUEEBSTO“’ N—Sailed April 14—Stmr Um- \hrln. for New Y ln)n'l Liverpool and Queenstown. b g Sun, Moon and Tide. Times and Heights of High and Low Waters at_ Fort Point, “entrance to San thority of the Superintendent. NOTE—The high and low waters occur at land, from New York. | enton from Giassow and Liverpool, for Hali- from Bremen, for New York. k. | (BOSTON_Armrived Aprl 14 Stmr Ultonta. Tnited States Coast and Geodetic Survey— Francisco Bay. Published by officlal au- the city front (Mission-street wharf) about N €30 3 0 e ‘BOARDING MASTERS GHOST ON GILDERMEISTER The American ship Kenilworth has ar-f mak- | 24 hours from Eu- | it a_hunderd names, They nd of our hrough the forces whi =0 far as we ma st good. The man who is h we afraid of this intervening world and mis- und nds it or underestimates it moral value will certainly. 1 And he who los his world loses the thing of | greatest worth next his own soul.” twenty-five minutes later than at Fort Point; the height of tide is the same at both dlaces. | MONDAY, APRIL 15. | Sun ris | Sun sets Moon Time t. H W Time NOTE—In the above exposition of the tides the early morning tides are given in the left | Fand column and the successive tides of the v in the order of occurrence as to time of v; the third time column gives the last tide he day, except when there are but three tides, as sometimes occurs. The helghts given | are in addition to the soundings on the United States Coast Survey charts, except when a minus (—) sign precedes the height, and then | | the number given is subtracted from the depth given by the charts. The plane of reference is the mean of the lower low waters, i s Steamer Movements. TO ARRIVE, From. Steamer. Senta B&r\mm. Hyades. Acme. Foint Aren: Australla. Colon. .|Panama’ & Way Ports. Progreso ‘|Tacoma ... Argo... Coquille ‘River’ Columbia. Portland and Astoria. Newburg. Steamer. | Destination. Salls.| Pler. Grace Dol el fi"\sm' race Dollar. |Grays Harbor ....| 5 pm|Pier 2 April 16, Pler 13 Eier 13 Seattle dire 4 pm|Pler | Puiget Sound Pler Newport .. Pier 11 | {Coauille River ™. Pler 2 i e adar |1 pyss, - |Valparaiso & Way. |1 m|S. Sydney & Way Bis Bier 7 3 Pler 11 Tillamook Ba; April 1 .|Point Arena . fRome via Seattle. G Y. v. Panama. Divore:d and Then Remarried. GRASS VALLEY, April 14.—The second marriage of Mrs. Angelina Nelson and Frank Nelson of Grass Valley occurred at Reno, Nev., this week. The couple Were divorced Some months ago, but they found life dreary without each other. Nelson is engaged in the plumbing busi- ness in this city. = 2 | o stand for | s represent our ! to save men and to ul; if we want | cial endeavor and in | time, our approach hope | 1901. ARMY TRANSPORT of Chief Plumber, Lost Overboard. Quick and Uneventful Voyage Home of the Twenty-Eighth and Two Battalions of Thirty-Fifth Volunteer Infantry. S50 AL The army trn.n ort Thomas, twenty- nine days from Manila and twenty days from Nagasakl, arrived in port yesterday afternoon. It was ofter sundown before she was passed by the quarantine officer, 50 nobody was allowed to come ashore un- til this morning. The run-across the Pa- cific was marked by one fatality. Louls Smith, a cabin boy, fell overboard anl was killed. He went aft to empty a bucket over the stern. As he tilted the receptacle the ship gave a roll and the boy, losing his balance, fell headforemost between the revolving screws. He must have been cut to pieces, as the body did not come to the surface again. The lad's father is chief plumber aboard the Thomas, and he has been nearly crazy with grief since the accident. Captain Buford of the Thomas says the Rosecrans, with the remainder of the Thirty-fifth Infantry, &comlng home via Honolulu. The Lawtdh left Nagasaki a day ahead of the Thomas, and should ar- rive to-day. The Garonne, now out twen- ty-five days with the Twenty-sixth In- fantry from Nagasakl, was not sighted during the voyage. The transport offi- cials expect her to-day. Brings Many Soldiers. The Thomas brought 1039 men of the Twenty-elghth and 538 of the Thirty- fifth Infantry, 12 members of the Hos- pital Corps, 33 discharged soldiers, 7 dis- charged men from Nagasaki, 1 teamstes 3 prisoners and 8 stowaways. The pris oners are: Privates Casey, Company K. Fortieth Infantry; Stanley, Company D, Twenty-eighth Infantry, and Lynct Company C, Thirty-fifth Infantry. Th cabin Fassengers on the Thomas were the following named: Major Thomas Q. Ashburn, Thirty-third In- tantry, and wife; Captain Thomas G. Hanson, Nineteenth Infantry; Dr. Fred Palmer, Miss Minnie Valentine, Miss Josephine Zink, Miss | Barbara Weidman and Thomas Sweeney. The officers of the Twenty-eighth Regi- ment are the following named: Colonel William E. Birkheimer, Major Thom- as C. Chalmers, Captalns John H. Dunn, John D. Croasman, john P. Teagarden, C. C. Bick- man, 8. A, Price, 5. D. Crawford, C. S. Camp- bell,’ W. €. King, P. Vredenburgh and C. S. Fries; First Lieutenants H, S. Terrill, F. B Nellson, L. C. Waldron, G. H. Wood, B. Wooton, R. S. Hanaburg E. S. Stager, C Boice, John M. Dunn, H. Geinty, Pons aoi A r, Baeton . Beasnd Licurinants G. R. Jones, J. F. Bishop. M. B. Mabson, R. M. Mitchell, J. M. Grey, L. E. Schucker, H. Good- { year and Dr. G. P. Peed. The ofticers of the First and Third bat- ';allons. Thirty-fifth Infantry, are as fol- ows: A Colonel E. H. Plummer, Majors W. C. Short, W. L. Geary and L. B. Gramby; Captains A. | . Halpin, H. T. Mattnews, J. A Ru T W W, Danah, C. Robinson, First Lieut n w. Collins, cond Lieu- Strong, B. Goss, B. Kossman and D. W . Degan, H. Rngpr e e — ADVERTISEMENTS. i\ Have you got it ? Got what ? Why your ticket to the Pan- American Exposi- ition, via the Michigan Central Railroad or Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway. Direct routes. time. vice. date. For rates and infor- mation, call or address CARLTON C. CRANE, Pacific Coast Agent New York Central Lines, 687 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. Fast Superb train ser- Everything up to] | FULL 857 0F TR $5.00. Comfortable, Natural-looking Plates that you can chew with, made of best material by experienced workmen. Payment by Installments. || Chalmers Dental Co., 133 Powell Street. OR. MEYERS & CO. Specialists. Dis- easc and Weakness of men. Estab- lished 1881. Consul- tation and private book free, at office or by mail. Cures guaranteed. 731 Market street (cle- vator entrance), San Francisco. Weak Men and Women SHOULD USE DAIflANA’ BITTERS, THE great Mexican remedy; gives health and strength to sexual organs.' Depot, 323 Market. I regard soap a: s a medicine. TO THE PUBLIC— In presenting my Witch Hazel Soap for your consideration, I arm positive that I am offering the PUR- EST and BEST TOILET SOAP EVER MADE. I know it will im- prove any CO(HpIe‘(!On and soften the roughest hands, that it will cure pim- ples, blackheads, sores and facial blemishes; will cure chapped hands and lips in a night; will cure dan- druff ané all scalp diseases; will cure baby rash, hives and most skin irri- tations. MUNYON. It either benefits or injures. The pores of the body take into the system more or less of the seap, and the blood carries the same to every organ of ths body. Therefore, it is important that people should use only soap that is free from all poisonous fats and alkalies. Witch Hazel is used in every hospital throughout the civilized world, and is endorsed by physicians as Na- ture’s Greatest Ski n Remedy, Having combined Witch Hazel with other known healing and curative madicaments, Imostpositively assert that lam offering to the Public th2 Best ToiletSoap Ever Made. I mean by this that it is best the baby, best for curing all skin eruptions. it will cure Lhappe skin, liniment or Inorder that the price may not prevent any one f Soap, druggists have been instructed to sell the regular 25-cent size for 15 cents. any address. MUNYO\’S HOMEOPATHIC HOME REMEDY CO., New York Trial | dient in this Soap is pure enough to eat. same confidence in this Soap that they have in my rem size, 5 cents. NEIL BURGESS ABIGAIL PRUE ™ ™3 3 Thos ayly clad joskeys ruzai VAUDEVILLE EXTRAORDINARY. TFrancesca Redding and Co., Horace Goldin, Barbareschi lano, Prevost and Prevost, Hal Stephens and Co., Josephine Gass- man and Picks, George H. ‘Woods, s BIG PRODUCTION OF | THE COUNTY FAIR Friday Even'nz—Th2 Big JOCKEY NIGHT. ronghbred Raceborses mounted by us maayiQ g 8 H-m The Great American Biograph. Farewell Week of Tschernoff’s Famo’ Reserved Séats, 2ic; Chairs and Box Seats, Matinees Wednesday, Balcony, 50c. Saturday and Sunday. us Dog Circus. for the complexion, d hands and lips in a nmhr cure dandruff and all scalp diseases, and allay all form is more soothing than Coid Cream, more healing than ve, more beautifying than any cosmetic. and Caste 10c; Opera best for t h' scalp, best for It will tenthe roughsst xt will positively s of itching. It any lotion, Every ingre- I want the Pu c tohave the ties.—MUNYON. f this om Sent by mail onreceipt of price to Philadelphia AMUSEMENTS. SAN FRANCISCO'S i. COLUM B IA LEADING THEATRE SECOND AND LAST WEEK. MATINEE SATURDAY. Blanche Walsh | AMERICA'S DISTINGUISHED EMOTIONAL More Than Queen, An Imperial Spectacle, Founded on the Ro= mance of Napoleon and Josephine | THE ORIGI. MAGNIFIC! \L NEW YORK PRODUCTION. R —_ HISTORICALLY CORRECT. This attraction does not appear in Oakland. «*TIVOLI~» Evenings at . Matines Saturday at o SIS BRIGHTER CTHAN BVER. And Crowds the House Nightly. THE IDOL'SEYE “HOOT MON.” By Harry B. Smith and Victor Herbert. as ABEL CONN. HARTMAN POPULAR PRICES Telephone—Bush 9. MOROSCO GRAND OPERA HOUSE Commencing THIS (MO!\DAY) EVENING. Miss Florence Stone and Jack Webster in an Elaborate Revival of EAST LYNNE! Prices—10c, 15c, 25¢, 50c. Good seat in orchestra Satuw Matinees, Few seats, Tc. 25e. Branch Ticket Office—Emporium. 'S rday and Sunfay BELASCO ~»oTHAILS g Beginning TO- _l\.E]iGHT BVERY EVENING MATINEE SATORDAY AND SUNDAY. Last Week Engagement America’s Tragedian, ROBERT DOWNING And a Powerful Cast, Including the Popular Actor, MASON MITCHELL, In Shake- speare’s JULIUS CASAR Presented on a Scale of Extraordinary ni 00— PEOPLE ON THE STAGE—#0 300 _.10¢," 1Bc, 2o ‘A FAIR REBEL." Next Week— LC Qg TO-NIGHT MONDAY, I-IEATR A WELCOME REVIVAL SUSANNAH' Made all New York laugh. MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. Next Week—New York’s Sensational Comedy, «THE CONQUERORS.” CHUTES »» ZOO EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. LA LISTA, The Wonderful Miriad Dancer. THE GIRL OF QUALITY, SCOTT 'AND WILSON, COAKLEY AND ‘HUESTED, MIRIAM AINS- 'BARNES' DOG AND PONY SHOW, NEW MOVING ‘WORTH, PICTURES. LEAH MAY, the Giantess. AMATEUR NIGHT, THURSDAY. Telephone for seats—Park 23. UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE CALIFORNIA CLUB. AN EXHIBITION Industrial and Allied Arts 1S NOW IN PROGRESS IN THE ART GALLERY MECHAN(I’CS' _PAVILION. LOSE ON SATURDAY EVE. Oven Afternoons and Admission, Zc. Season Tickets, ACE < TANFORAN PARK. SAN FRANCISCO JOCKEY CLUB. SIX HIGH-CLASS RACES DAILY. $130. Chil- April 15 to 19, Inclusive. FINE CARD EVERY DAY. First Race Daily at 2:10 P. M. Trains from Thira and Townsend streets—7, 10:30, 11:30 a. m.; 12:40, 1, 1:30, 2 p. m. Returning, leave track at 4:15 and thereafter | at short intervals, Rear cars reserved for | 1adies and escorts. ADMISSION (INCLUDING R. R. FARE), $125. FISCHER’S Damery and Bancroft, Symonds, Agnes Fried, Karl, Rese: Mat Leota Howard and Melville CONCERT HOUSE. Admission 10c. Laura Lopez. Jack Tom Mack, Moll and Coakiey. | inee Sunda: E. J. POWER, Racing Secretary. R DR.PIERCES GOLDERN Corner Fourth and S. F._ Try CAFE BOVAL 252 Market, our Special Brew. Steam and se. er, Overcoats and valises checked free. DISCOVERY BlOOD.lI\ER LUNGS.