The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 2, 1903, Page 10

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EUOUKINB ST[WES !CHlLDREN ENJOY FIRS:I' JUVENILE . mmns flzl:- l]]ms[m ADVERTISEMENTS. CETE N .., ¢ v st 575, e cmcron o1 WLINGHE| SPRING OPENING Smokestacks at the Cliff 1 Eouse Bring Firemen | to the Beach. Armand Putz, Discourses Selections Which Delight Little Ones and Set Them Singing the Melodies —Y Two Calls for Apparatus Cause an Unwonted Commotion. okestacks that th s r pres- 1 of the perform more he manufac- department HE children’s playground in Gold- €n Gate Park never before ¢ day contained so many children as yester afternoon. The oc- casion of the great juvenile as- semblage was the welcomed in tion in the form of the Third Artillery band United States army, which was placed on #1.00 | | the restaurant balcony overlooking the y-go-round and swings. dmaster Armand Putz arran programme for the first childrer ch m 5q. 45 concert v capered n the shafts of t carriages and pranced and became skittish enough to please the wildest daredevil of i of juveniles. The =g lorodora™ selectjor donkeys they stepped, with their rid tride, with the nimbleness of ballet re horses of the merry-go-round d to take on a freshness that passed ait when the band struck up the two-step “Under the Bamboo Tree.” The wooden-modeled Hortons and Kenilworths and the Yellowtalls rocked with canter ision, and the chil- dren yell popular enough to sing sang, while the -arms “coged,” the goats “baird"” donkeys. brayed with ecstacy, if not in exact harmony were never- ss in unison witk the rest. it was an afternoon of fun, froli and old were regaled with good things at the cozy the best of restaurant under WAECK FOLLOWS ~ THE AWAKENING | Sea Captain Demolishes | Saloon in Which He Is Locked. 1043 Mariet Steet, Bet. 6 and 7, and McAll th 894 { If the amateur saloon wrecker, Car- For . Burne, Seaids, rie Nation, will call at 323 Oregon street, USoers. Ringworm, Tetter, . Liysipeise, Scald Head,” off Montgomery and near Washington, P D, b o, she will learn something to het advan- 1ng Piies. endadl Skin Sactintin . cloah- ki e B st tage. Perhaps by. close observation she - may become a real “smasher.” F. S. Kordts had a saloon at this number up to’ yesterday. ' To-day there is only wreckage and desolation | bloomed and the ale bubbled from the cool base of the rugged cask. A British sea captain, who knows the difference between a real wreck and a Carrie Na- tion hatchét tea party, did the work. In his ligtle place around the. corner Kordts has for years done o business dependent mostly upon the patronage of — | his intimate friends. It is hard for a tion, Hunting and “ stranger to find the place without a po- Goods. Largest | ~ stock. Lowest prices, Send | for catalogue. TR R ADVERTISEMENTS. 736 Market st d 511 Kearny W. T. HESS, FOTARY PUBLIC AND ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, 5_Claus Spreckels bldg. ain 983 st., below Powell. e James 1501 DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. Catalogues and Price Lists Mailed on Application. What Shall We Have for Dessert ? This_question arises in the family every day. Let us answer it to-day. Try | adelicious and healthful dessert, Pre- Bargd in two minutes. No boiling! no aking ! add boiling water and set to cool. Flavors:—Lemon, Orange, Rasp- berry and Straw! . Geta at your grocers todabe"y 10 cts. p.ackag‘ FRESH AND SALT MEATS. JAS. BOYES & 00. Sisei=s Peighers, ox Clay. Tel. Main OILS. | { LUBRICATING OILS. LEONARD & ELLIS, | . Phone Main 1719, | | i BLINDNESS is often caused 2y neglecting weak ey €16 ¥ront st B. F. light, paintul, sore, Ty or — injured eyes, etc. Geo.Mayerle's PRINTING. German Eyewater instantly re- : lieves all eye troubles; price, PRINTER, 50c. G, E. C. HUGHES, 811 Bansome sty 8. ¥. | Market st 5 B CUrTAD Optieal Inst., 1071 When the band | ers who | song, and between times the youns | the direction of the superintendent, .\‘[rs.‘ where a few short hours before the rye | 2 @\N"’f" MRRNY | BCENES | DURING FIRST JUVENILE CON | THIRD ARTILLERY, UNDER DIRECTION OF ARMAND PUTZ. AT CHILDREN'S PLAYGROUND E3 IN GOLDEN GATE PARK CERT, RENDERED BY BAND OF i Alice M. Hickok, on whom the children looked ‘with affectionate regard. | There was a clarionet solo. by one of the i members of the band, George McNamara, probably the youngest musicfan in the ! bands of Uncle Sam. George McNamara | is a San Francisco youth, and owing to liceman. Among these friends are many mariners, and Kordts and one of these, the captain of a limejuicer, held a so- cfal sessfon in the place up to the shad- owy dividing line between Saturday night and Sunday morning. At.this hour the captain retired to a chair in a side room, and: fell into dreams of what yet remained in the world to be drunk. CAPTAIN AWAKES. | - ‘Whether by way of a joke, because he | thought his friend would hot be able to move again until opening time Monday 1 morning (the place is closed or Sundays), lor whether he forgot that the captain | was still in the place, Kordts locked up | and went to his home, leaving the sleep- ing mariner in his four-legged boudoir. During the early hours of the morning the captain awoke. Speclal Officer Frank Gillen, who keeps watch in the neighbor- | hcod, knew of it at once. He had never heard such an awakening before. There must have been a pin sticking in the | captain. The noise wound up with the | crashing of the glass in the front win- dow. The captain made known to the speclal what the trouble was when the officer | called out for information. The special | told him to keep quiet and he would | bring help. ‘The captain said he did not | need any. The shivering of a few bar | timbers and the crash of a shelfful of | glasses told the special that the man on | the inside was more in need of an anes- thetic than anything else. | Gillen ran to the Harbor police station | and Police Officer Schmidt went back | with ‘him to Kordts' place. There was | nothing doing there. The place had been done. The dawn was just breaking in the east. A gaping hole in the front, where once there had been a window, told how the captain had departed. WRECK COMPLETE Kordts was sent for and when he opened | the place he fell back into the police- | man’s strong arms. The captain, so the officers decided after a careful survey, had commenced by throwing the bottles at the big mirror hehind the bar, though it is possible that he used a chair on that. It can never be patched. Whether he broke the chairs with the tables or the tables with the chairs can only be deter- mined by a chemical analysis. They were so mixed up with fragments of the | slove that the point could not be decided. A smaller mirror was hanging on the ona | faucet left on the one keg not overturned. Glasses, bottles and punchbowl were ready for the glass eater. In fact, salvage w:“ not even mentioned by the propri- etor. Kordts is hunting for the captain and will malke a _t:;lmlnd that be buy him a new saloon. e captain is hoj favorable breeze. iyt e Trapper’s Oil cures rneumatismand neuralgia. Drugglists, 50c flask. Richard & Co., 406 Clay, * | ping hands kept Bandmaster Putz busy soch his age special permission had to be ob- tained from the War Department before | he was allowed to become a member of | a United band. The young I lo with admira- ble judgment and was rewarded with an encore. \ The children enjoyed the intermezzo “‘Hiawatha™ so much ‘that their tiny, clap- attending to the repetitions of the popu- lar melody. People were free to say that the whole arrangement reflected credit “ mischief and disturbing the peace. | At the prison Mrs | Francisco. | you don’t try to break furniture.” Smasher Is Jailed and Her Drawing Powers Are Increased. | She Visits Swell Resorts With the Usual Mob at Her Heels. Mrs. Carrie Nation managed to break into the San Francisco city prison this | | morning and she looks for large box- | office receipts when she gets out. She | took her night gown with her to the | prison and said she didn't want to be | bailed out. Mrs. Natlon was arrested by a special officer in the employ of Charles New- man, proprietor of the Russ House, at the fnstance of Newman. Mrs. Nation vieited the Russ Cafe early in the night | and smashed a bottle of whisky on the bar. She continued on her rounds and | was arrested after midnight by the spe- | cial, who charged her with malicious talks of mirrors and glass- ware broken, but the only thing really smashed@ was the whisky bottle. Nation said she had had a row with her press agent because she had heard he ‘“put up the job” to have her arrested. “Good morning, Carrie.” The refrain of the song that won its place in vaydeville, then died the dealh‘ of all such nonsense was r?lvwarnals'd{‘ last night when Carrie Nation, ‘*home defender and saloon smasher,” accom- | panled by her live press agent, staried | out on another crusade. The words rose | from hundreds of throats in the crowd that surged behind the pudgy little wom- | an in steel “gig-lamps,” when she made | her second crusade in unredeemed San | Newman The Wichita Zephyr, who has buried the hatchet and adopted the Bible as her only weapon, looked completely happy when she ‘turned with her throng of fol- | lowers into Lacey's, the press agent at her side. “You caw't keep this up and go to| heaven!” she shouted to the bartenders. “I know it, madam,” said George | Birdsall, the courteous manager of the | place, “but that'll make room for oth- ers. Just go ahead now and talk all you want to. The place is yours as long as | Mrs. Nation visited the Richelieu next and made a speech. She was courteously treated. “You wouldn't drink your own | whisky, would you?" she cried to oneof | the bartenders, and he created a laugh | by saying that he wouldn't, but explain- ed that he never drank anything. WOMEN IN THE CRUSH. By the time Mrs. Nation left the Riche- g9 lieu the crowd had become immense and in it were many well-dressed women. A great number of these piled into the saloon with the men, their curfosity im- pelling them so strongly that they stood the discomfort of the crush in the varl- ous resorts to see the Kansas woman perform her stunt. “‘Gentlemen,” shouted a full-sized voice when the mob, Mrs. Nation leading, crushed into Newman’'s Russ House | saloon, ““Mrs. Carrie Nation of the Olym- pic Club—" “No smoking, please,” interrupted some one else, and the varlous cries that arose | mingled into a babble that meant nothing | and out of which no understandable sen- tence escaped. ““Where is the proprietor of this place?” | outed Mrs. Nation. | Mr. Newman was at her elbow and | they shook. | The performance proceeded without an | orchestra. Once or twice Newman for- | got his lines and had to rubber at a type- written sheet under the bar, but the au- | dience was not critical. When he found | himself pocketed for something to say he fell back on “Have an enchilada?’ and it went all right. “I want to make a speech to you men,” shouted Mrs. Nation and she climbed up | on a leather upholstered chair. “What | kind of a place is this—?" “A blasted good one,” shouted one of the mob. “Can there be anything blasted and | good?” retorted the woman on the chair. Mrs. Nation smashed a bottle of whisky | on the bar and one of the crowd acci- dentally smashed the plate glass of a door. “TEDDY” IS EXHORTED. | Up to Kearny and Market the crowd | surged, led by the cold water Joan of Arc. | There she became timid, as her ribs had | barely escaped two or three times during | upon not only the Park Commissioners, but Mrs. Hickok equally, who took tire- less and unceasing Interest in the com- fort of the children. | the evening and the mob was growing | greater. She boarded a Geary-street car | with the two or three men who were pro- ADVERTISEMENTS. e March San Francisco, Mon Next Wednesday | day, 2 March, 1903. Fourth Afternoon from grammes will be Hawaiian Glee C ence is requested. Evening from eight to ten. . Second Anniversary of our Market *| street store and Spring Opening Dis- play of new Furniture, Floor Cover- ings and Draperies. mitted on this day. Musical pro- Orchestra. The honor of your pres- two to five. No sales per- rendered by the : lub and Bennett’s 957 to 977 Market Street, oty Frewnes (Successors to California Furniture Co.) Opp. Golden Gate Avenue. | but she died last night after a great deal Black Dress Fabrics On Monday, March 2d, we wili have our Spring Opening of NEW BLACK DRESS GOODS. We will then show a most elegant stock of exclusive novelties from both French and English manufacturers. SPECIAL BLACK LONDON TWINE CLOTH, 48-inches wide..-----ceeaeene- BLACK FRENCH ETAMINE, 47 101y 1)1 A e e A BLACK FRENCH MOHAIR VOILE, 44 inches wide..-----cccneonn. BLACK SILK WARP CREPE DE CHINE, 44 inches wide BLACK ENGLISH SICILIAN, 44 [T ek 11 A PSR PR A VALUES. $1.50yd. $1.50yd, $1.50yd. $1.50yd. $1.50yd, SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY OF AROVE GOODS. 111, 113, 115, 117, 119, 121 POST STREET. tecting her, and rode to Grant avenue, the car being immediately crowded to its capacity. | “The car’s loaded, Carrie,”” get out your hatchet,” shouted a funny man, and the | lady smiled. Down Grant avenue the “home defend- er” moved, the crowd swelllng to large | proportions and Mrs. Nation soon plunged across Market and into the Bohemian cafe, on Market street near Third, the ornate glass doors creaking and groaning under the pressure of the mob. $ “Good evening, Carrie,” said “Teddy” | Pilster, the night manager, with his most | gracious bow, and as coolly as if an old | friend had dropped in. “Make yourself at home."” “Teddy” is a blonde beauty Who makes the ladies look a second time when he appears behind his trotter in the park, but he failed to hypnotize Carrie. “Young man,” she said coldly, “if you were in any other business you'd be hand- some, but ‘handsome is as handsome and you look perfectly homely back there. The other bartenders promptly pirouet- ted to the front, but they couldn’t impress | efther. Mrs. Nation gave “Teddy” and his fellows the longest lecture she had | yet delivered, and they promised to be | good. In each place she went the “Zephyr” exhorted her hearers to turn out and hear her to-night at the Alhambra. San Joaquin Midnight Express. Arranged to suit Valley people. Can keep late hours in the city, finding train at_ferry at 11:25 p. m., which will drop you at Fresno or Bakersfleld in time for breakfast. . ——————————— ANNIE CARLE DIES SUDDENLY AT HOME Woman Was Ill and Is Believed to Have Taken a Dose of Carbolic Acid. Mrs. Annie Carle, wife of Gottlieb Carle, an employe of the National Bottling Com- pany, dled under suspicious ecircum- stances last night at 6 o'clock. It is be- lieved that she was a victim of carbolic acid poisoning taken with suicidal intent. Mrs. Carle was discharged from the Napa Insane Asylum about™two weeks ago. Since that time she has been at her home at 237% Henry street under the care of a nurse, Mrs. Mary Wantzel of 732% Natoma street. Saturday Mrs. Wantzel left the woman alone to visit a friend. On her return she found Mrs. Carle very sick. She called in Dr. R. H. Mass, who did what he could for her, 02 suffering. A search of the premises revealed a carbolic acid bottle empty. As there was no acid in the house prior to the depart- ure of the nurse it is presumed that the deceased took advantage of her absence Saturday and purchased the acid, drink- ing it in her despondency. You won't find ‘Jesse Mcore” Whisky in cheap places—it isn't mads for cheap men to drink. It is the best and demanded by the best people. . ——————— Accused of Grand Larceny. Maurice Gould, a respectable looking young man who resides on Stevenson street between First and Second, was taken Into ¢ustody. yesterday on the charge of grand larceny. The complaint was made against him by George Lam- prefis, who conducts a restaurant on Third street, who claims that Gould en- tered a room in the rear of the restau- rant and stole $0 from Lampredes’ trunk. The accused emphatically denies the charge and says the only acquaint- ance he ever had with the restaurant man or hig living quarters was that he had eaten a few meals at the place. The alleged theft is sald to have been com- mitted-two months ago. All newsdealers on the Pa- cific Coast sell The Sunday Call, with beautiful Art Sup- plement. OLDBE BOWEN % CO Monday Tuesday Wednesday Eggs—fresh of course G G doz 20C Butter-creamery soc 2 squares gsc 5 95 Kona coffee—reg’ly 25c 15 20¢ The coffee with some taste to it Bouillon capsules 25¢ Beef tea—celery flavor— reg’ly 3oc—box of ten Puree de foies gras 20¢ French sandwich paste-reg'ly 25¢ can Pine-apple—Hawaiian 2 cans 45¢ Sliced—coreless-—eyeless—reg’ly 25c Kippered herring—Moirs 20c Breakfast dellcacy—reg’ly 25¢ can Castile soap—Conti 50¢ The best Italian article—reg’ly 6oc bar Creole rice— 5 Ib carton 45¢ Finest quality 10 Ib carton goc grown—reg’ly roc Ib French cherries—glac’ Extra quality—reg’ly 6oc 1b Fi paste—reg'ly 25¢c # Ib bex urkish delight—serve with black coffee Ripe olives—California aqt Rich in oil-—reg’ly 35c qt % gal 55¢C Safety matches-s doz boxes 25¢ 3600 matches—safe arfund children 50¢ 20¢ 3oc Brandy—Califamia—- 75¢ Reliable—reg’ly $1 bot—$4 gal $3 Sweet wines—Imported 75¢ Sherry—Madeira—Port— reg’ly $t bottle—$4 gallon Cocktails—Imperial 6 kinds—ready to use-—reg’ly $1 25 bot Scotch and Irish whisky regny speciat Highland Club—Scotch % 1 8c Killyeroy—Ilrish bottle ©5€ Caledonia— Scotch— $135$1 15 Highland .\'zctgr - 150 120 Whisky—Cedar Brook bot $1 15 $ [ reg’ly $t 50—$6 gl 450 Old Mellow rye— bet 75¢ reg’ly S1—84— gal é:’ Sardines—Ramer— 25¢ Boneless—reg’ly 3oc large tin Mackerel—reg'ly $1 25—5Ib pail $1 Sénd postal for Catalog. 432 Pine 232 Sutter 2800 Californ's San Francisco Thirteenth and Ciay Strests Oakiand CUTLERY EVERYBLADE WARRANTED 2

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