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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 1903. ADVERTISEMENTS. 20,000 Babies Munyon’s Witch-Hazel Soap mothers were made happy thereby. Remember, Munyon’s Witch. cases baby of hives, chafing, and all forms of baby rash; it old as well as young; it is so excellent for the complexion TONOPAR ROAD A PROBABILITY Clark Sends Confiden-!Supervisors Order Pub-| tial Agent to Look Over the Field. w te 15¢ per cake. MAKE DEMANDS lic Administrators to Settle. Board adopted a of the of Supervisors solution on recommendat! re County Administrators certain fees id P ic Administrator: collected are $628 n of fees in probate cases was | | 1aid over by the Finance Committee for y one week in order to give ex ounty Clerk | from | 1 ane an opportunity to search further for the missing cash book of 1899 containing the entries of the fees. Chall Brandenstein explained that the al- | i defalcati was a matt for the or to i i made a report thereon. vefer it even to the French toilet soap that costs as high as $1. Sold everywhere FOR BACK:FEES vesterday ion Finance Committee directing the | Clerk to demand immediate pay- and to collect from various Pub- delinquent 1 remaining unpaid, as reported by the experts of the committee The demands | for the fees are not to act as a waiver to v additional delinquency on the part of | The amounts | , $1184, $1986 and Clerk’s office regarding the | vestigate after the committee | ’ AYOR SCHMITZ startled the Board of Supervisors yesterday by submitting a long message in which he recommends that sala- ® ries of numerous city employes &hn‘ reduced and useless positions be done {away with in order that the sum of $172,- 710 might be saved for public improve- | ments. The Mayor informs the board that | last year he exercised the right of veto | conferred upon him by the charter in the municipal budget to the ' aggregate of 134,700, which vetoes the board d not | sustain. This year the Mayor says he desires to make certain suggestions so that the budget may be readjusted before final action by the board and more money allowed for substantial werk on accepted and unaccepted streets, cven at the ex- pense of losing a few high-salaried or un- | necessary employes. The Mayor particu- | ularly directs his recommendations for re- | duced salaries to the Board of Public Works and the Board of Health, in both | of which departments, he claifns, the ex- penses could be curtailed without crip- pling their proper admiaistration. SALARIES TOO HIGH. The message submitted by Schmitz says in part: Mayor | 1 deem it proper to state that I Lave care- fully examined the proposed budget as passed to phint and also the preliminary itemizations upon which are based your various estimates | and allowances for the respective departmental | expenses. and I am constrained to say, with- | out reflection on your board, that this pro- posed budget again goes far to sustaln the neral complaint of our citizens, growing stronger and more bitter from year to vear, | that our tax levies seem to be made almgst | entirely for the purpose of providing high official salaries, and many of them, and with but small regard toward the execution of pos- sible and neceseary public improvements. The amount of taxation proposed by vour budget to be ra for and to be expended in the fiscal year 1903-1904 is $6,150,400. Of this immense amount of money about $4,000,000 is to be exvended in salaries, and of the re- 1 0,000 or thereabouts a consid- portion is to be pald for wages of labor, and probably less than $350,000 for all improvements, repairs and betterments to strects, sewers, public buildings and parks. This certainly does not look like sound busi- And th say with full appreciation e fact that the ce of governm nere existence and main- without visible material % 25, alleged to be due, respectively, to requires o very large expense, which g g the administrations of | <8 be escaped. but which may. however, he city Bt Mo % 1 therefore make the follow- PL Administrators Frecse, Drink- | ns and suggestio; house, Boland Farnham 7 Works—The total amount question of the alleged defalcation department Is only $769,867, as 7 allowed last vear, and as 017 recommended by your finance committee propr manent th large sum $203,255 is directly ap- ed for salaries ond $60,442 for per- improvements. WANTS FEWER JANITORS. Forty-four Janitors are allowed the Board ¢ Public Works. 1 am satisfled that thirty- eight can very easi the work. Last year there were but t 1 recommend that | $3500, being 3 y the salary of eight | janitors. d from the amount allowed - URGE INVESTIGATION. janitorial services and that it also be ap- 4 lerk (asey assured the | PrOPTiated to replacing cobblestone pavements. wi Deputy County Clerk Casey assured the | | recommend a reduction of $9100 in the “ smittee that the demands will be made | amount of salaries allowed the ‘‘bureau of the Public iministrators. County | streets” of the Board of Works and that this s Afaacy A it lerk Deane | AMOUNt also be fated to replacing cob- irged that a ful ctigation of al. | Pleftone pavem I estimate the possibility d that a tu estig; of this reduction as follows: (a) Chief of bu- 4 be hel ald there | reau of etreets, $2400; the work of th official i 76 ment that | could be easily done by onme of (h mis jonal fees be collected after the first | Sloners and much t could be «aned for it b e. | the Devart of Public Works by an ex fled for letters of adminis-| ;g ve arter n the part of the commis tes, mud this might r;);(»yl)a;_n sioners to duties of that oarticular de eming shortages. Expert partment one clerk at $1200: (c) three S ed that blanks of the Public| clerks «t £4500 ¢ S oy of TR o seems to me that the many inspectors al- Fia viies Sl fifen BY | lowed this department could do a little of ¢ attornevs, who had thu aped | the office work If the remaining clerks and P fe The letters “P. A.”" had been | officials cannot cope with it. I have nc doubt, used for “Public Administrator” and | however, but that those who would remain F. R for “fees remitted.” and there are | could easily do all the work. It aiso seems no orders « e remit s The | to me that $1000 could. without much diff order n fil ‘dm ;‘“h» th f B The | ity, be nomi#ed on the chief deputy’s mitiee directed the experts 10 con | and inspect laries and I recommend such the investigation into the records of | further reductio e the probate department. The Hassell (""r‘x(wr.‘tt‘v- ;‘m ~a:mu.= T‘h'—w are allowed it Cor - made another partial re- | f0Ur Keepers, where three ought to be able to s ® ANt Dow - made another DA e | do the work. 1 recommend a reduction of MANY WANT PLACES Jpoxt ‘«.'hs.u e T I ot rtateg| 900 in that appropriation. There 1s aiso al- or in the ) books. e report states | lowed $2100 for two carpenters at the corpora- IN THE CITY SCHOOLS t $46 75 is unaccounted for during 189, | tion yard e Board of Public Works employs % 4 g 1896-1897, $188 25 in 1898-1899, | a lyuxljt— number 'l" carpenters and may de- = i P tail them as needed; they may and zhould be Nearly 400 Names Have Already 50 in 1900-1901 and $46 25 in 19 paid as thefr services s’hnllmhn‘l?.wq!(lr:i’ul;l Sosn Busaliald e Oielk Bus- total of $539. The report says: | of the a_x‘mrn,;rx?n(,r. m“r )'P]nnh'r’ml‘l improve- . , { | ments allowed to the Board of Pubtic Works vice Examination. CASHBOOK INOT ?:}PINA'L- [ This reduction of $3000 1 recommend should 2 of S mentioss Sawe he cashbook for the year s not the one | also be appropriated for replacing cobblestone T f applicati ave al- | original entry. A thorough search has beer | pavements. » % ved at the offices or the original without avail. The ob Title to Miranda Grant Good. completed beer ications two are from the per cent off for next two narked a ne from Leibold Harness ( Already led year. twic are trunk n plain figures e as Have _———.—— 1 is extending Lyons Attorney ot of the title . is that it Boar« wishes to buy e purpose of war P of S grant He will rvisc ject of making this copy cannot be stated this time. The book referred to herein, #%,124, was made by a local firm, ordered b; Mr. Jordan, a clerk of the Probate Departm that t on November 20, 1809, delive aber 1899, charged to the pers of V. F. Northrop and paid for b he date of delivery. This departm be thoroughly audited for the per arch, 1895, up to the present time suggest th nee it a misdemeanor of whatever making Sllect fee: amo Without giving a receipt therefor to the pers paying such fees and making it mandat that a duplicate or triplicate receipt be tained as oc fees being paid to various clerks of the Cous Clerk's office, we would suggest that there one clerk named who shall be authorized the Cou lerk’s able, that in additio Wil be required by same time record 1 | tic registering ma i —_———— | June 8 1. this ernor’s office issued a requisit Governor of Towa for the return as McNamee, alias James McNamee State. McNamee escaped from v in 1864 while serving a seven a burglary | | you? | | T { | ffice, and, the e Miranda | a fe a committed in FOR THE WEAK The human body is a very delicate piece of machinery. It must be treated gently and intelligently when it is be- ginning to break down. Dosing the sen- sitive stomach with drugs will not re- store strength. Even if the drugs had strength to give, they never reach the parts that need the strength. The great- est scientists and doctors now acknowl- edge that Electricity is the basis of witality. Therefore use it, but use it right. This is my specialty. I know better than any other man on earth how to use it in these special troubles, be- cause I have had the benefit of twenty years of close study and actual con- tact with over 50,000 cases treated with it. My Dr. McLaughlin’s Electric Belt cured NWervous Debility, Varicocele, Weakness of Any ‘Will cure to stay Kind, tism, Pains . Cont Cpack and etipation, Dyspepsia restore health. Do you suffer from oy mait & What it m READ MY BOOK to remain young I wants 1 mail it, sealed. fi E months Dr. M. C. McL ———— T LI LI L LT E ¢ Stomach, Heart, Liver or Kiduneys, Rheuma- erves, does not burn, m’nu(h pe B give & strong current for yeare. Cut thie out and act to- Shoulders. of the troubles named above? arising from m See what it has done for others snd you will know ust do for you. Lumbago, Indigestion, Neu- and all other troubles waere new life can If so, cast the failure of other treatments and give 1 have & book which every man should read (one for women Jt tells facts which are of interest to every man who n vitality at any age res 1f you call 1 will give you a free test. you feel the current and can regulate it. day. Send for this book to-day if you can't member, my 1 warrant it to no man who uses it right needs it over three au'ghlin, 906 Market St. Above Ellis, 8sn Francise). Office Hours—8 8, m. 16 8 p. m. Sundays-—10 to 1. sion may require, and instead ¢ ent el ent 1od We formulation and enactment | unt r nty be and that he be centrally located ir| if deemed advis- t which he | t he at the | fee upon | after. 1on to Folsom | CLEANING STREETS. | 1 recommend that a reduction cf $25,000 be made in the appropriation for cleaning streets. Last_year $190,000 sufficed and 1 belicve that the $25,000 thus deducted can, without damage to the city's interests or reputatiun for clean streets, be economized and put with advantage into permanent improvements. I rereat that if the commissioners would devoie their ex- | clusive time as required by law to the duties of the Board of Public Works the amount thus | taken off the appropriation will show no loss of benefit to the city in the matter of sprink- ling and cleaning streets. In the division of architecture I believe that three inspectors can do all necessary work. The amount allowed for inspectors is $8400. 1 recommend a_reduction to $4500. Three in- spectore at $1500 a vear, together with the ar- chitect, should be amply sufficient to carry on the outside business of this division. This will effect 2 saving of $3000. 1 recommend also & reduction of $420 in the amount allowed for buggies. Four bugsies would be sufficient for our men the matter of the bureau of engineering ote that you have again allowed the lump m of £60,000, and that this is exclusive of the $5000 allowed to the Committee of Utili- ties of the Board of Supervisors for expenditure in_connection with the acauirement of public R utilities. 1 have not changed my opinion since last vear that a $10,000 reduction can 1 | be_made in this appropriation by cutti positions which are not strictly necessary and they ought to be. 1 repeat the statement made by me last year that “the business of this bureau can, I | am sure, be so arranged with régard both to | economy” and practical utility that all its legi- timate expenses outside of examination of pub- lic utilities can in the sum of | $50,000. FURTHER REDUCTIONS. alth Department—For the fiscal vear 1902- 19 there w allowed this department for salaries of the main office the sum of $59,940. For the fiscal r 1903-1004 the propesed budget provides an allowence ‘for the same urpose of $65,380, heing an increase of $5640. n my message laying befors you certain vetoes of the budget last year 1 objected to and | recommended a reduction of $20,180 of the amount of 840, and 1 believe that with the amount _remaining, namely, 80, the cen- | tral office of the Board of Ith can and should be conducted with efficiency and with satisfactory resuits to public intsrest. 1 there- fore recommend that instead of $65,580 for sal- 1“(&'!% which are higher than be embraced arles the central office of the Health Depart- ment be allowed only $39,750, making a de- duction of $25,800. The additional employes and the raised salaries allowed for in this budget 1 do not think are absolutely essential to the promer earrying on of the business of that office, and for the réason stated in my last year's veto message I believe the other $20.160 should be also deducted. | 771t it be claimaa that some of this increased amount s necessary because of the added ex- pense of cleaning Chinatown, 1 beg to refer { you 1o the additional appropriation of $5000 which vou have made in the budget for sani- tary purposes for that very object. The $20, 160 reduction last year was based (with reasons given) on the following ftems: $600 allowed to the Health Officer, with recommendation that he abstain from private practice during offi- clal office hours; $300 deduction on salary of secretary, making the salary $1800. SECRETARY CAN DO WORK. Fiftesn hundred dollars for one assfstant mecretary, as 1 then believed and now believe that the secretary can without much diffi- culty do all the work which has heretofors been done by himself and his assistant; $1200 of the anpropriation of $3600 for three ‘clerks, inmy judgment there are too many clerks in this office. Two_should suffice. Fighteen hundred dollars allowed for statistican, on the ground that the secretary and clerks can do the work of the statistican without greatly jeopardizing public interest; $1200 allowed for one assist- ant chemist, a& the chemist at $1800 and his help at §000 can in my judgment do ail the work in their department If they will davote their entire time to its business; $1200 al- lowed for one toxicologist. on the ground. that the position is unnecessary. The chemist and \M' assistant can do what Tittle work is neces- | sary in this line, and for special cases special allowance can be made. Eighteen hundred dol- jars allowed for one chief sanitary inspector. | There is no necessity for a ‘‘chiet’’ sanitary | inepector. The Heaith Officer {s really the | chiaf sanitary inspector. Twenty-four hundred dollars of the $6000 aliowed for five sanitary ' $172,710 Saved Be U | duetions have Urges the Board of Superviéors to Make Reductions in| ' the Tax Budget and Recommends That the Total of sed in Public Improvements This ‘vould leave three sanita inspectors, whose retention I favor only thi there may be directing heads to this depar ment of the Board of Health. As every police- man is by law a sanitary inspector and may be called upon st any time, there is, except as etated, no need for addtional sanitary inspec- tore in the Board of Health. If the three re- maining eanitary inspectors will call upon the Chief of Police he will at all times instruct his patroimen to co-operate in this work. Thir- teen hundred and eight dollars of the $4104 allowed last vear for three assistant plumbing inspectors. The chief and two assistants can, in ‘my opinion, do all the necessary work. Three hundred dollars of the $1800 allowed for insgectors. one chief food inspector, upon the ground that $125 per month is sufficient salary for this positl TOO MANY INSPECTORS. Fifty-four hundred dollars of the $8640 allowed for eight assistant food inspectors. A chief and three assistants are suffi- clent = for this work when we sider the additional -~ milk, One thousand and dairy and market inspecto eighty dollars of the $5400 allowed for five market inspectors. In my opinion four arc amply sufficlent to do the work. This makes, as stated, a total reduction of salaries in the central office of the Board of Health Depart- ment of $25,500, an amount which I recommend should be appropriated for permanent improve- ments on our streets. I recommend that the amount allowed the Health Department for expenses be reduced by $2000. The detall items aggregating the amount appropriated are too high, and, moreover, the $5000 appropriated for “sanitary purposes’’ necessarily include some of the items embraced fn the $8000. 1 recommend that $2400 of the $33.600 allowed for salaries at the Emergency and Insane hospitals be deduct- od as follows: $2400 of the $10,800 allowed for nine assistant sugeons; in my judgment the chief surgeon and seven assistants are enough. 1 hereby recommend that $1700 of the $7200 allowed for expenses of emergency in Insane hospital be deducted. as'I am more than satis- fied that $6500 is amply sufficient to cover the amount of this expense. EXPENSES OF HOSPITAL. In the City and County Hospital the amount allowed for salaries is $38,000. While the total aggregate of other expenses recommended by the Finance Committee is $67,000 (total $105,- 000), to which your Honorable Board has added $10,000, 1 am of the poinion that several of the arfes could easily be dispensed with, and I commend that the office of secretary and commissary, each drawing at least $1500 a year, could be consolidated and the duties of both offices performed by one man. With regard to the item of $25,000 for e: penses in the suit brought by the Spring Val- ley Water Works against the city and county for a restoration of last year's rate. I must confess that I fail to see where, with the ex- tensive force of the City Attorney’s office, such a large amount shall be necessary to defend the ca: I shall not recommend a reduction of this amount merely because I have not been Jnformed of its proposed use and have not had time to accertain, but I do recommend that as much of that iarge amount as may not be found necessary shail be saved and returned to_the general fund In conclusion I beg to call your attention to the fact that no recommendations for reduction have been made in the appropriations for the public schools, the park. the Fire Department, the Department of Electricity, the Civil Service Free Library or the Polico for any permanent improve- Department, t Department or ments. The total amount of reductions recommended herein is the sum of $172,710, an amount which will go far toward reconcliing our tax-paying citizens toward bearing their proper burden of taxation, If the sum saved shall be expended in the public improvements, for which they have been o long and so earnestly petitioning. § MORE REDUCTIONS. Other reductions recommended are: ions, $5000: Department of jury and wit ness fees, $5000; Justices' Clerk’s office, $2400; advertising. $1000; printing munieipal reports, £3000: sut e’ of prisoners. $4000: station- ery, $1600; Assessor's stationery. $1000; furni- ture for public buildings. $6230: examination of ins $1000: lighting streets and public buildings, $25,000; extending aswessment roll, £2000; tags, 8$000; Assessor's salary, dditional clerks, $6000; Re ): salaries of Treasurer' nographers of eriminal courts, $20 ntenance of jails, $2000: po- lice contingent fund, $100Gzpoiice patrol, £2000. In order to consider the message of the Mayor, which was read by the clerk, it was necessary to reconsider the hoard's action in having adopted the budget at the last meeting. Supervisor Curtis in- treduced a resolution, which was adopted, providing that “the head of each city de partment where recommendations for re- been made appear before the hoard at a meeting to be held to- morrow afterncon at 2 o'clock in order that the board may determine what merit if any there may be in the suggestions of the Mayor. Also that each department furnish the board a statement of the work performed by each employe affected by the proposed reductions.” Lo REPORTS ON LIGHTING BIDS. Committee Favors Awards to the Amount of $300,000. The Supervisors' Committee on Arti- ficial Lights. filed a report at the board's meeting yesterday regarding the bids for lighting streets and public bufldings of the city during the next fiscal year. The committee recommends that the bid of aeputie the Pacific Gas Improvement Company, which is the lowest for eleven public buildings, be accepted, subject to an agreed reduction to a 75-cent rate in the case of five buildings exceeding that rate where there was no competition in the bidding. The estimated cost of lighting the eleven buildings is $3400. The committee further recommends that the bid of the San Francisco Gas and Eleetric Company for all other pub- lic buildings and for lighting the streets 365 nights in the year be accepted, sub- ject to certain conditions which require the addition of sixty-five new Welsbach lights and sixty-eight new arc lights, making the toal number of Welsbach lights 5150 and arc lights 1000, and also the lighting of the dome of the City Hall any twelve specified nights during the year. The estimated cost is $206,600. While the rates secured are a material reduction from those of the present year the increased total cost over that of last year, which was $273.79 04, secures 133 lights additional and thirty-six nights ad- ditional lighting, which means the termi- nation of the moonlight edule, the re- port says. Gas Inspector Tupper submit- ted a statement showing that the cost of lighting the present number of street lights every night during the year at ex- isting rates and lighting public buildings would be $326,844 70. Action on the report of the committee was postponed for one week in order to give the Supervisors time to study it over. The ordinances declaring that public in- terest and necessity demanded the con- struction of a number of new school- houses and the acquisition of sites for the same; the construction of an additional park in the Twin Peaks Tract and the construction of & new public lbrary building on the block bounded by Polk, Grove and Fulton streets and Van Ness avenue, were finally passed. The Mayor at once affixed his signature to the ordi- nances and the propositione will be incor- porated in the proposed bond issue, The ordinance grauting permission to the Union Oil Company to lay two pipe lines in Illinois and Sixteenth streets to connect with th® water front was passed to_print. The sum of $1%0 was appropriated out of the urgent necessity fund to purchase a filing case for the Clerk’s office of the Board of Supervisors. *The sum of §500 was appropriated for the purchase and installation of pelice patrol signal boxes by the Department of Electricity and bids were ordered to be advertised for at once. The ordinance imposing licenses on trncks and wagons at the rate of $5 per annum for those drawn by two horses and $10 per annum for those drawn by more than two horses was passed to print, ' The City Attorney reported that the title to that portion of the Miranda Grant required for the extension of Lyon street IMAYOR SCHMITZ DECLARES SALARIES i OF CITY EMPLOYES ARE TOO HIGH is vested in Frederick T. Duhring, who at once filed the deed and agreement of con- veyance to the city of the property for & consideration of $12,000. George W. Tindal was released from the contract to furnish fruits and vegeta- bles to the City and County Hospital, Almshouse and Twenty-sixth-street Hos- pital, and it was awarded to John Miller at the prices bid by Tindal. An ordinance was passed to print fully accepting Eighteenth street, between Fol- som and Division. Chief Hewitt of the Department of | Electricity submitted a proposed amended | ordinance which prohibits interference | with or injury to the fire and police tele- 1’ graph systems. The amendment consists princlpally of changing the distance of running wires parallel with or across wires of the systems In order that this | distance may comply with an ordinance | which takes effect January, 1904 The following ordinances were finally passed: | Directing the Board of Works to purchase | from the Spring Valley Water Worl for £3500, a strip of land 1300 feet long by 70 feet | Wide 'on Nineteenth avenue, between Trocadero | road and Ocean avenue, upon the grantor exe- | cuting an agreement that the purcha<e price be avplied to the macadamizing of the road- way and fencing of the lands abuttiag therecn. | Establishing grades on Virginia and Eugenia avenues, Elleck lane and Elsie street. i Repealing certain orders imposing Iicenses on various industries and penalties for misde- | meanors and re-enacting the same In the form of ordinances, to comply with the terms of the | charter. . | Providing for the acceptance of “Twentisth | street, between Howard and Shotwel Authorizing the Auditor and Treasurer to pay out of any surplus funds that may Le on hand on June 30, 1903, certaln judgmen:s ob- tained for back salary. obtained by Mary Mor- rissey, R. H. Mitchell and Mrs. Ireane D. Reeves, teachers in the School Department, The Mayor was requested to appoint a citizens’ committee of twenty-five for the purpose of making necesary arrange- ments for the celebration of Independence day. The petition of property owners for the‘ removal of a fence maintained by the Southern Pacific Company on Sixteenth street, between Kentucky street and the | water front, was referred to the Street | Committee. The petitioners say that the | fence causes traffic to go a royndabout way to reach the water front. The petition of Willlam Nicol of 410 Kearny street that the permit given to €. | A. Warren to blast on Twenty-second | street, from Illinois to Michigan, be can- celed, was referred to the Street Commit- tee . Nicol says that last Saturday an ex- plosion blew off the chimney of his house at 360 Michigan street and cracked the’ lot for eight feet and that Mrs. Paulson had a_narrow escape from death by rea- | son of falling bricks and rocks. —_— e ——— | ROSS WHITAKER PLAYS | SHERLOCK HOLMES' ROLE | PR [ Succeeds in Discovering Identity of the Suicide Found in the Park. | Dctective Ross Whitaker reported the Coroner yesterday that he had suc-| ceeded In learning the identity of the man | who shot himself in the head in Golden | Gate Park some time last Friday ulght,\ Tha only clew that the detective had to | | | to work on was the laundry mark on the shirt collar of the dead man. The people sta laundry said that at the Contra C the- mark was 6208 and that the collar | had been washed and marked | there,” but that was all the in-! formation they could give. The de- tective finally learned that the collar had | been marked at the Cascade Laundry and | that it had come from 40 Geary street. | At that address the detective learned | that the dead man was a waiter named | Polycarpio Iglesias, a native of Spain. | He had been rooming at that address for | abcut a month and was sick and out of | employment. On Friday morning he | packed his gripsack and told Mrs. Davis, the landlady, that he was going to the | comtry. That was the last she saw or eard of him until the detective's visit. | Iglesias’ body was found the next day. | Detective Whitaker #as complimented | by his brother officers for the successful | manner in which he had worked up the case. —_——————— Chinese Arrested for Murder. Nine presidents of Chinese tongs, who were indicted by the Grand Jury for the murder of Tom Yick in Ross alley on May 8, were arrested on warrants in Po- lice Judge Conlan’s court yesterday morn- ing and booked at the City Prison. They were later sent to the County Jail. By a mistake In the County Clerk's office | their bonds had been fixed at $5000 each and their attorney, Frank Gould, had ar- ranged to supply the bonds, when an or- der came from Presiding Judge Murasky | to the Chief of Police not to release the | defendants, as no bail had been fixed. | The charge of conspiracy against the nine indicted and two others was continued by Judge Conlan till to-morrow. —t————— Bankrupt Hotel Man. George Coulter, a hotel-keeper at Chi- nese Station, Tuolumne County, filed a petition in insolvency yesterday in the United States District Court. He owes $2054 and has $20 assets in debts on open acecunt. —_— YOUR SU "The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signa- ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his gfrsonal supervision for over 30 Counte deceive you in this. ears. 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The Magnificent Sousa Opera, “EL CAPITAN.” Triumph of EDWI and the Splene ENING, June 14, The Famous Fantastical Opera, POPULAR PRIC] 50c and T5c. 9. A dered linen. U. S. Laundry methods | VAUDEVILLE 'C“ACKERJACKS! make every parcel sent out all this payton’s Living Art Panorama; the and more. It’s worth a trial to learn what you're missing. No saw edges. UNITED STATES LAUNDRY OFFICE 1004 MARKET STREET, Near Powell. EVERY WOMAN is interested and should know about the wonderful The new Vaginal Syringe. Injection and Suction. \ st—Safest— Most Con- venient. ItCleanses Instan! Ask your druggist for it. 1€ be_cannot supply the MARVEL, accept no other, but send stamp for llus. trated ook somle particulars and (et foladie " MARVEL CO.. Room 203, Times Bdg.. New York. BITTERS A PLEASANT' LAXATIVE NOT. INTOXICATINGC Desirable location, unsurpassed cuisine. unequaled service and modern conveniences are the attributes that have made these two hotels popular with tourists and travelers who visit San Fran- cisco. Palace and Grand Hotels AMUSEMENTS. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. UNNA DEFINES A CAUSE. European Skin Specialist Says Dan- | druff Is Caused by Parasites. | Upon that theory, proved beyond a | doubt, a ecure for dandruff was sought | after. Scientists, chemists, druggists and ! | | physicians all “took a hand” and the successful issue is the present product | known as “Newbro's Herpicide.” | This remedy actually kills the parasites that infest the hair bulb, does its work most effectively and contains not an atom of substance injurious to anything else than the germ alone. Herpicide causes the hair to grow as nature intended it should—soft and abundant. Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c in stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., De- PHONOGRAPHS [DISO HOULDED RECOR ARE THE BEST NATIONAL PHONO. CO. ORANC N.J PETER BACIGALUPI. AGENT MARKET ST..S.F SAINT MARGARET’S SCHOOL adpens A m:h‘auusw'r BUILDINGS ns_August in Monte 'mu:f: avenue. Modern hwvonmen:: For_further information or circulars address (MISS) I L. TEBBETTS, LEADING THEATRE SECOND :.... LAST WEEK. MATINEE SATURDAY. E. H. OTHERN (Management of Daniel Frohman.) In Justin Huntley McCarthy’'s Drama, IFIWEREKING Next Monday, June 15 N. C. GOODWIN in “THE ALTAR OF FRIENDSHIP." SEATS READY THURSDAY. ALCAZAR To-Night—This Week Only, WHITE ssit:’compazy WHITTLESEY In the Romantic Colonial Love Story, D’ARCY OF THE GUARDS. Evg., 25 to 75c; Mat. Thurs. & Sat.. 15¢ to 50c. Next Monday—-WHITE WHITTLESEY in the Famous Mark Twain Play, Pudd’'nhead Wilson. GRAUMAN’S *"“&%3% s, ery Afternmon and Evening. REFINED VAUDEVILLE. Frank Cushman; Christy apd Wiilis: Wil son Family; Devaney and Allen; Hayward and Hayward; Marsh Craig: Fern Melrose; Clin- ton Montgomery, and the Bloscope. Prices—Night, 25c, 20c, 15c and 10c. Mati- nees, 20c and 10c. Phone for Seats, South 1022. COLUMBIA 5o MARVEL $X355¢ | [ | ] | | Three Rixfords; Lutz Brothers; Harry Le Clair; Frank Keenan and Company; Hanlon’s Pantomime Company; Hale and Francis; Rus- sell and Locke, and the Biograph showing SCENES =t the DELHI DURBAR. 25c; Balcony, 10¢c; Box Seats B0c. Reserved Seats. and Opera Chatr; CENTRAL=: TO-NIGHT—ALL THIS WEEK MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDATY. The Brilliant Comedy Melodrama, ON THE STROKE OF TWELVE - - PRICES Evenings. Matinees. YOU’LL LAUGH TILL THE TEARS COME! THE CIRCUS GIRL. FUNNIEST OF MUSICAL COMEDIES AS PRESENTED BY THE FAMOUS DALY THEATER COMPANY. NOTE THE PRICES. Orchestra, first 10 rows..........81 Balance of Orchestra .1 Balcony Gallery, SATURDAY GRAND 2% 7 ONLY MATINEE SATURDAY. wrhe Labor We Delight in Physics Pain” SECOND WEEI ©Of Raymond and Caverly and Our Superb New York Company. TO-NIGHT—Every Night. The Mirthful and Witty Musical Eccentricity, In Washington The Entire Original Production as Used by the Rogers Bros. During Their Long New York Run. Everybody's Talking About It. Seats on Sale Two Weeks in Advance. POPULAR PRICES. .. --23c, S0c and e Vo) TO-NIGHT. TO-NIGRT. There's fun and there's frolic enough to cure collc In every performance of “Twirly Whirl-ea It 1= right up to date and its jokes are all late, And toFischer’s you go If this gem you would ses FIRST TIME HERE. Reserved: .25¢ MATINEE. With and Bernard, Winfleld Blake, Harry Hermsen and the only “Show Girls” in town. Reserved Seats—Nights, 25c, 80c -and nd Sunday Matinées. 25¢ and 10c and 25e. SPECTAL—To-morrow afternoon at 2:30 the great singer_from Grau's Metropolitan Opers Company, MME. EUGENIA 1a scenes from Grand Opera, in Costume. Sea en sale at the box office; 50c, 75c and 31 Migh-Class Specialties Every Afternoon and Evening in the Theater. SEE THE BOHEMIAN GLASSBLOWER. SEE THE Pound and One-Hali Baby AND HIS FRIENDS. IN THE INFANT INCUBATORS. AMATEUR NIGHT THURSDAY. ———ADMISSION, 10c; CHILDREN, Se——