The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 20, 1904, Page 9

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, F TBRU/ RY 20, 1904 AUBURY SAYS NO RADIUM IS FOUND IN CALIFORNIA es That Claims Anout the Discovery of That Metal in f\\:‘ iposa County Are Not True and Denounces Fake. About to Begin Near Historic Town of Coloma —_— gist that radi nt was a vestigate, ma; min y declares | am | over one re- at he has ny = n w & produce one gran of ra to produce the e m from a few ! a County ore. I xamine many . »m the Fitch h giowing adver- d he has re- is no radium to County. He take public that the ad for the ct that the s light is no in all that possi this credit friction, but There h mine ore. back of the ad the spark of light Il a fake State th Miner; Professor ged discovery the weakest uranium 1 ble | in re- is dmonition of | ore upon di- that they are al- good of the made other state- same intent as the it is unnecessary WATER IUH THE MINERS. n utilized last week in the by it in check en water enough per time A B t itation in Oneida n s been put in GRAPE-NUTS. County is manifested > in shape In most everything and Fatally at, Fault, about, your FOOD Ever Think about. That.? u can greatly incrcas: your energies both Physical and Mentai by the use of GRAPE-NUTS. There's a Reason! Grape-Nuts food made of selected parts of field grains that contain the natural Phos- phates which restore the gray matter in Brain and Nerve Cen- ters and the food is predigested in the process of manufacture 1o enable any one to easily di- gest 1t is 1f you are ailing in any way change your diet, and if you take on Grape-Nuts a sure gain will foliow. Look for the little book, “The Road to Wellville,” in each pkg. =0 that a dividend of $40,000 has been | declared. This is the first dividend, | says (he Amador Ledger, that the prop- erty has pald since 1885, at which time operations in the mine were resumed. Work has been proceeding steadily for nine years. The Ledger describes the work on the mine as follows: | The operations at the mine continue. The | winze being sunk 400 feet north of the shaft | at the 2000 jevel, for prospecting purposes, is now down about 100 feet, but as yet nothing 1 It will be continued, % level. The new pumyp is being looked for daily 2 11 Lo n By A58 e L eetric e to furnish the motive power pump has already been put in place, pump will be installed Iu short order n this pump has bein have become almost a TO DREDG EAR COLOMA. According to the Placerville Nugget, | dredging operations will soon be under way near Coloma, the site of the original discovery of gold in El Dorado County. Over 300 acres of ground in the | vicinity of Lotus and Coloma has been jlocated and bonded during the last three weeks by parties who intend to | prospect the ground with drills, and if the prospects prove satisfactory a, large dredge will be built to work the ground. The lands proposed to be worked in- clude the bed of the river from below Lotus to « a, and the large bars at Coloma and Lotus. A great portion of the ground the pioneer miners were prevented from working, owing to their inability to handle the water. The great value of radium is inspiring predictions all over the coast that it will be discovered in quantities. The supposed presence of the mineral is made the basis, to some extent, of a demand for a State mineralogist for | Nevada, aithough other reasons given for having the servic of such an official. There is no doubt that the legitimate mining industry Cali- fornia has been bepefited by having a mineralogist at the head of a State Mining Bureau. The Carson Appeal is urging the creation of the office of State Mineralogist for Nevada. It makes an argument which is given in part for the interest that inheres in the | subject of the mineral development of the next door mineralized neighbor of California the item that demand: a ther is the discov uranium ores, in Utah ister State. She has what we have—the same class of mines, and her Take the miners d to enlig he wonderful euxenite, read thie you don't know where 1 average miner and her e & 1\nnldg'h that are State manifested resulting from the careful ineralogist furnish even better argument than is found 1 the >going extract in advocacy of the institution of the office of State Mineralogist in the State of Nevada. The San Jose Herald says of the con- solidation of the Santa Teresa and San Juan mi in Santa Clara County, part: in Preside people an a better run- perties are conso As soon as Mr ‘the change will take f this city will be one new company and also two properties WAITING FOR PERMIT. | The Nevada County Miner contains the following, relative to the Omega Company’s hydraulic mine in Nevada County At meeting of the executive committee of the Anti-Debris Assoclation, held yesterday, Deviin & Devlin, the attorneys, reported that they had examined the papers on file by the Omeza Mining Company with the California Debris Commission at San Francisco, from which it appears that t.e --ea proposed to be 3pon Boston Harpe tors of the ager of the worked by this mining company is two and a half acres, the height of the bank ninety feet, the cublc number of vards of material to be wa: 4 363,000, which is estimated to consist 5 per cent cobblestones, 50 per cent gravel, per cent of sand and 5 per cent of loam or Dipe clay. The mine will drain into Scotch man Creek, thence into the South Yuba, and the source of the water supply is Diamond Creek. The length of the ditch is five miles, width five feet and depth three feet, the grade of the ditch ‘being from five to ten feet e posed to be used and the pressure water 120 feet The sluices to be used to be four feet wide, three feet dep with @ grade of six in twelve feet. It is proposed to raise the present log dam in Scotchman Creek higher in the same manner and build high at each end above d in the same with is that ifs area for olding the debris is nd the capacity of proposed | n is 560,000 cubic yards. The n completed, but the California smmiseion said they had not yet been permit had been granted. Ir d be granted for the season by would only be for the pres- s report that the mine is under to its past work and its permit hdrawn by the debris commission, jcation was ffor a new permit, | yet been granted — e | SAYS HER HUSBAND MADE i THREATS TO KILL HER which had nc Mrs. F‘lon:m-f (-oddnrd Refuses to | Withdraw Suit for Divorce and Makes Trouble for Joseph. Mrs. Florence Goddard, 260 Third | street, secured a warrant from Police | | Judge Fritz yesterday for the arrest| of her husband, Joseph, on a charge | ' of threats to kill. She said she had' instituted a suit for divorce from him, ‘ns he was in the habit of beating her, i jand he called upon her last Tuesday | and asked her to withdraw the suit and live with him again. She refused and she alleges he threatened to kill , her. e Oil Promoter in Trouble, J. L. Reid, who gives his occupation as an oil promoter, was arrested yes- terday by Detective Whitaker on a warrant from Police Judge Fritz's court charging him with obtaining money by false pretenses. The com- plaining witness is J. F. Littlefield of W. P. Fuller & Co., Pine and Front streets. It is alleged that Reid on No- vember 29 last went to Joseph Miccal- lizzi, who owed the company $40, and falsely represented that he was a col- lector for the company. He received the money and signed a receipt for it. return limit February 21 Tickets a 650 | Market street and Tiburon ferry. . —_———————— Give First Annual Ball. Seal Rock Lodge No. 197 of the | gave its friends a good time last night FOR CITY SHOW Out of $50,000 Needed tosMake Municipal Exhibit, Less Than One Half Has Been Subscribed PR RE ATE BUILDING BIDS s RECEIVE | Committee Arranges to Have No_Duplications in" Articles to Be Placed in Exposition - ERIE A The finance committee that is secur- ing funds and subscriptions to have a San Francisco building and San Fran- cisco exhibit in that building at the St. | Louis Exposition is still short abou” $28,000 of the $50,000 that it is estimated | will be necessary to install and main- tain the show throughout the exposi- tion season. The Supe which it is building to ors provided $15,000, imated will pay for the erected and will also | be a balance of $3000 or so to be to other uses connected with Francisco part of the great The fi committee has | ance show, raised by subscriptions something like $7000 to date. That leaves $28,000 still to be subscribed and paid in. There is some expectation that the| roof garden cafe which will probably be permitted by the exposition man- agement to grace the top of the San Francisco building will yield something of fair size toward the payment of the running . Louis, but this is uncertain because it has not been decided that all objections on tha score of fire danger from the roof cafe can be set aside, Therefore the lack of funds to n San Francisco secure is $28,000 approximately. Letters and dispatches have been re- ceived from Samuel Newsom,"the archi- tect who prepared the plans for the San Francisco structure at St. Louis, and also from T. C. Judkins, who went on to St. Louis to let the contracts for the comstruction of the building. The instructions to the San Francisco repre- sentatives in St. Louis included a pro- vision that if bids for putting up the municipal building should exceed $12,000 then nothing additional should be done after the bids were opened without con- sultation with the finance committee of the San Francisco general committee. A dispatch was received yesterday from Mr. Judkins in which he an- nounced that the bids had been opened and that he believed that it would be possible to have the building construct- ed at a reasonable figure. This is sup- sed by the committee to indicate that the bids have fallen within the $12,000 ter from Architect Newsom ed the fact that all the large hhllrllhps on the exposition grounds have been completed to the extent of 80 per cent, and that many of the small- er ones are finished and are already re- ceiving exhibits. Newsom also wrote that this advanced condition of the construction work would probably make it possible to have competition among the larger contractors for build- ing the San Francisco structure. No additional particulars have been re- ceived concerning the bids. The San Francisco sub-committees are reported to be working actively. ch booth in the San Francisco build- ing will be distinct and separate in character of its exhibits, and it is an- nounced that there will be no duplica- tion It is believed that the greater the variety of San Francisco exhibits the keener will be the interest of spec- tators. Educators have been in confer- ence with the San Francisco committee during the week. It has been practical- ly determined which grammar, primary and high school shall be represented at St. Louis as characteristic of San Fran- cisco’s educational system. The names of these schools have not been made public. The Lick School Awill represent technical training. An engineering school in this city will also be selected ; to make an r‘n):inr ering exhibit. THE MISSION Street Furniture House Is Now Begitming to Replace New | Goods From the Warehouse R e 03 \ | | | Yesterday the Pattosien Company started to replace the many fine articles of furniture and carpets from the ware- ale commenced many have d out, and it was im- possible to replace them on account of the delivery wagons being used to deliver goods. The public to-day can find the stock wel sorted at the PATTOSIEN COMPANY'S, corner Sixteenth and Mis- sion streets. —_— e———— Dr. Craig Delivers Lec The regular Lane lecture last night at the Cooper Medical Col- lege. Dr. Charles F. Craig, first lieu- | tenant and assistant surgeon of the United States was the lecturer. “Water Dr. Craig told of the ssity of having filtered water and taking precaution against con- tamination. Water, he said, was one of the best mediums for disease germs to live in and people should be con- stantly on guard against anything but pure water. ——,—————— Libe] for Freight. The Compagnie Havraise de Navi- gation filed a libel yesterday in the United States District Court against W. R. Grace & Co to recover $12,653 and interest, alleged to be due for freight carried by the French ship Alice from Antwerp to San Francisco. In the same court J. J. Moore & Co. filed an amended complaint in their suit against the Sphere Shipping Company for breach of charter party The sum originally sued for was in | creased to $5000. Special Rates for the Citrus Fair, Cloverdale. The California Northwestern Rafiway is now selling tickets at one fare for the round trip, good going Saturday, Sunday and Monday, with , Switchmen’s Union of North America in Native Sons’ Hall. The affair was in the form of a grand ball, and though it will be a whole year before another entertain- ment of its kind will be given by the switchmen, the memories of last | tary de Succa attended the session. An as a | FUND 1S SHORT [AUTO AVENUES [N THE PARK Commissioners Pass to Print Ordinance Regulating Speed and Management of Machines TO CLIFF Danish Professor Is Coming Here to Measure the Veloeity of the Earth’s Rotary Motion ROUTE HOUSE A meeting of the Park Commission was held yesterday afternoon at the | office of the president, A. B. Spreckels. Commissioners W. J. Dingee, R. H. Lloyd, Frank J. Sullivan, A. Altman, Superintendent McLaren and Secre- ordinance, as follows, relating to auto- mobiles in Golden Gate FPark, was passed to print and will go into "effect ten days hence: \ Ordinance for the regulation, use and go ernment of the parks, aquares, avenues and zrounds in the eity and county of San Fran- Cisco, which are under the exclusive control and_management of the Park Commissioners of the city and county of Ban Francisco: The Park Commissioners of the eity and county of San Francisco do ordain as follows: section 1—No horseless carriage, motor- we_on, motpreycle or automobile shall enter or %o upon any avenue, driveway or part of any park or square in the city and county of San Francisco except that driveway in Golden Gate Park commencing at the entrance known as “‘Waller-street entrance’’ to said park and | terminating at the exit on the great highway (which latter is sometimes called the ‘‘Ocean | Boulevard”), which driveway is known as the south drive in Golden Gate P ; and also on and upon the sald great highway commencin, where the northerly line of Fulton street, ’ projected westerly, would iutersect sald great hichway; thence southerly from said line to the southerly end of sad great highway, Only such vehicles as are exclusively used for | nleasure shall be permitted upon the said | drl\kl nml highways. 2—Upon the straight portions of sa ¥s, the speed of sald vehicles shall not ten miles per hour, and around the curves thereof the speed shall not exceed eight mils per hour, and upon the great highway | from the southerly iine of Golden Gate Park where the northerly line of H street, if pro- jected westerly, would cross said great high- way. to the point where if the northerly line of Fulton street was projected westerly it would cross said great highway, the speed #hall not exceed six miles per hour; and upon such portions of sald great highway all gase line srovelled vehicles must use mufflers and every precaution shall be taken by the person or persons in charge or control of any of the vehicles hereinbefore mentioned to prevent said vehicles from making any unnecessary noise or frightening any teams, horse or horses upon | said great highw: or interfering with the quiet and safe enjoyment of sald great high- | Way by any person or persons. Sec. 3—All automoblles operating under this | ordinance shall have their permit number in | the center of the front and back of the ma- chine, the figures of such numbers not to b»] less than five inches in size. Any person violating any of the pro- | visions\of this, ordina shall be deemed | v 6f misdemeanor and shail be punished | {mprisonment in the County Jail of the | y and county of San Francisco not exceeding | six montks, or by a fine not exceeding $500 nor less than $50, or both. THE OVERLOOK DRIVE. The original ordinance introduced | by Mr. Lloyd included the Overlook | drive among the avenues open to au- tomobiles. The order, amended on motion of Mr. Spreckels, excludes the Overlook drive. The order as passed !gives the automobilists an avenue from the great highway, or Ocean | boulevard, to the Cliff House. The route winds to the rear of Sutro Heights. Commissioners Lloyd, Altman, Din- gee and Spreckels voted in favor of the ordinance. Commissioner Sullivan was excused from voting. Mr. Dingee, in his explanation of his vote, remarked that he did not own a machine, but he recognized the fact that the auto- mobile was an institution that had come to stay | In the discussion of the topic the ne- cessity for additional police protection in Golden Gate Park was dwelt upon. President Spreckels remarked that he had talked with Mayor Schmitz on the ibject and the Mayor had promised to do what he could to assist the com- | ssion. | The commission decided to pur chase two dozen fox-tailed squirrels and two arch-necked trumpet swans for Golden Gate Park. Mr. Spreckels expected to get the squirrels from Mount Lowe. A letter from H. E. Huntington was read, in which the in- | formation was conveyed that the ! Mount Lowe squirrels were not attain- able. Mr. McLaren knows where the Inx tailed squirrels can be had for $2 ch. SPEED OF THE WORLD. Commissioner Lloyd presented a letter from the International Geodetic | Association, Copenhagen, in which the Park Commissioners are advised that Professor Hecker will arrive here in July, 1904. lnddenmlly the Copen- hagen as!o(‘(duon sires to know if there a hotel n ar the Davidson Observatory wherein the professors may dwell for two weeks. The main | purpose of Professor Hecker’'s expe- dition to California is to swing a pen- { dulum on the exact spot where it was once before swung when calculations were made to determine the exact ve- !locity of the earth’s rotary motion. The pillars of the old Davidson Ob- servatory in Lafayette square, between which the pendulum was formerly suspended, still stand, and as the Park Commission exercises sovereignty over this zone, the right to swing pen- dulums thereon rests with the board. | The commission readily granted the privilege desired by the Copenhagen experts, Mr. Lloyd, who seems to have mastered the subject and is real- | ly eager to ascertain if any errors were made in previous measurements | of the world's revolving speed, ex- plained that the calculation could not be made as accurately at the State universily as at Lafayette square be- | cause latitude and longitude .at the latter place had been exactly deter-; mined. The Commissioners resolved to have music in Golden Gate Park on Mon- day, February 22, Washington's birth- d: On this polnt the board was unanimous and Commissioner Sulli- van enthusiastic. On motion of Commissioner Alt- man the board decided to advertise for proposals for the erection of a drink- ing fountain at the Conservatory, Golden Gate Park. Some months ago the board accepted Earl Cummings' design for a fountain and the question urose as to whether this acceptance could exclude bidding on other de- signs. Mr. Sullivan maintained that the commission should invite compe- tition on designs and give all the sculptors a chance to win fame. The reiterated statement of Mr. Alt- | man that the board had already ac- cepted the Earl Cummings design set- tled the question and the motion to invite bids prevailed. Mr. Sullivan was excused from voting. Mr. Lloyd remarked that there was a tendency to crowd on the park la- boring force men who were incapable night's joy will surely linger over that period in the minds of the partici- pants. i Hills Bros." Arabian Roast is a success because there is quality behind it. =« E % z The Eureka Valley Social Club will give an entertainment and ball in Mission Turn Verein Hall this evening. l $100 Rupture Cure for $10 by Hunter, nu Market st, Send for circular, 3 on account of advanced age to per- form the work required. He suggest- ed that a rule be adopted to give em- ployment only to men under 40. The proposition was not favorably re- ceived, although Mr. Lloyd insisted that the park should not be made an asylum for old and worn out work- men. Opponents of the suggestion contended that some men at 60 were better than others at 30. No vote was taken, but Mr. McLaren, the su- | lr!nun?tnt. ":o ld&lled to give em- ployment only 0se capable of performing a good day's work. { that Irwin perjured himself when he | asks for the annulment of the mar- | Sheehy and the School Board refused | ment. CLAIMS IRWIN IS A PERJURER Father of Sadie Lyons Says Son-in-Law Swore to an truth When He Got License SRR WANTS BONDS ANNULLED Avers That His Daughter Is Now Only a Few Months Over Fifteen Years of Age —_— Ralph Bert Irwin, the young man who, on the night of February 6, swore that pretty Sadie Lyons was 18 vears of age, secured a marriage li- cense and then after Justice of the Peace Thomas Dunn had refused to make Miss Lyons his wife, went to the chambers of Justice of the Peace Lawson and prevailed upon him to/ perform the ceremony, perjured him- self if the allegations of Alexander Lyons, the young girl's father, made | in a suit to annul the marriage, are true. Lyons avers that his daughter is only 15 years and 10 months old; swore to Deputy County Clerk Dan- forth that she was 18 years of age and did not need the consent of her parents to enable her to marry him. WOULD SEVER TIES., | The suit was filed yesterday. lt; | | riage on the ground that Miss Lyons, being under age, had not secured the consent of her parents to become the wife of Irwin. When asked about the matter yes- terday Judge Lawson said: | “I remember the young woman | very well, because I remarked her | youthful appearance, and in order to find out how old she was asked her | in what year she was born. She told me she was born in May, 1885. I then asked her where her parents re- | sided and she told me the only rela- | tive she had was an uncle, who lived in Oakland. Under such conditions I| could do nothing but make them hus- band and wife, particularly after | voung Irwin had most emphatically informed me that the young woman was over 18.” FLOODS ARE UNHAPPY. A suit for divorce was filed yester- | day by Anna M. Flood against Thomas F. Flood for crueity. She says that ever since their marriage in 1901 he has displayved a quarrelsome, morose and malevolent disposition and has made her life a burden. She says that he also wanted to bring his mother | to their home and thus place her in an intolerable condition of subjection. Divorces were also asked for by Ma- bel Foster from John A. Foster for { neglect, W. A. Lazzarevich from Mary 8. Lazzarevich for infidelity and Clar- ice Vitant from Achille Vitant for in- temperance. Decrees of divorce were granted to Mary A. Baker from Jacob H. Baker for neglect and Gustave Lindee from Nita Stone Lindee for desertion. On request of the attorneys for | Edith May Partello Madden, the de-| fendant in the suit for divorce brought by Captain John Madden, U. S. A, | Judge Hebbard has continued thei matter for thirty days from to-day. | Mrs. Madden claims that she needs the extra time in which to prepare and file her answer to her husband’s | complaint. School Board’s Demurrer Argued. Judge Hunt heard argument yester- day on a demurrer to the petition of | James B. McSheehy for a writ of man- date compelling the Board of Educa- | tion to approve his warrant for his | salary as inspector of schoolhouses. | He will decide the case within a few | days. The suit is the result of a quar- rel over patronage between the School Board and the Board of Public Works. The last named board appointed Mc- to countenance its action on the| ground that the Board of Public Works had no power to anvoint any one for service in the School Depart- | —— E: hief Justice Wins Case. Justice of the Peace Dunn yester- day gave judgment for $168 in favor | of John Currey, who sued William | O'Dea for the amount on a promissory | note. Currey many years ago was | Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of California and is now practicing law | in this citv. | ADVERTISEMENTS. L ook at the Brand ! WalterBaker's Cocoa and Chocolal:e o AT - FINEST i the Warld By ok Walter Baker & Co. Lid. Ty iy | Cures aCold inOne Day, JAMES and WARDE 'WEBER and FIELDS | Comeatan, | SPECIAL MATINEFE MOND. ADVERTISEMENTS. ABSOLUTE SEGURITY Geouine CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS must bear Fac-simile Signature of Sl BILIOUSNESS. SICK HEADACHE. TORPID LIVER. FURRED TONGUE. INDIGESTION. CONSTIPATION DIZZINESS. SALLOW SKIN. AMUSEMENTS. ANUSEMENTR. 3 COLUMBIA 52a | ALCAZAR 545" Three Pert 1 ooy e To-Night—Mats. To-Day and Sunday. EXCITING GREAT ENTHUSIASM Belasco & De Mille's Famous Play. THE CHARITY BALL ¢ to 75¢; Mat. Sat. & Sun, MONDAY—Opening with S; MATINEE WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY First Stock Production of THE WRONG MR. WRIGHT George H. Broadhurst's Farcical Comedy. In Active Preparation—PARSIFAL CENTRAL":: Market street, near Eighth. Phone South 333. TO-NIGHT—LAST TWO NIGHTS. ‘MATINEES TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW, THE MEN OF ‘ JIMTOWN A Thrilling Tale of the Cherokee Strip. ——MATINEE TO-DAY— JULIUS CAESAR To-night . ....MACBETH | Sunday Night [JULIUS CAESAR BEGINNING NEXT MONDAY, DENMAN THOMPSON (HIMSELF) IN THE OLD HOMESTEAD CALIFORNIA DEVIL'S AUCTION NEW SCENIC MARVELS. And the following great features: The Famous Onri Family, The Four Salamonskys, Signorina_Elena Rossi, Fraulein Prazer, £LASC, s The Boneless Herman, Eveni .16 Ang the Imperial Dancing Troupe. PRICES 3ainess Fag l BRING THE CHILDREN TO-DAY. ’fl'[lll‘ MONDAY (Washingion's 'Ilfl‘ly' MATINEE, TII mfl OF THE OPIUM me. TIVOLI s | HOUSE. MATINEE DAY AT 2:15. Special Matinee Washinglon's Birtday. | 0.!'.' NINE MORE NIGHTS 9’ >J When Johnny Comes Marching Home SPECIAL !ATI,\'—EZ_‘VASHXNGNN'S BIRTHDAY. ASTOUNDING VAUDEVILLE! EIGHT VASSAR GIRLS | ‘Werner-Amorcs Troupe; Harry Thom- son and Orpheum Motion Pictures. Last times of Ziska and King; Billy B.'Van, Nose Besumant and Cémpany; SECURE SEATS IN ADVANCE. Thorne and Carleton; Sayder amd | Buckley and Rice and Elmer. D P Regular Matinees every Wednesday, ThUrs- | Box Seats -..c...o...e-eeesss - day, Saturday and Sunday. Prices 10c, 25c¢ | - and Soc. | OPERA | GRAN HOUSE | MATINEE TOsDAY AT 2 SHARP. LAST TWO NIGHTS | KELLY AND Vlm.ETTE IRVINS " JONES weAND A GREAT SHOW.... Bvery Afternocon and Bvening in the Heated Theater. AND PHILIPPINE NT INCUBATORS. ALL-STAR STOCK COMPANY—Presenting | WHOOP-DEE-DOQO | AMEFICAN, S AND BURLESQUE OF § NARRy S C A THE R I N E FIRENORKS MONDAY NIGHT PRICES—$2, $1 50, $1, 75¢ and 50c. In Honor of Washington's Birthday. When Phoning, Ask for “The Chutes.'™ THOMAS J. SMITH, the Young Trish Singing in “THE GAME KEEPER KISCELLAN EOUS Al uumr; Feeckesy BLAUVELT 1S for Saturd here shall you ®o? ““Roly Poly,’” 'tis Fischer's best show. So says everybody in town. ‘ROLY POLY | 2 THE GREAT PRIMA DONNA. LYRIC HALL The one Der('(;!d‘r‘na!;sig:“;:::wdy. wien neey | Last Concert This Afternoon at 3 0'Clock Our “All-Star” Cast, Including | SEATS—$100. 130 AND 3200 AT SHER- To-Morrow Afternoon at 3 Second Kopta Mansfeldt Pap. RUSSELL, | NELLIE LYNCH. Saturday and Sunday Matinees, Next Attraction, ““THE ROU: 25c and 30c. DERS. A\Y—\Vuhln.lon s AN EXCURSION LBl | THE GREAT SCOTCH BAND OF 40 WITH SINGERS. DANCERS and PIPERS OF THE : : | ALHAMBRA THEATER Submarine Boats | COMMENCING NEXT TUESDAY NIGHT Oft Red Rock, on Seats, $1, 75¢, 5Cc. Chiidren, 23c. Washington’s Birthday, Feb. 22, I904 At Sh Clay & Co.’s. EXCURSION TO NAPA. S. P. STEAMER BERKELEY ‘Will leave Pler 1 at 1 p. m. Recollect that the weather is delightful Tickets $1 round trip. Napa when it is cloudy in S Steamer ST. HEL Will leav Steamer DONAHUE, North Shore R. R., will leave Tiburon ferry slip 1 p. m. Tickets (limited to 300), Ine]udlfll luncneon, $3. WASHINGTON-ST. WHARF, Pl TICKETS, round trip, 50 cents. Stop two hours at Good music. | freshments on board Ra. EVERY WEEK DAY. RAIN OR SHINE. NEW C. ORNIA JOCKEY ChUB. INGLESIDE TRACK Commencing MONDAY, February L Six or More Races Daily. Races start at 2 p. m. Sharp.

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