The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 6, 1904, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

CISCO CALL, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1904. LS HERSELE 1| HEN REBUKED i lildred Hopper Swallows| Returning Missionary at the Turkish Carbolic Acid Because Her Mother Reprimanded Her ETURNS AT MIDNIGHT Claims to Have Attended al Party in Neighborhood When Parent Questioned or its fractions, midnight Mildred re- | & party. This was the her mother. There was and the girl 1. At about § o'clock rs. Hopper heard her ther! Mother!™ The sow same © a shed In the back yard. Mrs. Hopper hurried to the rear door of the house and called: “Is dred?” The answer came, APPEALS SECRETARY TO OF STATE es That His Sixteen-Year-Old n Has Been Marconed on the Costa Rican Coast. with offices appealed to on behalf of has been ma- 1 the Costa on has not y tidings of his pow whether he GRAPE-NUT THEY LAUGHED the Arguments on the Packages. io woman f Grape- was much the story. hin and sickly digestion, was uld not sleep at e physically or duties and the care of our ain living and recommended tter. brought home d, ‘The grocer this food and report it will help on the boxes nd I remember how , for 1 thought it fool- »od could help me. But we all ate some with i it and enjoyed the and new flavor, so we 2 s, not because cure me, but be- o e we had no idea what d be, but now I am anx- a well and strong woman nd mentally. I gained over , do not suffer from any of I know that it is to that I owe my re- v v call me ‘Grape- the home and all of my asked me the cause of ve persuaded several of s, and has done =0 has been I wish it were in my ice every one who is sick derful food a trial pe-Nuts three times ver tire of_it.” Name | tum Co., Battle Creek, | wo; n this nourishing and com- restible food will show any s run down from improper change, sometimes a pgold mine because the joy and spring of in place of the old ail There's a reason.” = ook, “The Road to Wellville.” world know that to- | »e-Nuts and every one | UEVIL POWER CHINA'S FAITH Ministers’ of Meeting Tells Mongolian Religion B PROPITIATING FIENDS Even Veneration for Dead Ancestors Is Part of the General Scheme of Worship S R were two interesting minis- meetings on Monday—that of the ccidental Board of the Presbyterians and that of the West Side Christians at their church on Bush and Deyisa- dero streets, The meeting of the West Siders was made particularly interesting by an en- tertaining paper by Rev. L. O. Fergu- son of sno on the imperative, need 1 teaching and by -an ad- dress b, tev. W. E. Macklin of Nan- kin, China Dr. Macklin’s remarks were filled with prgctical informatioh d from years of preaching and ng in the celestial kingdom. Dr. n spoke in part as follows: and political past of China iy devil. The Chinaman knows no a devilish one, and everything in e empire seems to be along thess di- The gods they worship are nder world and their prayers are for ropitiating the spirits of dark- man dies his money is used from punishment in the abede bu re uild temples to the dévil is steted in-China that it g, the greatest graftsr in Kingdom, a sum-equal to a to get on the good eide n hell. The practical natur- nese is satanic worship, Even the boasted venera- cestors is for the purpose of its of the departed and mak- advocates at the court of the nt the only idea of the ie graft. From the high- in Peking down to the lowest in eome faraway district, the queeze money the common peopie who are They learn that there y in the faith of Chriat meeting Miss an interesting talk on the work in Chinese homes s who cannot go to school- d that of the $2500 needed pital in Lyenchuen, Korea, had been raised. Of the $3200 for the Girls’ Rescue Home nd, $1400 had been subscribed. nch , served at noon by the ladies of the board, Dr. Sturge, just re- m a year in Japan, gave an account of his work in the re were present Dr. Lewis Mrs. Barnheisel of San > rist of Arizona and pson of Jersey Qity. b Methodist meetihg in the n an address was made by 0 the m of Scotland and an ad- B. Wiison and one Hamilton on matters coming State con- (CPID RIDES N AUTOMOBILE Machine Plays a Part in the Engagement of Crown Prince to Fair Cecelia pRRENE Sept. 5.—The Duchess Ce- kienburg-Schwerin, whose , the Crown Price Frederick f Germany was announced slight girl, light- d. Although she alled pretty, she has and is of sprightly * BERLIN 1 f M only demeanor. The time she and the Crown Prince been seen together in public was a f evenings ago. The Crown Prin h 2 on her and her mother at the Kaiserhof Hotel just before they left for home. After talk- m for an hour the Crown them to the station in an He then d rt for an hour. me ngt sta asked them to drive around the city, | went through the prin- | and with t *h started ‘the first ible to say whether it is Strong dynastic r the marriage exist. Only 1g the last century, in the case of Frederick III, has a Prussian King taken a wife except from a Ger- man princely house. The Emperor de- sires to bring the Cumberland, Danish It is imp a love match or not. out of the common . and found that the train| FAIL T0 ROUT THE ARMENIANS —_—— Troops Unable to Reduce or Disperse Insur- génts in the Town of Van il | MORE SOLDIERS Entire Army Corps Will Be Mobilized in an Attempt NEEDED RS | PARIS, Sept. 5.—A dispatch to the Temps from Constantinople, by way of Sofia, sa that an official report which has reac! one of the foreign Consuls there states that Armenian insurgents | at Van, Asiatic Turkey, are success- fully resisting the Turkish troops, { which until yesterday had been unable to reduce or disperse them. The Ar- menians advanced to within about four hundred yards of the French consulate. The population of Van is seeking \refuge in the schools and convents. It is expected that Turkey will mobilize pthe Fourth Army Corps and draw | troops from Asia Minor in order to sup- | press the uprising. 2 | It was announced from Constanti- | nople, September 2, that a flerce fight between Armenian insurgents and Turkish troops had occurred at Van August 31, in which more than a score were killed. About one hundred and fifty Armenians raided the town, cap- tured four houses and barricaded them- selves. Troops attacked the houses and | n the fight whieh followed two soldiers and twenty other persons were killed. The authorities set fire to & number of adjoining houses so that the troops might be better enabled to besiege the insurgents. It was said by the author- ities that other Armenian bands were preparing to cross the Persian frontier. + L DEATH CALLS CENTENARIAN . TO LAST REST MIUTON, Sept. §.—James G. Stana. way is dead. He had reached the age of 100 years 11 months. He was a native of England and a stonemason by trade. Stanaway worked on the first stone building erected in San Francisco." Until recently he’ was particularly robust. When past 80 years of age he could do a full day’s work at his trade without unusual fatigue. He was the father of twenty-one children, | the majority of whom are still living. The funeral was held here.to-day, Pl el PROMINENT ATTORNEY - DIES. William M. Pierson Suffers -Relapse and Expires at His Home. [ Willliam M. Pierson, the well- known attorney, died on Sunday morning at his residence, 2214 Van | Ness avenue. He had been sick for several months, but his friends were confident that he would recover. Last | Saturday he suffered a relapse and passéd away the next morning. | " "Mr. Pierson was born in Cincinatti, | Ohio, He came to California in 1852 | and received a grammar school edu- | cation. Afterward, while employed as an attorney’s -clerk, he stud- jed law assiduously -and became one of the leading lawyers of the State. Senator. He was 62 years of age. He leaves a widow and two sons, Lawrence H. and Fred H. Pierson. | ————— Famous Architect Dies. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 5.—Aneurin Jones, 80 years old, a landscape archi- tect of renown, died suddenly in this city to-day. Jones was a Welshman, a scholar, and said to have possessed the most complete Celtic library in the world. At one time it Is sald Jones was gen- eral superintendent of parks for Greater New York and knew person- ally every large park in the world. He was chief engineer of boulevards and drives for the boroughs of Brook: 1lyn and Queens, New York, and nu- merous parks throughout the country were planned by him. e e— Aged Artist Dies in London. { 'LONDON, Sept. 6.—James Archer, the portrait painter, is dead, aged .82 years. He visited America profes- slonally in 1884. SOBS AT GRAVE and Netherlands courts into closer re- | lations with the German court. The~ Duchess Cecelia’s brother, the Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, mar- ried this June the Princess Alexandria, second daughter of the Duke of Cum- berland, a sister of the future Queen of Denmark. The Duchess Cecelia is also a niece by mariage of the Prince Con- sort of Holland. The best loved of Prussian Queens, Louise, same family, but of branch. The Grand Duke of Mecklenburg- Schwerin, who is at the Bristol Hotel here, set any doubt of the betrothal at rest this morning by telegraphing an official announcement to his Cabinet. —_————— PERSONAL. the Dr. T. R. Heintz of Redding is at the Palace. Rev. C. E. L. Wright of Denver is at Palace. W. F. Shields, a prominent business man of Medford, Or., is at the Occi- dental. B. F. Thompson, a merchant of New- man, Ga., arrived at the Occidental yesterday. Assistant General Gerrit Ford of the Union Pacific Rail- road is registered at the Occidental. Robert F. Ford, manager of Young's Hotel, and Walter L. Townsend, man- ager of the Parker House, "of Boston arrived here yesterday and are at the St. Francis. Dr. E. D. Johnson of Portland, sur- geon general of the Grand Command- ery of Knights Templar of Oregon, is a guest at the Lick. Charles Josselyn and family have re- turned to San Francisco after a sojourn of ten months in Paris. Mr. Josselyn has achieved success in the, affairs of business and attained recognition as a writer of books. ——————————— Picnic on Admission Day. The annual picnic and reunion of St. Rose’s parish will be held at Shell Alound Park, Berkeley, on Admission day. September 9. A splendid pro- gramme of games, races and other and game prizes will be awarded. Passenger Agent | 1 | Pasadena Physician Makes a Scene at the Funeral of Mrs. McVicker at Chicago PSR IS Special Dispatch to The Call. CHICAGO, Sept. 65.—The funeral of | the late Mrs. James McVicker at Rose Hill to-day closed the first chapter in | the sensational case and with it ends | the bitter struggle for her physical re- | mains. With a meeting to-morrow in the offices of the Illinois Trust and Savings Bank the second chapter, a contest for her wealth, will begin. ‘Whether Dr. Zeigler will attempt to | participate in the meeting is a matter | of some speculation. The reply to the puzzle is chiefly in the negative among those who know Dr. Zeigler. Colonel | James H. Strong, Pubilc Administra- tor; Horace McVicker and his attorney, | L. D. Condee; Mrs. Clara ' B. Game of San Francisco and her attorney, E. C. Ferguson; Sterling, Iil, and possibly Miss Minnie Effey, the latter being the only relative not mentioned in the will of Mrs. Mc- Vicker, will be present. The will will filed for probate on Thursday morning and not until then will the surprise, which Dr. Zeigler avows he is going to spring, material- | ize, unless the medical man changes | his mind. The funeral was much plainer than it would have been under ordinary cirs cumstances. Dr. Gunsaulus preached the funeral sermon. When he touched upon the character and charitable life of the deceased, Dr. Zeigler reached the climax of his avalanche of tears and, despite the presence of four detectives, | pushed his way to the brink of the | grave. He walked over the grave of i the late James McVicker in his eager- ness and utterly 4gnored the presence of the blood relations, who stood rev- was of the| Strelitz _ |amusements has been pfepared and erently at a distance from the last restg n pkg. for the famous lit- | ;uny valuable as well as useful gate | ing place of the wife of the well known theater owner. to Suppress the Uprising! kel fes. 1 In 1875 he was elected a State | - OF HIS PATIENT Miss Jennie Boydston of | (ZAR'S URASE PLEASES JEWS | Document Ends Vexatious | Restrictions Inaugurated During Time of Ignatieft | { | PRESS SHOWS PLEASURE | Makes Favorable Comment Upon Emperor’s Display of Leniency Toward Hebrews | i | ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 5.—The im- perial ukase extending the rights of residence and to engage in industrial and commercial pursuits to the higher class of educated Jews meets with favor { both in the pro and anti Jewish press. The Novosti, as spokesman for the | Jews, hails it, together with the speech |of Prince John Obolensky, Governor General of Finland, declaring that it is | the purpose of Russia.not to destroy Finnish rights, as meeting in a tran- quillizing spirit the two burning ques- tions—the treatment of the Jews and the frontier problem. It says the ukase ends the intricate and vexatious re- strictions against the Jews -introduced by General Ignatieff when Minister of the Interior in 1882, and concludes with expressing the hope that it will be fol- lowed by the removal of the restric- tions which have cut off the Jews from higher education. The Novoe Vremya, anti-Jewish, in calling attention to the opening words of the ukase—"having found it just to introduce certain changes prior to a | general revision of the laws affecting Jews"—says it shows the privileges now conferred are but the commence- { ment of the removal of various re- | strictions on the Jewish race, and ex- | presses the hope that the Jews in their | turn will demonstrate their ability to gradually assimilate themselves with the native population, and not make the privileges conferred on them the means of oppressing the common peo- ple, adding: “Persons who enjoy au- thority among the Jews should exert | all thelr influenceiin converting their coreligionists into worthy citizens.” o NORGAN QUITS BANQUET HALL iFinanciel"s& Departure From | Canadian Club Function | Gives Rise to Conjecture ———— Special Dispatch to The Call. | . TORONTO, :Ont., Sept. 5.—One thou- sand representative business men were i sorely. disappoinied ~ this afternoon | when. J. Pierpont:Morgan, a rival at- | traction. to'the Archbishop of Canter- bury at a luncheon given in their hon- or by the Canadian Club, excused him- | self and left the banquet-hall. He had | occupled a seat of honor second from that of the Archbishop and next to .the Mayor of the city at the guests’ table. - | A short while after Morgan left Presi. | dent Howell introduced the Archbishop, | but made no mention of the great fin- | ancier. At the close of the banquet, | however, he observed that Morgan had been unable to stay, having a very im- portant engagement to fill at 2 o'clock. It transpires, however, that this was | nothing more than a visit to the To- | ronto Hunt Club. There were other evident reasons for the multi-million- | aire leaving at the time he did. Impe- | rialism would necessarily be the key- | note of the speeches at the Canadian Club, and as the Archbishop spoke from prepared notes and emphasized | British imperialism, it is more than probable that the absence of Morgan during these utterances was prear- ranged. Great applause greeted British ex- pressions of the Archbishop, such as | these: | “I am sure you are eager in your loy- { alty to the great empire of which we are members.” “Every one here, I am sure, is pro- foundly and intensely loyal to the Brit- ish empire.” | “The British possess a power which | other nations have not shown them- selves to have—that is, the power to hold an imperial position.” “There -has been apportioned to us a | power that other nationalities do not possess—the power to hold for the | world’s betterment large tracts of the | world’s surface.” ' | By leaving before the spcechmaking | Morgam escaped what might have been a very embarrassing position, and also | possibly for his fellow guest, the Arch- bishop. The Archbishop, Morgan and the oth- ers will leave for New York to-morrow. v — When Jones was last initown he sald “‘there was no Gilt Edge whiskey e he'd been. “‘Must have been to the moon,”’ guessed Smith, Good guesser, that Smith. . ————————— Collins Dies of Injuries. STOCKTON, Sept. 6.—James Col- lins, who was shot last week by A. V. Anderson, died this morning. Collins went into Anderson’s tamale cafe and | ordered tamales, but declined to pay ! for them. He assaulted Mrs. Ander- son when asked for pay and also | struek - Anderson, who ‘then shot him. —————— Hop Pickers on Strike. UKIAH, Sept. 5.—About 150 pickers at the American Hop and Barley Company’s ranch quit work Saturday, | sctriking for $1 25 per 100 pounds for | picking hops, instead of $1. About i half the pickers are San Francisco | people, the remainder being Japanese = Way and Edwad Latimer, the Amer- the burning garments and stamp out and Indians. KILLS MOTHER BY ACCIDENT Ten-Year-0ld Lad of Santa Barbara Commits Tragedy While Cleaning His Rifle —_—— YOUTH IS PROSTRATED Parent of the Boy Is at Work in Kitchen When the Weapon Is Discharged i Special Dispatch to The Call. SANTA BARBARA, Sept. 5.—One of the saddest accidents that ever oc- curred in this city happened shortly before noon to-day, when Epifanio | Foxen, a boy of 10 years, shot his mother, death following in about two hours. Mrs. Foxen was busy in the kitchen of her home when the accident oc- curred. No one knows exactly how the shot was fired, the boy being so prostrated that he could give no more than an incoherent account of what happened. It is generally supposed that the youngster was cleaning his rifle when it was discharged. Mrs. Foxen was removed to the Cot- tage Hospital and after two hours breathed her last without having re- covered consclousness. It was found that the bullet, 44-caliber, had en- tered the left side and passed through | the liver. e e NEW 'SYSTEM IN TRAINING OF LOCOMOTIVE CREWS Harriman Will Require Engineers and Firemen to Pass a Rigid Examination. OMAHA, Sept. 5.—A new system in the training of engineers and firemen is to be instituted on the Harriman lines. Examining boards of experi- enced men are”to be appointed from the various méchanical departments whose duty it shall be to conduct rigid examinations in the dutles of the posi- tion for which the candidate is an ap- plicant. Firemen, for example, will be given a year to study a book of rules and instructions relating to the mechanical and fuel phases of the locomotive, after which they are to undergo examination | by the board. Failure to pass with a | certain percentage of merit, either in the first or second year, will be fol-| lowed by dismissal. If the candidate pass the exagination he will be given | a diploma for the place for which he has qualified. i —_——————— CASE NOW RESTS WITH MEXICAN - AUTHORITIES Trial of Men Who Killed Americans Concluded and Evidence Turned Over to State. MAZATLAN, Mexico, Sept. 5.—Gov- | ernor Canedo has notified Louis| Kaiser, American Consul in this city, that the preliminary trial of Herman Torres, Fidel Carrasco and Francisco Castro for the murder of Clarence icans shot: Callentes, Sinaloa, has --been luded and the case turned over to theé state authorities. . _Torres, who was alcalde of Aguas Calfentes, ordered the arrest of Way by the two .deputies, who did the shooting. It Is not yet known what punishment will be meted out to the | men, but it is not believed they will be executed. —_——e—————— CHINESE CELEBRATION IS MARRED BY A FIRE Draperies Are Ignited, but Priest Bravely Stamps Out the Flames. SAN BERNARDINO, Sept. 5.—The annual celebration of the Chinese Free Masons was held in Chinatown just west of this city last evening, the ceremonies, which were elaborate, be- ing prolonged until a late hour. The occasion nearly ended with an unpre- meditated holocaust, for the wind fanned sparks from the sacrificial fire to the robes of the officiating priest, ‘Wing Tong. The other Chinese fled in terror, but he fought the flames, keep- ing away from the draperies in the room, and finally managed to strip the fire with his bare feet, sustaining no dangerous burns. —_—————— DUNHAM SUSPECT AN ALLEGED CROOK Man Who Said He Committed Crimes at San Jose TIs Identified as Escaped Convict. NACO, Ariz., Sept. 5.—Silica, a cap- tive of the ranger forces, who says he is Dunham, the San Jose murderer, has been identified as George C. Nel- son, a crook, who served a term at Yuma and lately escaped from New Mexico penitentiary. Nelson deceived the officers, think- ing they might possibly take him to California for identification and turn him loose when they found out they had been taken in. INJURED BY FALLING FROM A. BICYCLE Prominent Resident of Southern Cal- ifornia Is Rend Unconscious for Two Hours. SAN BERNARDINO, Sept. 5.—E. ‘W. Thayer, a prominent resident of Ontario, fell from his wheel some dis- tance from his home and struck on his head, sustaining injuries from which it will take him some days to recover. He left home in the early morning and -was found a couple of hours later unconscious in the road. ‘When he revived he could not re- member what had happened. GOING! NEWBRO'S HERPI Tho Origisal Rumedy fhat “Lils the Dandeutt Gorm.” DON'T BLATE YOUR MIRROR WERPICIOE WILL SAYE 17, ‘Many ladies compel mirrors fo bear silent NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Makes hair light and fluffy. Stops ltching Instantly. GOING !! GONE {11 ADVERTISEMENTS. INFANTS “CHILDREN - Promotes Digestion.Cheerful- ness and Rest.Conlains neither ium, Morphine nor Mineral. 0T NARCOTIC. Tgpe af Ot I SAMUEL PITCHER Pamplein. Seed~ Rockells Sulls - Anine Sovdl # - el A perfect Remedy for Constipa- Tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea ‘Worms Convulsions, Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. FacSimile Signature of At s old ]')Dns\s-“')(t NTS e AT o TR EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. {GASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought For Over Thirty Years GASTORI THE cENTAUR cOMPANY. NEW crrv. H. W. BISHOP, Lessee and Manager. TO-NIGHT a=>az=_ T0-NIGHT COLOSSAL SUCCESS. OLIVER MOROSCO'S MAJESTIC THEATER | COMPANY, OFFERING o PAIRCE & KIND 25¢c Thureday Bargain Matinee; Reserved Seats to All Parts of the House. MATINEES FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. AMUSEMENTS. oveR T VOR Jrouse LAST 2 WEEKS % Gresees: Tivoli Success ¢ TOREADOR MAT'NEES ADMISSION DAY AND SATURDAY ‘:’p"-'r.":,"ss" SERENADE UAL TIVOLI PRICES—25c, 30c, 7Se. S B i COLUMBI Powell St., near Market. ‘Engagement limited to two weeks. NOTE.—Performances Every Night, INCLUDING SUNDAY. Matinee Saturday Only. . BELLEW And Original Company, Including E. M. HOLLAND, In the Celebrated Dramatic Study In Criminology. RAFFLES 725 amarzus PRICES—Orchestra, §2; dress circle, $1 50; Balcony, first seven rows, rows, T8c; Second Balcony, reserved, S0c; ad- mission 25c. SAN FRANCISCO" LEADING THEA\qE $1; next seven 3 MODERN VAUDEVILLE! MATINEE TO-DAY AND EVERY DAY THIS WEEK. “OUR BOYS IN BLUE.” Prices—10c, 25c and 50e. ALCAZA TO-NIGHT—ALL WEEK. With Mats. Thurs.,, Friday (Admission Day) and Saturday. Belasco & Mayer, Proprietors. E. D. Price, General Manager. | Evg., 25 to 75¢; Mats., 25c to 50c. WA/HIT EE [[A% T AtcAzar co. [ WHITTLESEY In the Romantic Irish Drama, ROBERT EMMET FIRST TIME IN SAN FRANCISCO. The Original Version by Brandon Tynan. Monday, Sept. SEY TO-NIGHT—ALL DAY (ADMISSI SUNDAY. 12, MR. w! EE] ON DAY), WHITE WHITTLE. “THE SECOND IN COMMAND." PLAYED BY JOHN DREW, GENTRA Market Street, Near Eij pLiASCy MAYER PROPS th...Phone South 583 —MATINEES FRI- SATURDAY AND Theodore Kremer's Most Powerful Drama. EVILMENDO Massive and Magnificent Scenic Environment! Brilliant Cast PRICES EVENINGS . Matinees .. DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. | Frida; i on Application. FRESHE AND SALT MEATS. d LUBRICATING OILS; LEONARD & ELLIS. 418 Front 8 F. s. BOYES & C0. & Butchers, ok Mt 1208 - Phone Main 1718, E. (. HUGHES, 611 Sansoms at., & F. PRINTER, CALIFORNIA— ALL THIS WEEK. MR. FREDERIC BELASCO Presents FLORENCE ROBERTS In Her Wonderful Portrayal of SAPHO Matinees—To-morrow, Friday (Admis- sion day) and Saturday. SEATS NOW SELLING FOR “MARTA OF THE LOWLANDS” OPENING NIGHT, SUNDAY, SEPT. 11 Fesckirg “WELCOME,” SIR XNIGHTS! THE ANHEUSER PUSH Funniest Play (o the City. Best Musie, Dances, Marches. Twenty Clever Speciaities. Scenery, Costuming Unequaled. Unrivaled Cast of Burlesque Artists. DOROTHY MORTON . GEORGIA O'RAMEY. EDWIN CLARK . FLOSSIE HOPE Beautiful Chorus of Forty. Night, 25¢, 50c and 75c. Saturday and Sume day Matinees, 25c_and 80c. SPECIAL MATINEE NEXT FRIDAY (Admission Day.) Burlesque to follow, * —_— i The Musical Goolmans 3--BABY LIONS IN THE Z00--3 AMATEUR NIGHT TEURSDAY. _MISCELLANEOUS AMUSEMENTS. BASEBALL AT RECREATION PARK. Eighth and Harrison streets. SAN FRANCISCO vs. OAKLAND Sunday LADIES FREE ON THURSDAY. Advance Sale of Seats at 5 Stockton St. 7 LAUNCH CO., office Clay st., just north of Ferry building.

Other pages from this issue: