The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 22, 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)

THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1904. MORCAN MAKES BUY 0N C04ST ——— CAPITAL GOING | T0 PUILIPPIES Men With Money to In- Financier and Other East- vest Are Becoming Inter-' ern Millionaives Purchase | ested in the Archipelago! Washington Canning Plant BOOM FOR THE ISLANDS CONCERN IS EXTENSIVE One Toledo Firm Announces Company Will Be Reorgan i tire at 1t Will Move Its En- Plant to the Orient - - With ized and Started a Capital Stock o -— BARTON, 1 Advi Ins BELLINGHANM, Pierpont Morgan, fleld and several rn Wash with other apitalists, who are the prin- ors of the Pacific Packing . ny, will pur- that y or- it in the courts, and pany and con- 1ew ba EL two years, the Unijted is morning r from the completion of Packing and Navigation st ve com- . The capi- is $25,000 te ight cane 1d_on Puget Sound. bout fifty vesse! s The n op- ——ee————— SLOW PROGRESS 1S MADE IN HEARING OF CHARLES WYMAN Attorneys Squabble Over Introduction of Evidence and the Case Goes Over Until Friday. efore Judge Cabaniss for aminas on on t of Fairfax H. Wheelan, his Very little was accomplished. was be UNATIC UNDRESSES BEFORE CROWDS ON MARKET STREET g ‘ teceives Sudden Reve- lation T} t Man Should Remain untryman, attorn for the 1t, opened the day by inter- a demurrer to the complaint sround that the primary elec- red unconsti- e Court and s therefore illegal. By < John A. Hosmer, representing the Naked and Obeys. State as special prosecutor, read a K k long list of author n contradic- g it tion of this claim. Judge Cabaniss rk and Market stre took t matter under isement N «1)12'3 Streets .na ordered the case to proceed. .o a halt G p. Adams, Regist of Voters and secretary of the Board of Elec- tion Commisgioners, was the only wit- ness called. He came armed with a pile of his office books and documents in reference to the election ih ques- tion. The principal document needed, the proclamation of the election, upon which Attorney Hosmer had intended to force the > of the case, was not there. In its place Adams had brought copy of that document. Attorney Countryman objected to the copy be- was taken ¥ Hospital and ention ward. There ceived a divine reve- that man being continue in that Ppropriateness An to obey the he received it. ed the message _— to the [ 1 he obey: = ing introduced in evidence and after ADVERTISEMENTS. a long discussion between the con- - tending forces, in which Attorney S ——— "7 WO DS fight, Judge Ca- baniss brought the session to a close. He did this in order to give time to . . have the original proclamation pro- duce The hearing will. be resumed s to-m W p. m —_———— oF 1 by All Means See DRINKHOU CHARGES H Cigarmakers’ Accusation Against Po- | Useml e a e lice Commissioner Will Come Before Mayor To-Day. Mayor Schmitz will begin an inves- On the Low Rates—Via Southern Pacific Until October 13th the Southern Pacific will sell round trip tickets from San Francisco to Yosemite Val- ley for $48.50. ROUND TRIP INCLUDES Pullman accommodations both ways, a charming side ride to the Mariposa Grove (the greatest of all the Cali- fornia Big Trees), twelve meals and three nights’ lodg- ings at first-class hotels, and carriage drives to Mirror Lake, Vernal Falls, Nevada Falls and Glacier Point. Those who desire to stay longer than the schedule time may. do so by pa the low special hotel rate oi $3.00 a day. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S CHOICE Was the Southern Pacific route, and many famous peo- ple before him have found it most satisfactory. If you want your trip to Yosemite to be complete Travel by Southern Pacific. Folder and Full Information Gity Office Southern Pacific 613 Market Street, San Francisco. DON'T FAIL TO see the beautiful COURT Loungin room, the EMPFRi PARLOR, the tigation to-day, according to his an- | QUESTIONS RULED OUT nouncement, of the charges preferred Police Commissioner John A. ouse by the Cigarmakers’ Union. rious allegation that Drinkhouse uses | the power of his official position to| compel Eastern saloon-keepers non-union cigars has the local agenc thrown many union workmen in Francisco out of employment. Much confidence is expressed by the prosecutors that they will prove con- clusively their allegations as to mal- feasance. will make a determined prosecution with the aim of having the Commis- gioner removed from his public sta- tion. San e REFUSE TO RECOGNIZE DOWIE AS APOSTLE | Thirty Former Disciples of the Zion City Prophet Leave for Their Homes, i WAUKEGAN, Ili, Sept. 2L.—About | thirty former disciples of John- Alex- | for the.| ander Dowie refuse to “‘stand” prophet’s fancy new robes and white socks and are going back home anger. Most of them last night and this morning, after Dowie and his chief lieutenants had | gone to Ben MacDhuli to rest after the fatiguing duties of assuming the apostieship. | The apostates, as Dowie will call | them, are mostly Oregonians, leaving for Seattle and Portland. A few are Californians and some will embark at Western points for far Australia. There are others discontented in the Zion camp, it i id. —_————— Fireman's Widow Loses. Superior Judge Hunt yesterday de- | nied the application of Phoebe F. Ho- gan for a writ of mandate compelling the Board of Fire Pension Commis- sioners to continue to her the pension which was paid to her hsuband before | his death. J. H. Hogan, a member of the Fire Department, was disabled by disease contracted in the service in | 1900 and drew a pension' until his death four years later. Judge Hunt holds that two classes of pensions are provided for in the charter: one for those disabled in the service and one for the families of those who are killed in the performance of duty. The former pension, he says, ceases death. —_———— Lapigue’s. Amended Complaint. John Lapique, the others for $650.000 damages for ma- licious prosecution alleged to have been continued for a period of sev- enteen years, -vesterday filed an amended complaint in the case. The | document contains forty-six pages and CUTLERY _EVERY BLADE WARRANTED CURE SICK HEADACHE. Gerwine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature | SoeadR ool | reads word for word like the original | with the exception of a few blue ink | interlineations, which are intended to meet the objections of the demurrers. | —_—ee——— More Fraud Orders. | Postmaster Fisk received another | of hi | fraud order from Washington yester- April 1 i engaged in the in- Wyman, accused of ballot | ng at the primary election | Mrs. O'Brien Has Not Seen Husband the | The union men make the se- | to purchase s, of which he | the Wickersham will contest Thomas | and has thereby | j. They announce that they | in | left Zion City | at| the Superior Court. pork packer, | who sued Abe Ruef and forty-three | day denying the use of the mails to| the Fidelity Funding Company, E. C. | Hedges, and the fice inspectors having reported them to be fraudulent. Empire Diamond | made | Company, all of this city, the postof- 2" GREATRAILROAD UNDERTAKING International Geographical Delegates at St. Louis Dis- cnss Alaska-Siberian Line SRR A SCHEME OF WIDE SCOPE it e | | | tious Enterprise Reviews History of Proposed Plan PR i Ao -| ST. LOUIS, . 21.—The most im- portant subject presented to the mem- bers of the International Geographical = which convened to-day at tion, was the proposed trans- Alaska-Siberian Railroad, which is of a wider scope than any undertaking of its kind in the history of engineering. Delobel, a member of the Geographical Society of Paris and the projector of the railway, reviewed the history of the undertaking. After a conference Roosevelt and Secretary Hitchcock on October 11 relative to securing the neu- tralization of the Behring Strait, De- lobel will sail for France and spend the coming winter endeavoring to effect final arrangements for projecting the line through Russia. sia, President Roosevelt and several Eurcpean sovereigns relative to the trans-Alaska-Siberian Railway has been obtained and the trans-Alaska- Siberian-French syndicate, of which Delcbel is president, considers that, ! when the arrangements with Russia have ben made, the final step will have | been taken and the success of the un- dertaking assured. sl cordas o N L TGS DESERTED WIFE DIVORCED | FROM THEATRIOCAL MANAGER for Ten Years—Other Marital Troubles. Judge Graham yesterday granted a | divorce to Rose E. O'Brien from Walter “BUFFALO BILL French Projector of Ambi-| WITHDRAWS SEIT | Cody Declares He Was De- With Trying to Poison Him ADMITS HIS MISTAKE Asks Forgiveness of Woman to Whom He Has Not Spok- en a Word for 18 Years with President | | The approbation of the Czar of Rus-! Special Dispatch to The Call. DENVER, Sept. 21.—Convinced that he was deceived into bringing false at- tempted poisoning charges against his wife, Colonel Willlam F. Cody will withdraw his suit for divorce in Sheri- dan, Wyo., this week. He has already written to Mrs. Louisa Cody at North Platte, Neb,, admitting to the woman, to whom he has not spoken a word in eighteen years, that he was misled and is desirous of obtaining her forgive- ness, their relations to continue as in the past. This result, according to word received here by relatives of the scout, is due to the arguments of Buffalo Bill's own attorneys and public senti- ment, In March of the present year the di- vorce suit became public, having been filed secretly in Big Horn County, Wyo. The charge was that Mrs. Cody had at- tempted to poison her husband on the night before Christmas, 1900, and had been guilty of numerous other acts | detrimental to his peace of mind. Mrs. Cody and her friends were thunder- struck and attorneys were engaged to reply to the charges with a cross-com- | plaint. The reply was never drawn, al- though it was publicly charged that | Buffalo Bill had been much in the com- pany of a woman who traveled along the route taken by the Wild West Show. Mrs. Cody obtained a change of venue to Sheridan, Wyo., out of “Buf- | falo Bill's” home county. —_——— JURY READY TO HEAR ceived Into Charging Wife| G. O'Brien on the grounds of desertion | KORNFELD WILL CONTEST and neglect and awarded her the cUS- | gy qan Relatives of Deceased Cos- tody of her two daughters. The h“”l tumer Want a Share of His band makes New York his headquart- Large Fortune. ers and travels through the Southern | 3 Vo States as the manager of a theatrical | A jury was impaneled in Judge troupe. They were married in San|Coffey’s court yesterday morning for Francisco in 1891 and ten years ago | the trial of the contest of the will of O’Brien departed and the wife has not seen him since. Other divorces were granted by Judge Graham to Lillie Lamerax from Walter Lamerax, for desertion; by Judge Kerrigan to Gustav H. Beisel | from Catherine Beisel, desertion; to Michael Meyer from Sarah Meyer, de- sertion; by Judge Sloss to Katie Ka- fouri from Abe Kafouri, neglect; by Judge Hebbard to Carrie Levenson from Harry Levenson, for neglect. Suits for divorce were begun by Flora E. Jones against Charles W. Jones, a lawyer, for intemperance Mary McKenna against Edward F. McKenna, intemperance; Ada E. Fow- den against Tom Fowden, cruelty; Al- | bert Thurlow against Marion Thurlow, infidelity. In the latter case Adam Hannah is named as co-respondent. Katie Anderson sues August Anderson, proprietor of the Superior restaurant at 504 Third street, for divorce on the ground of cruelty. She says his in- | come is $300 a month. Elizabeth Frederici, who is suing her husband, Leopold, for divorce, yes- terday filed an affidavit for an injunc- | | tion to prevent him from visiting her home at 10 De Boom street. She says that she inherited the place from her | former husband and Frederici comes | arouna with threats to kill her. —_————————— | Charles Kornfeld, lodged by Otto | Irving Wise, as attorney for Joseph Guzik, a nephew of the deceased re- siding at Warsaw, Russia. The trial will begin at 11 o’clock this mornjng with Lloyd & Wood and Bishop, ‘Wheeler & Hoefler defending the at- tack upon the fortune. Kornfeld was a pioneer costumer on Clay street. He | dled fourteen months ago, leaving an estate worth $250,000. He made a few minor bequests and bequeathed $60,000 to Annie T. Smith, who had been reared by himself and wife. The esidue of the estate was left to the dow. The relatives at Warsaw | were not mentioned in the will, and in the petition for the revocation of the ! admission of the testament to pro- bate the nephew alleges that Kornfeld, | who was 80 years old, was of unsound of his wife and Annie Smith. Balliet's Sult m. ! An answer and cross-complaint In | the case of Letson Balliet and Flor- ence E. Balliet against the White Swan Mineg Company were filed yesterday. The suit i{s fo invalidate an assess- ment of 5 cents a share. The com- | pany denies that its officers and direc- tors were not legally elected and de- nies that Balliet and his wife own 216,680 shares of the company stock, mind and under the undue. influence: but aver that Balliet was an officer nd one of the organizers of the com- pany and subscribed for 275,000 4 shares of stock for which he has never Alleged Conversation Into the | paid. The company denies that its Records. levy of an assessment of 5 cents a rday 0 share was illegal, but was for the pur- esterday afternoon’s session of Boas o payite exislting o andpthe | running expenses of the mine. The Geary of Santa Rosa Was| .ompany asks the court to order the | again cross-examined by Attorney | plaintiffs to deliver up the stock for | Francis J. Heney on behalf of Cora | cancellation, to declare that the as- ! L. Wickersham, the contestant. | sessment was good and valid, and to IN WICKERSHAM CASE | Attorney for Contestant Cannot Get | At ! torney J. C. Campbell interposed ob- | restrain Balliet from asserting its jections, were sustained by|invalldlty. —_———— ! Judge Seawell, preventing the line of [quf-slioning relative to alleged con- versations between Geary and Heney, hysi. i Aehich ‘the’ Topmer o ghlll o Higed Lt - aves lu DRygical culture and issions n ak- | Eymnastics of the Mission Turn Ve- | mzdzra?‘?flm \r{-icieei:;:,:i, !\5?11“::\1‘:- :‘ rein, under the direction of Professor | ting off her son Frank. Mr. Heney | Robert Barth, will give an exhibition said that fraud had been charged and | of the work of the society next Sun- ! it was his purpose to show that Judge | day at Mission Turner Hall on Eight- | Geary was a party to it. Further ex- | eenth street, near Valencia. There amination was in regard to Geary's| will be calisthenics by the children’s negotiations with Attorney Porter | classes, songs and drills by the girls’ Ashe, Frank Wickersham and the lat- | classes and apparatus work by the ter's wife to bring about a settlement | actives and seniors on horizontal bar, between Frank and his brother and ! ladder and buck. Diplomas will be sisters. presented to successful contestants and a dance will conclude the enter- Will Give Exhibition of Work. e e PROGRESO CASE IS tainment. - INALLY SUBMITTED | s Drummers for “’Old Gilt Edge Whiskey al- ways have “‘the best the town affords.”” They carry it with them, in fact. . —_—————— SCHOOL ~ HOLIDAY TO-MORROW.—The schools will not be In session to-morrow, the | Judge de Haven Will Pass Upon the | etition to Limit the Steamship Company’s Liability. PRAGERS “Buyster Brown” Collars 19c This is the real new swell collar for women, and is 1 made of Butcher linen There w'“ Be and embroidered in delicate Oriental designs. This will be the reigning fad this fall. It is a collar well worth 25c. Wmen Handkerchief's l2l/2c *W o men’s very sheer linen all pure i Handkerchiefs — un- laundered—they are made in the prettiest of floral de- signs, worked by hand in one corner, and have dainty hemstitched borders. They are well worth 2oc. at, Pragers o-Da 'Opening Sale of Women’s High Grade Shoes in Our New Dept. W On Every Purchase of $1.00 or Over “Something Doing” to the Amount, of $1.50 Free, Women’s Hosiery {3 pairs for $1.00 Women's tWo-thread Silk Lisle Thread Hosiery, which f has lace all around from the il toe to the 1ble es and de nd another pattern has lace ankle and gauze top; | guaranteed fast black; worth 50c a pa toes; A fine grade of nis Flannels, pretty styles of pink and blue y are just the pro- er weight for night dresses, ajamas, etc.. and at the low | price of 8 1-3¢c a yard are an exceptional offering. Women’s Tourist. Coats (Second Floor.) $7.95a0d $9.95 These are the new Mannish Tourist s, made of fancy Mixtures or Co- our prices are much lower than ould expect to find m marked, the values are so great. To-¢ we place on sale one hundred selected ones, all of which are beautifull 2 inches long, have helted backs and are either collarless or with coat or fancy collar. We have other styles up to $24. | stripes. T E have delayed inaugurating this great sale until everything was in absolute readiness to give the very best satisfaction to our cus- East for this new department and to make it worth while to visit this opening sale we have marked them at prices lower than ever before. —At this price is included all of the $3.50 and $5.00 $2 15 shoes of such famous makes as Jenness Miller, John e riety of styles and leathers; you can have either lace, Blucher or button in Viei Kid, Patent Calf, Every toe shape is shown and they are hand-turned and have Good- your choice of Military, Cuban or Louis XV heels. of ‘all our women's $3 and $3.50 Ox- are made of Patent Colt and may be had in either Blucher or lace. They are made on _the new shape toes with Military or Cuban heels. This is ab- (Main Floor.) tomers. A special stock of shoes of all kinds was bought in the They are certain to prove a great temptation to all. Foster, Dalton and others. They come in a large va- Colt, Patent Vici, Enamel and Box year welted soles. You may have l 3 —This is a special $ .8 ford Ties. They have Goodyear welted soles only and solutely the best Oxford Tie ever of- For $3.50 you may have one of these exquisite rolled rim Sailors. They are unusually jaunty and trimmed with the very best materials. $4.00 will buy you a fine fancy shirred Silk and Velvet Hat. The colors are black, brown and navy. $4.98 will permit a wide selection of styles in Silk Turbans, complete with- out trimming; this is a very dainty hat. ALWAYS RELIABLE 1238-1250 MARKET S Women's Fancy (Main Floor.) LACES. | 256 a yara—A new net top point Gauze Lace—the popular kind that is so pretty for sleeves. It is a splendid width from 4 to 7 inches wide, and 18 shown in butter and Arabian EMBROIDERY. 25¢ a yard—Embroidery edgings and demi-flounces, made specially for skirt flounces and corset cov- ers. There are many new and fine patterns in this stock and every yard of it comes from six to twelve inches wide. It is really worth 33c to 50c a yard. SILK GLOVES. 25¢ to 50e a pair—We have just opened a big shipment of Kayser's Silk Gloves, They come In black and white colors, so that every taste may be satisfied here. All of these gloves are made with double tips. They come in all sizes. T.o% IN COMMISSION AFTER FOUR AMUSEMENTS. AMUSEMENTS. YEARS AT BOTTOM OF OCEAN CALIFORNIA LAST THREE NIGHTS. FAREWELL MATINEE SATURDAY. MR. FREDERICK BELASCO Presents the Popular Actress. FLORENCE ROBERTS In Her Great Masterpiece. “TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES" NEXT SUNDAY RALPH STUART —IN BY RIGHT OF SWORD With His Original New York Com- pany and Production Direct From the American Theater. Ship Falls of Garry, Sunk and Bought by Wreckers for $375, Sells for $350,000. NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—Rapidly be- ing loaded, preparatory to sailing for Australia, the four-masted steel bark Falls of Garry lies at McCormick's elevator, Atlantic dock, Brooklyn. Several men who had the temerity to raise the bark from the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, where she had lain a wreck for four years, were made wealthy by salvage by buying her while she was still at the bottom for $3756 and selling her after she was repaired for $350,000. She is the same vessel, beam for beam, mast for mast, that went ashore on the coast of New HIT. Instantaneous Success of | AND AGAIN A MISS MAZUMA | | 3. C. Crawford’s Strictly Original Burlesque. i A Ludicrously Funny Play With a Plot. | ! SPARKLING M 1‘ Captivating Da i MAGNIFIC T SCI ERY. Our Unrivaled Cast of Highest Salaried Bus MATINEES E NEXT BURL THE LINB" Qu By Howard Jacot Caledonia, the French penal settle- ment in the Pacific Ocean, twenty de- greed south of the equator, nearly eight years ago. Rising gently with the swell at her Brooklyn dock, her brasswork glisten- ing like crystal, her stiff steel masts testifying to the strength of her keel, one can hardly imagine that she en- COLUMBI Powell St., near Market. A POPULAR SUCCESS. SN FRANCISCOSS | LEADIG THEAGE dured for so long a time the wear and tear to which she was subjected dur- ing the years she lay submerged. e e e ODD FELLOWS AT SANTA CRUZ. Saturday to Monday Excursion Tick- ets Sold by Southern Pacific for $3 00. Santa Cruz, with its great bathing estab- lishment and host of other attractions, will offer a warm welcome to all visitors on Satur- day and Sunday, September 24 and 25. There will be military band concerts on Saturday and Sunday afterncons and evenings, with a grand display of fireworks, and there will be a grazd ball at the great casino Saturday night and bopfires on the beach Sunday night. 0Odd Fellows and other visitors can go to Santa Cruz on the Saturday to Monday round trip excursion cickets sold by the Southern Pa- cific and which may be had at Third and Townsend streets depot or 613 Market st. * —_————————— Seeks Custody of Chinese Girl. Jan Kun, a Chinese, made applica- tion before Judge Lawlor yesterday for a writ of habeas corpus to secure possession from the Oriental bureau of the Methodist Episcopal church of Lee Mee Ho, a Chinese girl. He claimed he was the girl’s godfather. The writ was denied. The girl arrived here with eleven others to go to the St. Louis Exposition, but she and three others were detained here and given into the care of the Oriental bureau. There is an application on behalf of the bureau before Judge Coffey for letters of guardianship over After taking the testimony of Fire | Board of Education having declared a holi- | the girl, which will be heard to-meor- Marshal Towe yesterday the matter | day in honor of the visiting Odd Fellows. row. s of the limitation of liability of the | Michigan Steamship Company was | submitted _to United States District ADSHEENTS: Judge de Haven. The petitioner was the owner of the ’ steamship Progreso, which explodedl and burned on December 3, 1902, while lying at the wharf of the Ful- ton Iron Works, killing and injuring | several persons. Representatives of | the killed and injured brought suits against the petitioner for damages. The value of the wreck was ap- praised by United States District| Clerk George E. Morse at $15,020 and his appraisement was approved by the court. If the court shall grant the petition for limitation of liability it will be limited to that sum. e Three Suits for Damages. Three suits for damages for per- sonal injuries were filed yesterday in | John Endicott | | demands $10,710 from ‘the Bay View | Brick Company because his arm was crushéd in a brick making machine | while in the employ of the firm. Henry | ¥. Band sues Robert N. Risdon and | Henry F. Dutton and wife for $5000 | for injuries sustained K by falling! through a defective wooden grating into the basement at 1218 Hyde street. | George Patton asks that the United Railroads pay him $2535 for injuries | pianos CHICKERING STEINWAY WEBER | tion closed its case yesterday at the trial be- | fore a jury in Judge Lawlor's court, of homas P. Fallon, charged with the murder | s wife, Agnes, at 940 Mjssion street on | The witnesses examined were Dr. Bacigalupl, autopsy surgeon, Miss Mollie | | Short, Thomas J. Linehan, Mrs. Florence Res- sique, John Flenming and the officers who the arrest. Their evidence was the me given at the preliminary hearing. Barbara Fallon, a sister of the "defendant, ‘was examined the defense on the question | oi temporary insanity. BENS. (C 16- ENLARGEMENT® Ends Saturday. On Saturday the workmen will be gone—our sale will be over. Our showrooms will then be the finest in the city, with ample room for the display of our superb line of musical instruments. e is your opportunity to secure one of our high-grade en in exchange, at the wonderfully low prices now prevailing. The list includes these standard instruments. MASON & HAMLIN received when a Mission-street car [} While the enlargements are still in pro day, Friday ran into his truck on Spear street, and Saturday—the generous reductions on our entire stock are | August 8 last. i L still in force. A like op‘;‘onnnrt, will not soon recur—it is but | FALLON MURDER TRIAL.—The prosecu- pnldent " sevail e offiils anie. Sheet, Music at. Popular Prices. URTAZ «son ARRELL ST. \ The present sale VOSE STERLING STECK THIS WEEK AND NEXT WEEK, Nightly, Including Sunday at 8. MATINEE SATURDAY at 2:15. Hamlin and Mitchell's Extravaganza, WIZARD OF 01 Seats now ready for second and last week. @ OPERA {GRAND gHouse LAST 3 NIGHTS—MAT. SATURDAY. PRINCESS ¢ FAN TAN ""NEXT SUNDAY WATINEE Opening of Combination Seasen ¥ YORK STATE FOLKS Seats Now on Sale. O] oreR ] VO Jouse ANOTHER BRILLIANT SUGCESS EVERY NIGHT AT 8. Herbert & Smith’s Delightful Comie Opera SiiuE ERENAD VAUDEVILLENOTABLES SPECIAL MATINEE FRIDAY, 0DD FELLOWS' DAY. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Truesdell; Marvel- Regular Matinees Every Wednesday, Thurs- day, Saturday and Sunday. PRICES—10c, 25¢ and 50o. Belasco & Mayer, Proprietors. E. D. Price, General Manager. ALCAZA] TO-NIGHT—ALL WEEK. Matinees To-Dey and Saturday. Bvg., 25¢ to T5c. Mats. Thurs. & Sat., 25¢ to 50 WA/ HITEE A% Th AtcAzan co._| WHITTLESEY In the Great Romantic Drama, MONBARS best."'—Chronicle. “A Pronounced Suecess.”—Call. “The Production Excellent.”” —Examiner. MONDAY, SEPT. 26—MR. WHITTLESEY In “SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE.” GENTRAL " Market Street, Near Eighth...Phone South 533 TO-NIGHT—ALL THIS WEEK. MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. First Time in San Theodore Kremer's Powerful Drama, FALLEN BY THE WAYSIDE Depicting the Terrible Evils of Drink. A Mammoth Scenlc Production. p=hnste MAYER of Sensational Evenings. .. e 5% Matinees. . .10c, 1Be, 28e Next—THE DANITES. rinesT A A H. W. BISHOP, Lessee and Manager. THIS WEEK ONLY. 25 Cts “Linwx° 25 Cts MATINEE. MATINEE SATURDAY. Oliver Morcaco offers THE ALTAR OF FRIENDSHIP Night Prices—25c, 35c and Sie. A few front rows 7de. Sunday night, first time Lere, CAPTAIN BARRINGTON. High-Class Specialties Every Afternoom and Evening in the Theater. ——TO-NIGET— GALA AMATEUR PERFORMANCE ——Concluding with— ..NEW LIVING PICTURES.. Take a Ride on the MINIATURE ELECTRIC RAILROAD. THREE BABY LIONS IN THE 300. ADMISSION. ......10e | CHILDREN. 8¢ When Phoning Ask for The Chutes. MISCELLANEOUS AMUSEMENTS. MISCELLANEO! ALHAMBRA THEATER. MATINEE NEXT SATURDAY. Second and Last Grand Operatic Concert. wi: FRANCISCA FANNIE _The Great Prima Donna Soprano. Seits on sale at Sherman, Clay & Co.'s. Melville Ellls at Piano; Louls Newbauer, BASEBALL. Oakland vs. Los Angeles. AT RECREATION PARK ighth and Harrison S I‘E[\\Tlgl’:\' THURSDAY and FR D.\Pv..i . - EX BA’ . SUNDAY. P. M. FRES THURSDAY AND MMDES‘“ sale of seats at J Stockton st

Other pages from this issue: