The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 29, 1904, Page 9

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THE SAN FRANCISCQ CALL, THURSDAY, SEPT IBER 29, 1904. SEEKS 10 SET DIVORCE ASIDE An Aged Wife in Ignorance for Two Years of Decree| Granted to Her Husband S SHE CHARGES FRAUD RS fomes to San Franciseo to a Home: Gets Le- Separation Instead I i Vake ta, is an liho ried thirty 1 not know until last onial obligations in ws came to her ner at d her applica- wusband’s pension e had ] wife started an inves- orney John erday com- the Superior e set aside. The rk and the hus- the papers ce case the nstances are for e charges. yesterday by nehan from by Jude m trong from sertion; to Georgianna udge Hunt to chwab, de- Mary A Barnett, ex- Judge Kerrigan to m Bessie Schneider, ler fr ree were filed by Fred nst Maud M. Hall, ex- Murphy against extreme cruelty. Stanley Estate Settled. John Garber yesterday pre- Judge Coffey his final ac- petition for settlement of estate of his aunt, Cor- Stanley. A complex was involved in the set- was divided into h was given to the interest to ter in the East, Mrs. h jeath the prin- to her son. The son estator and the point ey to decide was estate, on its ter- ee the residuum the heirs at law, confined in its tees in the will ded that the fifth 1ld go into the ses, and the ributed. and 0 ADVERTISEMENTS. ™= LONDON DIRECTORY TAINING over 2000 pages sed commercial mat- bles enterprising traders United States to keep 1 with the trade of the Besides being a2 com- mercial guide to London the London Direc- s lists of: air PORT MERCHANTS Goods they ship and the and Foreign markets they STEAMSHIP LINES der the Ports to which 1 indicating the approxi- PROVINCIAL APPERDIX EX nged f Trade Notices of leading Manufac- | wurers, Merchants, etc., in the princi- I towns and industrial United Kingdom. A copy of the 1905 edition will be ded, freight paid, on receipt of ce Order for §s5. TheLondonDirectory Co., Lid,, 25 Abchurch Lane, London, E. C. England. DON'T FAIL TO see the beautiful COURT m EVERY BLADE WARRANTED CURE SICK HEADACHE, Genvine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature Ahewd ool MAUVAIS MUSIC CO. 833 MARKET ST., OPP. MASON. One-Third Off on Reyal instruments. i had freed him- | been di- | ~ |OCEAN VIEW NEIGHBORS QUARREL AND EXPLAIN By Shutting Off the | s . Ocean View was extensively repre- sented in Police Judge Mogan's court- |room yesterday morning while the | peace disturbance charge against two | prominent residents of that suburb, | Andrew Douglas of 181 Sadowa street |and William Wells of 137 Sadowa street, was on hearing. The defendants | were locked in deadly embrace when King and Cronin arrested spent five minutes in tearing testimony Mr. s of a windmill p that supplies eral of the resi- dents of Sadowa street with water and that he shut off the aqua supply of Mr. Wells man refused to pay for the repair of a window in the house which had been broken by some small bo; Mrs. Con- r of the Wells residence, ’ mother-in-law and Wells declared that she ought to to the the owner & is Mr pay for the glazing, while she, oh the other hand, asserted that he alone should defray the expense. It was to help his mother-in-law*in the dispute that Mr. Douglas deprived the Wells f water and it was Mr. Wells’ lation that led up to the fight ich the two men were found by the police. Judge Mogan thought that the re- pairing of the window was a trifling matter to quarrel about and Mr. Wells emphatically stated that he would neither pay for a new pane nor leave the house. *It is not the price of the glass but the principle of the thing that impels me to this attitude,” quoth Mr. Wells. To which Mr. Douglas, speaking for Mrs. Condon as well as himself, retorted by asserting that un- til the window is repaired or the Wells folk vacate the house not a drop of 211 be conveyed to the latter the pipe leading from his :ave seen such asinine stubborn- on the mimic stage,” said the but never till now has it con- me in court. You remind me stinate characters in a New England rural drama. The time of this | ne is too valuable to be wasted in g to bring reasop to bear upon h stubbornness and the case is dis- ed. But if you are again brought e for disturbing the peace of your neighbors by fighting you may find less leniency.” . . Judge Mogan continued till next Sat- urday the case of August Weinman, ac- cused of having cruelly beaten a young child of Mrs. Annie Weintraub, which had been placed in the “home” man- aged by him at 4109 Twenty-first street. Secretary Levy of the Eureka Hebrew Benevolent Society testified that the child had been entrusted to Weinman'’s care by that organization, the mother being unable to provide for it, and that it was properly treated. Mrs. Kate Pettie, manager of the Universal Ser- vice Society, stated that the child had been struck with a cane by Weinman | and its thighs showed evidence of the séverity of the punishment. The de- fendant, a blind man, then averred that Mrs. Weintraub’s object in complaining against him was to recover the custody of the child and get the $7 month which the Eureka Society paid him for its support. The continuance was made in order to get the testimony of neigh- bors as to the treatment received by the little inmatgs of the Weinman home. T Anna Burelbach, who accused W. H. Pittman of having robbed her of sev- eral diamond rings and a gold watch, told Judge Mogan that for seven years she had been the defendant’s only means of support. During that period, she testified, she had given him, from time to time, 000 in cash. They lived in almost every town of any size on this coast and in each place he posed as a gentleman until her vo- cation was discovered and then they sought pastures new. She is now re- siding at Victoria, B. and when ar- rested he was managing a get rich quick concern in Los Angeles. The hearing will be resumed Wednesday. P B. Cohn, peddler, was accused of cru- elty to animals, the specific offense be- ing the twisting of a prostrate horse’s tail in futile effort to make it rise. Mrs. | Havtie Mardis testified that Mr. Cohn’s treatment of the animal was unneces- sarily harsh, and her statement was corroborated by H. Iben, A. P. Paul- sen and other persons, who witnessed the tail twisting. Several small boys averred that in so far from being cruel | to his steed Mr. Cohn’s conduct was | most humane. Judge Cabaniss took the case under advisement till October 26. Marcus Perris was in the crowd that | blocked trafic at Third and Market streets and absorbed the bulletined re- ports of the McCoy-Sullivan prizefight, and so enthused was he by the clever work of,)*“The Kid” that he involun- tarily gave it practical mlustration by jabbing and uppercutting and sidestep- ping and _short-arm-joiting persons | within his arm reach. He was environ- ed by sore and indignant victims when Patrolman “Tom” Murphy elbowed his way into the throng and quickly sub- jugated and then arrested him for dis- turbing the peace. Judge Mogan con- tinued the case till to-morrow in or- der to give the defendant opportunity to prove that his fistic indulgence was not malicious. . Five small boys—Charles Everhard, Walter Spangler, Frank Ripstein, Har- ry Page and Henry Douce—were ac- cused by Andrew Jacobson of having stolen forty-eight doughnuts from him at Twenty-fourth and Howard streets. Patrolman Fogarty, who arrested the lads, testified that they swallowed the material evidence for the prosecution, and Judge Cabaniss held that their re- | sultant stomach pains was punishment sufficient for their offense. T Nineteen-year-old Henry Golsch, charged with having plundered a tele- | phone cash box at Seventeenth and | Church streets, told Judge Mogan that two unknown men had primed him with liquor unti! he was reckless and | then urged him to commit the bur- | glary, explaining to him how it could Ibe done with neatness and dispatch. His story is being investigated and he will get anothgr hsn.rln-g to-morrow. With a barrel of olive oil upon one of his shoulders, Hugh McCaffrey was ‘ ambling along Battery street, when an | inquisitive policeman demanded an ‘explmnunn of how he became pos- | i | { sessed of the stuff. So shaky was his story that it prompted further inves- | tigation and the officer discovered that | the barrel had been stolen from the premises of the Rankin Company. “What did you intend to do with | the o0il?” Judge Mogan asked the de- | ferdant. “I might say that I intended to drink it, but you wouldn't believe me,” was the answer. “Six months fer you,” said the Judge. PUN | Water Supply Andrew Douglas Tries to Help His Mother-in-Law in Her Crusade gl home because that gentle- | ISPUTE IN COURT Wells Family’s- Pure Charles Jon€ clared that hi Bessie Henry w mation and so a railroad man, de- acquaintance with Miss, of such recent for- nerely casual that he considered her hint that he take her to n dinn impertinence. It was' . at Sutter et and Grant avenué he met her for the first time, he averred, and: ¢y had been engaged.in convers ee minues she abruptly ex- inclinatien- te -dine- at -his. He tried to ignore the sug- | but she wdlld not allow him'| to do so, and finally, when he told her point blank that he regarded her in- tence as bad form, she scolded him | h such vehemence as to attract a crowd and visit'upon him great: hus miliation of spirit. “Stingy” was the vlaasl( offensive of the adjectives she used. { Patrolman L. J. Larkin heard a por- tlon of Miss Henry's denunciatory ora< jtion and to Judge Mogan heyg pro- nounced it “pretty tough talk.” "Theny Mr. Jones remarked that never in:all/ his life had he listened to, much less been made the subject af ,such ‘a “bunch of language.” Miss Henry will tell her side:of-th | story to-morrow.; . ol Ella Johnson, the 16-year-old girl; whose mother had her arrested for waywardness because she atterided a | in celebration of his release from prison, was turned over to the custody of Secretary White of the Society for | the Prevention of Cruelty to_Children,, To plead for her release there appear- | ed in Judge Mogan’s court the parents | of Leslie Falkenburg and they were | roundly censured by his Honor for en- | couraging the girl's attentions to their | son. “I am informed,” said the Judge, “that you escorted this young girl to | the prison in which your son was serv- ing a six months’ sentence for having cruelly ill-treated the mother of his two illegitimate children, and that you have been partly instrumental in caus- ing the estrangement between the girl d her mother. Your appearance | here I consider extremely impudent and I would advise you to go home and attend to the proper training of your own children.” Little Miss Johnson will probably be consigned to 8t. Catherine’s Home. —_—— STOCK BROKER WALLS AND WIFE FILE ANSWER Deny Stephen Otis’ Charges of Fraud and Cast Reflections on Honor of Court. Separate answers to the suit of en Otis to collect a judgment of 50 from John A. Walls were vesterday by Emma G. Walls, and the Central Grain change. In December, filed John A. Wall and Stock 1896, Walls, chief clerk of the Stock Ex gave Otis his note for involving a stock deal. Otis sued and got judgment, though Walls pleaded that it was a gambling debt. | When attempt was made to collect it was found that Walls had no prop- erty. Mrs. Walls, however, was the owner of 518 shares of stock in the Central Exchange, which was given her by its president, W. E. Baines. Since May, 1900, when the gift was made, Mrs. Walls has received $41,- 000 in dividends on the securities. Otis got permission from the court | to .,sue Mrs. Walls, alleging that the | stock had been ed in her name in | her husband'’s Interest and in order to defraud his creditors. The defend- ants all d this allegation and say that Mrs. Walls is the separate owner of the stock and its profits. Walls ad- mits that his wife paid nothing for her noldings. He says he has nothing to do with the shares or the money and only receives $250 a month salary in kis position. Walls also charges that the judg- ment against him, rendered in Depart- ment 12 of the Superior Court, is fraudulent because the court arbitrar- ily struck out his answer and refused to hear his witnesses. He says, too, “that in furtherance of its determina- tion to deprive him of a fair trial, the court refused to allow his bills of ex- ceptions and a statement of the case on appeal. He asks that the judgment be vacated. —— YOSEMITE VALLEY. [ Reduced Rates Via the Santa Fe. Until October 13 the Santa Fe will sell round-trip tickets from San Francisco to Yosemite Valley for $25 90. This round trip includes all the fa- mous sights, the big trees, the stupen- dous cliffs and the great waterfalls. Reports from the Valley are it is.unu- sually beautiful and attractive. Now is the time to go, just after the rain, Hundreds of people are now going. Daily stages from Merced connect with Santa Fe morning trains from San Francisco. Full information and folder at 641 Market street, Santa Fe office. . —_—— Street Cleaner Is Tested. A public test was made yesterday afternoon on Market, Eddy and other streets of a new street cleaning ma- chine, the agents for which are en- deavoring to induce the city officlals to make use of it on the city streets. It consists of a large tank wagon, into which water is forced by the ordinary hydrant pressure. The owners of the device claim that it cleans the streets, sprinkles them and flushes the sewers, The fault found with it is that it washes all the dirt into the sewers. The test was witnessed by a number of cit— officials and members of the Merchants’ Association. —_——— BENEFIT FOR FATHER YORKE.—There will be a barn dance and social evening at 3036 Twenty-second street on Saturday night, the funds to be for the. béhefit of Father Yorke's Church and Sunday. school in Oak- land. His old friends and parishioners be present in large numibers. e party given by one Leslie Falkenburg | &t | Hutton from officé undeér section 758 of | Frank J. Murphy intimated that he COLLINS WANTA HUTTON'S SCALP Adopts Various Methods to Have Police Commission- er Removed From Office e ASKS GRAND JURY'S AID Will Prefer Charges Next Week Before Mayor to Im- pugn Defendant’s Morals P Attorney George D. Collins is taking advantage of all legal methods to re- move fromoffice Police Commissioner H. W. Hutton, “special Chief of Poli¢e for 1129 Dupont street,” now that Hutton has been adjudged guilty of contempt of court by Judge Cook for violating the injunction to restrain the police ! from interfering Wwith the restaurant business of Jean Pon and fined $100-for the contempt. . Yesterday Collins appeared before Presiding Judge Lawlor and procured from the Judge an order é&iting Hutton to appear before him on.October 6 to answer the accusation filed against him on Tuesday afternfop for’ instructing Policernen Barry,and- Fennell to arrest Mary Duran on.Juhe 7 after she had left Pon’s restdurant. The accusation is made nnder section 772 6fithe Penal Code, which'gives'the Judge power to remove Hutton from officé if the dccus- tlon 18 sustaimed and enter judgient &f $500 in favor of the informer. Collins says he is preparing’ a com- munication to the Grand Jury asking that body:fot an indictment to remove the Penal Codé, which provides that | “an acclsation-in writing against any district, county, township or munici- pal officer for willful or corrupt mis- conduct in office may be presented by the Grand Jury of the county for or in which the officer accused 1s elected or appointed.” A A suit will soon berinstituted by Col- lins to enjoin the City Treasurer from paying any salary to.Hutton In virtue of section 10, article 16 of the charte which provides that, “an office becom vacant when the incumbent ls con- victed of an offense involving a viola- tion of his official dutles.” ‘ Besides these statutory proceedings, Collins says he will file charges with the Mayor, asking for Hutton's remov- al from office becaule of his immoral- ity. This he says will be done within a week. AR e 5 MAYOR ‘DENIES THAT HE PLANS TO OUST HUTTON Pronounces False Report That He Intends to Appoint C. H. Hilbert Police Gommissioner. Mayor Schmitz last’ ‘evening pro- nounced as absolutely false the pub- lished report that he will oust Police Commissioner Hutton from office ow- ing to the latter having been found guilty of contempt of court and ap- | point C. H. Hilbert, president of the | Hilbert Mercantile Company, in Hut- ton’s place, "It was also stated-in the article that Attorney Georg Col- lins would take st to have Hutton dismissed under a ar’ vision. Mayor Schmitz v The story is untrue as all the others re- flecting upon me and my adminigtration that have appeared recently in an evening paper. 1 have given the matter mo consideration what- ever and the fact that Hutton has been ad- judged gullty of contempt has not been brought officlally to my notice as yet,: I have not siven the matter of Hitton's removal or the appointment of his successor a -thought. The story was manufactured out of whole cloth, as I was not interviewed at all on the subs Ject. Asked as to whether he would take advantage of section 10, article 16 of the charter, which provides that an office becomes vacant when the in- cumbent is convicted of a felony or of an offense involving a violation of his official duties, the Mayor said: 1 do mot care to say whether I will take such advantage or mot. Of course, If Mr. Hutton has violated his official duties his office becomes vacant without any action on my part, and I would simply appoint his successor. But, as I have sald, I have not considered the matter at all and the mind readers who have concooted their tale have absolutely no foundation for it. —_———— Asks Exemption From Taxation. It is expected that there will be an amendment to the constitution sub- mitted to the voters at the next elec- tion, providing for the exempting from taxation of the California Acad- smy of Sclences. It is urged that the payment of $7000 a year taxes im- poverishes the in titution. As the acad- emy is run as * free museum, no tax should. ba imposed upon its income bearing property. Circulars relating to the matter have been sent to mem- bers and friends of the society by C. E. Grunsky and Leverett Mills Loo- mis, the committee in charge of the matter of taxation. Scherf Is Arraigned. Gustav Scherf, deputy poundkeep- er, was arraigned before Judge Law- lor yesterday on a charge of murder for shooting and killing Rudolph W. Schwartze on August 24. Attorney would challenge the panel of the Grand Jury that returned the indict- ment. Assistant District Attorney Ferral expressed the hope that no un- necessary obstacle would be put in| the way of having a Speedy trial. The case was continued till to-morrow. ————— Fall hats, 1904, just arrived, nobbler than ever. Tom Dillon & Co.. opp. Palace. | ffh e S ol Aiding the Home Market. Eighteen thousand packages of seeded California raisins and prunes from Santa Clara County have' been sold by Weinstock, Lubin & Co. at 5 cents per pound, or cost price, at their store on Grant avenue. The purpose in dding this was to aid a great Cali- fornia industry by ‘making a home market for products. NEWBRO’S The GOING| . GOI ‘W _ADVERTISEMENTS. - - ING !¢ HERPICIDE Qerm.'™s i i Ils enough to melt . ticle FIRE DESTROYS UPTON'S PLANT, An Early Morning Blaze on Fremont Street Causes Large Amount of Damage STREET RUNS EXTRACTS Bottles Break in the Heat and Vari-Colored Fluid Flows Along Sidewalks ——— An early morning fire at 17-19 Fre- mont street caused damage amounting to about $50,000 yesterday. The fire broke out in the third story of the building, occupied by TUpton Bros., printers. . The stock and machinery of six firms located in the building were damaged. The cause of the fire is not known. The heaviest losers are Upton Bros. Their plant, valued at $25,000, was en- tirely destroyed. It is insured for $8000. Above the printing office was the Eng-Shell Extract Company. The heat of the flames in the printing office ‘destroyed about $10,000 worthiof ex- tracts. ‘Thousands of bottles burst and their contents flooded the fourth floor and dropped to the sidewalk. For sev-/ eral hours a vari-colored stream of ex-, tracts ran in the gutter on Fremont street.. The Eng-Shell Company’'s loss is covered by insurance. Phe first floor of the building was oc- cupied by the California Hydraulic and Engineering Company. They sustained ‘a loss of about $1000, which {s covered | by insurance. The building, owned by | Mrs. Ada Taylor, was damaged $15,000. The West Coast Wire Company lost| about $3000. —_——— Board Rejects Bids. The Board of Works yesterday re- jected the bid of J. F. O’Brien for street and sewer work on Seventh and South streets as being excessive and ordered new proposals to be in- vited for the work. The board also rescinded the award of contracts for street work on Seventh street, be- tween Hubbell and South, and on Cole street, owing to slight errors in the notice of publication. The board ordered work stopped on the sidewalk elevator on Clay street, near Mont- gomery, protests having been flled by business concerns in the vicinity. Commissioner Schmitz was delegated to inquire into the case of M. Paglo, who had his house at 829 Pacific street repaired without first securing a permit. ADVERTISEMENTS. Perrin - Gloves | Q All the dye stays in our black gloves, none comes off on the hands or what they handle, nor do they wear rusty ‘looking or gray. Sole Depot in San Francisco: R.D. Davis & Company Geary and Grant Avenues. MEN'S GLOVES AT ALL MEN'S STORES. Good work, quick service an fair treatment have put me in the in this line, and my customers are stay- || ing by me. Here are some figures that ought to interest you. They'll save you money. DEVELOPING: Roll of 6.....10c | Roll of 12....18¢0 PRINTING: Solio finish..3¢-5¢ | Vélox finish.3ec-60 DAYLIGHT LOADING FILMS-—In all popular sizes. Popular prices. ANSCO C. IRAS—Are high class || and alwgys satisfactory. Buy one here. CYKO PHOTO PAPER — Gives 1-|p1:?dld results. Prints by artificial ght. Cameras repaired at low rates. Mail orders promptly filled. THAT MAN PITTS F. W. PITTS, The Stationer, 1008 MARKET STREET, Opp. Fifth, SAN FRANCISCO. anything—even | the finest laundered linen—but neg-; lige is the thing, and in its handling you can depend upon our nailing its colors fast and returning: every ar-| in the condition _youll be pleased to wear. No saw edges. UNITED STATES LAUNDRY, 1004 MARKET STREET. ADVERTISEMENTS. ] VRN i i ul R \\ o ] NNy % RIS | / WA (\ AT I AMUSEMENTS. c°LuM~§_I A SAN FRANCISCOS LEADING THEA2E LAST 4 NIGHTS—MAT. SAT. Hamlin and Mitchell's Extravaganza, WIZARD OF 0z BEGINNING NEXT MONDAY NIGHT. CHARLES B, DILLINGHAM will present FRANK DANIELS In the Laughing, Musical, Beauty Show, “THE OFFICE BOY.” FUN that makes you roar—MUSIC you can whistle—GIRLS good to look upon. SEATS NOW READY. SOUSA is coming to the ALHAMBRA. OPERA GRAND RSG5 THIS WEEK AND NEXT! The Beautiful Pastoral Play, YORK STATE Better than “The Old Homestead” Matinees Saturday and Sunday COMING—THE BURGOMASTER. P T ST ovemer Logam M H. W. Bishop, Lesses and Manager. THIS WEEK ONLY. . 28 cts wurmEm 95 cts OLIVER MOROSCO offers CAPTAIN BARRINGTON FIRST TIME HERE. Night prices 25, 35 and 50 cents. A few front rows orchestra, 75 cents. MATINEE SATURDAY, 25 and %0 cents. Sunday, Oct. 2—‘THE HENRIETTA." CALIFORNIA ALL THIS WEEK. EDW. THURNAER Presents RALPH STUART IN THE BIG SUCCESS, BYRIGHT OF SWORD Direct from the American Theater, New York City. NEXT SUNDAY — Biggest, Brightest, Best Musical Comedy of the Season, “THE TENDERFOOT." Positively 60 People, including Phil Ryley, the famous lepunch in Flos 00 nights in New York, 250 nights in Chicago. SEATS NOW SELLING. Feiclerly LAST WEEK OF MISS MAZUMA The Burlesque Hit of the Season. Replete With New Songs, Specialties and Novelties. Our Unexcelled Cast and Chorus. Matinees Saturday and Sunday. SAME POPULAR PRICES. NOTICE—NEXT MONDAY NIGHT, First Production of “DOWN THEE 4 (By Howard Jacot, Esq.) A Hilariously Funny Burlesque. Absolutely New and Original. Three Great Acts and Twenty Specialties. ALHAMBRA THEATER. TO-NIGHT AT 8:30 AND NEXT SATURDAY AFTERNOON AT 2:30. ND OPERATIC CONCERTS. stingulshed Prima Donna Soprane FRANCISGA The Lyric Sensation of the Da Marcellino at the Plano—] el The SEATS NOW SELLING The Beautiful Morality Play, “EVERYMAN”’ JOSEF HOFMANN, THE GREAT PIANIST ALHAMBRA THEATER. Of the Brillfantly Successful Comic Opers, S THE Same Prices 25¢, 50c, TSe In Preparation DER RASTELBINDER ONLY MATINEE SAT. (The Mousetrap Peddler.) 'A Vaudevilie Revel! URBANI AND SON; John P. Kennedy and Carrie Reymolds; | ; Two Pucks; T. Trovollo, and Orpheum { Motion Pictures, Showing “Personal.” the Great Comedy Success, Drama in the Air.” Last Tim and Mrs. Howard Truesdell; Melrose Troupe; Lawson and Namon, and James and Bonnie Farley. Regular Matinees Every Wednes | | | | | | day, Saturday and Sunday PRICES—10c, 25c and 30c. . Belasco & Mayer, Proprietor D. Price, General Manager. TO-NIGHT—ALL WEEK. Matinees TO-DAY and Saturda: Evg., 25¢ to Tc. Mats. Thurs. & Sat., 25c to 500 WHITE [ e & ] WHITTLESEY In & Grand Revival of Richard Harding Davis’ | Thrilling Story of Adventure, SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE Dramatized by Augustus Thom: Monday, Oct. FAREWELL WEEK, MR. WHITTLE: Y as ARMAND DUVAL n “CAMILLE." ptiisSce MAYER o PROPS Market Street, Near Eighth...Phone South 333 TO-NIGHT—ALL THIS WEEK. MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. Magnificent Production of the Matchless Call- fornia Drama. [THE DANITES Adapted from the Famous Story of the Sierras by Joaquin Miller. | PRICE Evenings Matinees High-Class Specialties Every Aftermoom and Evening in the Theater. ——TO-NIGHT— GALA AMATEUR PERFORMANCE ——Concluding with— NEW LIVING PICTURES.. Take a Ride on the MINIATURE ELLCCTRIC RAILROAD. THREE BABY LIONS IN THE Z00. ADMISSION. . .....10¢ | CHILDREN........| 3o ‘When Phoning Ask for The Chutcs. BASEBALL. SAN FRANCISCO vs. LOS ANGELES. RECREATION PARK, Bighth and Harrison streets. WEDNESDAY, ;K‘HL‘RSDAY, FRIDAY, at m. SATURDAY. 3 p. m. SUNDAY, 2:30 p. m. LADIES FREE THURSDAY and FRIDAY. ‘Advance sale of seats at 5 Stockton st & MISCELLANEOUS. Perfect Fitting Eyeglasses 1t Moderate Cast ’ 642 "MARKETS Dr. Gibbon’s Dispensary, 629 KEARNY ST. Fstablished

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