The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 17, 1904, Page 9

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THE N FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1904. FIND INDIANS \RE STARVING e | Investigators Report That | Red Men on Reservation Near Campo Are Destitute TELL PITIFUL STORIES| Wards of the Nation Willl; Be Dead Before the New| Year Unless Given Relief! e SAN DIEGO, Nov. 16.—A pitiful| story of hunger and destitution and a | pathetic talé of patience and faith in the ultimate consideration of a kind Government are brought from the eastern mountains of this county by men who have been investigating the condition of the Indians on the Gov- ernment reserv. tions near Campo. In- dian Agent Charles E. Schell of Pala and Charles F. Lummis, the well known author and editor of "OutI West,” have spent six days among the red men. The gist of what they found is harrowing enough to send a shud- der through the country. | In the five reservations near Campo, | on the edge of the desert, there are at | present nearly 200 Indians—not the | Qirty vicious, untutored, begging creatures who Infest tinental railroad sations, but working, intelligent farming people, | who cultivate every possible square | inch of the practically worthless.land reserved for them by the nation. No | reain has fallen to start the seed plant- ed, no water is at hand for irrigating, no large reserve food supply is ever possible and the unfortunates are now | subsisting chiefly upon acorns. 1 ss relief comes,” sald Lummis, | ve Indians will be dead before ew Year's Such emaciation, uch patient suffering among old and , I have never seen before t to see again. Those putrid flesh, yet such that when they see any animal that scare the birds larder with also go out and catch LETCHER AGAIN ARRESTED ON A CHARGE OF ARSON Judge Cook Issues a Warrant on Com- nt of Attorney Nagle and Fixed. Bonds Are r order of the it from Judge for the ar- he is 3 The case wil be r afternoon at 2 George W. Schell tcher's interests. RN A T Accused of Stabbing Chinese. 2+ highbinder be- Suey Sing Tong, was ar- rested yester afternoon by Detec- tis McMa and Special Officer - Washington street. He is f stabbing Chin Tai in a Washington-street theater ¢ night over a dispute as to of the bory. Chin Tafi's serious and Wong D.( Sing will be held pending developments. __GRAPE-NUTS. TILL The Simple Dish That Keeps One Vigorous and Well Fed. T doctor takes his own medi- cine a the grocer eats the food he recommends some confidence comes to the observer. A grocer of Ossian, Ind., had a prac- | el experience with food worth any attention. He says: “Six years ago I became so weak from stomach and bowel trouble that I was finally compelled to give up all work in my store, and in fact all of work, for abouy four years. st year I was confined to the bed all of the time and much of | the time unable to retain food of any sort on my stomach. My bowels were ipated continually and I lost from 165 pounds down to| ight pounds. | When at the bottom of the ladder I| anged treatment entirely and started in on Grape-Nuts and cream for nour- ishment. I used absolutely nothing but this for about three months. I slowly | roved until I got out of bed and | n to move about. | have been improving regularly in the past two years have working about fifteen hours a day my life “During these missed akfast of Grape-Nuts and | and often have it two meals a | but the entire breakfast is always | : of Grape-Nuts and cream alone. | nce commencing the use of Grape- | never used anything to .umu ate the action of the bowels; a | thing I had to do for years, but this | food keeps me regular and in fine shape | and T am growing stronger and heavier every day My customers, naturally, have been nterested and I am compelied to an- | swer a great many questions about‘, Grape-Nuts. sme people would think that a sim- NOON. | | | | ti 1 and mow been store and never felt better in! two years I have never | a bres ple dish of Grape-Nuts and cream would not carry onme through to the! noonday meal, but it will and in the most vigorous fashion.” Name given by Postum Co., Creek, Mich, Look in each pkg. for the famous lit- e book, “The Road to Wellviile," Battle 1]’ ARE IRREGULAR Wil Succeed in - Her Own Way™ . d | | | Maxine Effiott I % — | Procedure in Shaw Cases | |AUDITOR IS MISTAKEN Method in Vogue at the Institution Is Said to Be the Only Practicable One LOS ANGELES, Nov. to the Express from Whittier, says: Reports from Merced that County Auditor Cook alleges that irregular claims have been presented to Merced County by Superintendent Smith of | | the Whittier Réform School in connec- | tion with the release of the boys Rob- ert and Dick Shaw, August 15, seem to have been based on a misunderstand- ing ‘of - the methods pursued by the 16.—A special | | | | | i ; Cal., { board of trustees, which methods have the approval of Governor Pardee. According te the allegations of Aud- | itor Cook of Merced the State school ](fficlals were guilty of misrepresenta- tion in filing the claims for the support of the Shaw boys for August, Septem- ber and October, affidavits obtained | | from the boys. stating that they left { the school August 15. Since the State school of correction was established at Whittier, | amount advanced by the county to the | State, $11 a month for each pupil, the | has ! WHITE ROUSE the | Before Them | ORK OF WIDE RANGE From Roosevelt. on Questions enator Newlands and Par- dee Spoken Of for the Next | Head of the Organization EL PASO, Tex., Nov. 16.—The Na-| tional Irrigation Congress was to-day | | divided into five sections and eacl section met in a different hall. They! will gather again to-morrow in general | | session and report results of their work | and any conclusions arrived at. | The executive committee, in accord- | ance with the instructions given last year, to-day reported a number of sug- ! gested amendments to the constitution, but none of them is of material im-| portance. | A paper on the subject of “Rural Set- | tlements” by Commander Booth Tuck- er was presented to the congress. Aside from the technical information brought out at the convention to-day, it was devoid of unusual interest. The Mexican delegates are enthusiastic over the prospect of being officlally recog- nized by the convention. It is under- stood that they will return to.organize a congress for Mexico, but they want affiliation with this congress also. Among the resolutions Introduced and referred was one asking that congress include Texas in the list of States that IES CLAIMS GREETING FROM |GRANT'S ORDER ANGERS BLACKS T s Superintendent of Whittier Irrigation Congress Hears | Negroes Lrae the Pxesxdent | Reform School Explains | to Retain Soldier Who, Married a Colored Woman | TAKE UP SMITH'S CASE{ {Recommendation That He! Be Discharged Is Styled! an Insult to the Race, Spectal Dispatch to The Call. | —_— | BOSTON, Nov, 16.—Believing that an | njustice had been done Private John | | F. Smith, whose disenarge from the | United States army was recommended | by General Grant because he married a negress, the colored people of New | England have sent a petition to Presi- | dent Roosevelt, asking that he inter- | vene. Some time ago the New England | Suffrage League sent cut blanks ask- | ing for signatures to the petition on the ground that the discharge of white soldiers from the army for no other‘ reason than that they had married col- | ored women weuld encourage the pre- | judice against negroes, in the army and | out, and that it would be an insult to every colored woman. The petition, | which was headed by C. C. Morgan, Boston lawyer, and signed by nearly | 1000 persons, was as follows: i We, the undersigned colored Americans, be- | lieving that the interests of personal liberty Tequire that the appeal of Private John F. Smith, stationed at Fort Worth, Salem, N. J.. | from bis Gischarge by his superior officers, PRAGERS There Will Be ‘“Something Doing” at. Pragers o-Day. Don’t, Miss It.. resulting from his marriage to a woman of | o our race, be sustalned. and realizing that his | LS + POPULAR ACTRESS WHO WILL APPEAR AT THE COLUMBIA IN “HER OWN WAY.” + Elliott in the Clyde Fitch comedy, “Her Own Way,” will be the attraction at the Columbi Theater commencing next Monday night. Mati- nees are to be given on Saturdays and Maxine dditional afternoon performance on Thanksgiving day. Miss Elliott, who has for some seasons been re- garded as the most beautiful woman on the American stage, has won new honors as an actress and she has sur- prised her admirers, who have been sposed to regard her simply as a beautiful woman by the strength and sincerity and depth of feeling of her work in several emotional scenes. The play also gives her ample opportunity to portray the lightest and most deli- cate shades of refined comedy. Manager Charles B. Dillingham will present Miss Elliott here with the same cast and production seen in New York In the vflm.’van_" are Charles Cherry, James Carew, R. C. Herz, Nel- lie T Georgia Lawre Addison Pitt, Suzanne Perry Donald Gallaher, a clever juvenile. orne PERSONAL. is Banker T. J. Field of Monterey at the Palace. ¥. W. Hatch mento, at the L w. G City, is at the.St.” Francis. a fruitman of Sacra- k. is A. F. Luning, a brewer of Milwaukee, is staying at the St. Francis. Coramander Mahon, 3 .t the Palace yesterday. B. Clapp of the United Geodetic Survey is at the Occidental. H. P. Anderson, a well known man of Los Angeles, man pf Los A the Palace. Fred A. Rindge, ness man of Los Angeles, at the St. Francis. ngeles, and wife are Judson Brusie, secretary of the Rail- road Commission, and wife are regis- tered at the Occidental. Thomas R. Jones, the newiy cific, is in the city on business. J. W A. G. Wells, James J. Byrne, general general manager, companied President E. P. Ripley the coast as far as Monterey, here yesterday the Palace. | day. A party !ana Stirling, and are registered at the Palace. ihe party are President O. C. Barber, General Manager W. M. Graves and General Superintendent C. M. Palmer York and F. M. Clough, Pa-| of New cific Coast manager; J. B. Robinson, chief engineer at Chico, and A. F. Jones, attorney for the company on this coast. . e Californians in New York. NEW YORK, Nov. 16.—The follow- ing Californians arrived in New York to-day: From San Francisco—Mrs. M. Frank, at the Breslin; Mrs. L. H. Grifith and Mrs. J. P. Mavers, at the Imperial; Mre. E. H. Merrill, at the ! 8t. Denis; E. C. Brau, at the Grand; M. H. Hale and 'yife, at the Astor; A. W. King, at the Murray Hill; L. W. | Knight, at the Earlington; J. Madison and wife, at the Broadway Central; H. McDermott, at the Rossmore; C. H. | Morton, at the Astor; Mrs. A. M. Sey- | mour, at the Cadillac. From Santa Rosa—Mrs. B. Thomp- | son, at the Astor. From Los Angeles—H. F. Norcross, | at the Victoria; F. A. Walker, at the Astor; Mrs. D. M. Weich, at the Mur- ray Hill IS SO Californians in Washington. WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.—The fol- lowing Californians arrived in Wash- ington to-day: At the Raleigh—Paul Dotz of San Francisco. At the New Willard—L. L. Emon of Los Angeles; Miss A, Collett, Miss Riley and Robert M. F. | Dobbs of San Francisco. INJURED DY CARELESS DRIVERS.—Os. | gocd oward of 11A d_street was kpocked down by a wuon at the corner of Taylor and Market streets yesterday afternoon. James O'Riley of 621 Sansome strest met with a wimilar mishap at Market and O Farrell streets. B were Weated at the Central Howoital Filer, a capitalist of Sait Lake ar- States oil is at the Palace. mson, a prominent lumber- at a prominent busi- is registered ap- pointed superintendent of the Sacra- mento division of the Southern Pa- Kendrick, third vice president; and passenger agent of the Santa Fe road, who ac- up arrived and are registered at President Ripley will ar- rive to-day and expects to remain in San Francisco until Saturday or Sun- of Diamond Match Com- pany officials, who have been inspect- ‘irg the company's interests at Chico arrived here yesterday In been claimed until the pupil was dis- charged or paroled. Superintendent Smith said to-day that this plan had been in vogue during his adminstra- tion and heretcfore no question had been raised by county officials in re- gard to it. “About three’ months ago,” he con- tinued, “I sent these boys to their home in Fresno on furlough, and at a meeting of the trustees a month agb I recommended their discharge from thé school. They were discharged, but for the interval between the furlough and their d sal from the school charges for the keepinx was rendered. This is the practice of the school and it is followed every month in similar cases. Immediately upon the discharge or parole of a cadet the charge against the county from which he comes for his aintenance is stopped. Our plan has been approved by the Governor, the ate Board of Examiners and the board of trustees, and in fact, is the only one practicable.” —————— Want Share in Oil Leases. Two actions to over money on oil le aggregating $12,000, were filed § perior Court yesterddy. W. P sued Oren G. Meyers and jus Fried for $333 33 and 3333.33 shares of stock in the Westmoreland- Coalinga Company, or:its value, $6666 6. - The plaintiff came into ssion of the land from C. O. Canfield, and the defendants got the lease from R. W. Heath. Kerr agreed to let them sublease provided he re- ceived one-third of “he proceeds. They sublet for one-sixth of the ofl and $1600 in cash, but Kerr says they received 10,000 shares of the com- ;..u, s stock besides. The other suit by Louis han and W. P. Kerr against Meyers and Fried for $5000, which y claim as their share in $10,000 paid for sub- lehses by the Pittsburg - Coalinga | Compan: ERSEGSESES OuN Improvements Along North Shore. The North Shore tunnel through Whites pleted. All that remains to be rading of the approaches. Trains o running through the tunnel by Decem- 5 thereabouts. This will mean a sav e of about thirty minutes between S and Lagunitas, where th Mailiard subdivided qand placed on the It will mean extensive the country along the Mrs. Crocker’s Remains Here, The remains of the Ilate George Crocker arrived from the East vesterday. They were met at the Oak- land mole by Louis Hanchette, broth- er of the deceased, who will arrange for their interment. George Crocker and his stepson, Alexander Ruther- ford, will arrive here to-day. The funeral will take place to-morrow at 10:30 a. m. from Trinity Church. In- terment will be in Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland. For the con- venience of friends of the late Mrs. | Crocker who desire to attend burial ceremony a special boat will Jeave the ferry landing on this side of the bay for Broadway, Oakland. ————————— Cleanse and renovate the vital fluld (or blood) and healthfully stimulate every bodily function with Lash’s Bitters. * the L S Want Bond Taxes Refunded. Claims were filed vesterday with the Board of Supervisors for the re- | turn of taxes alleged to have been il- legally collected for the redemption and interest of the new bond issue by John Rosenfeld’s Sons and Mandel, ! Wiener & Co. The protestants aver ' that the board had no power to levy, the tax because the bonds are not yet issued or sold. | | Co. print anything. 419 Sacramento st. | | Laundress’ Hand Caught in Mangles. | | Annie Ryan, a laundress employed | in the St. Nicholas laundry, had four fingers of her right hand fearfully | crushed while passing linen through ! a hot mangles yesterday. The wo-/ man was smoothing wrinkles out of | a piece of cloth that was going| through the machine. The lnjurlpn were treated at the Emergency Hos- pital by Dr. Pawlicki. FREE WITH SUNDAY CALL SMALL ADS. A Ten-Pound Sack of SUMMIT SNOW FLOUR, The Newest and Best F-nuly Flour on the Market, Every Detail of Manufacture Carefully Managed From “FIELD TO FAMILY.” Free With Every small Ad in Sunday Call S SallAdP for Furth ee Sm meeor er | | | FREE FREE | | l ! Mrs. | POSTERS and BANNERS.—Gabriel Printing | may benefit from the national funds; one urging legislation appropriating funds for the creation of additional forest reserves and another repeating and emphasizing the resolutions of pre- | vious congresses in favor of consolidat- | ing all Government forestry work in the Department of Agriculture. PRESIDENT'S GREETINGS. The following letter from President Roosevelt was read and aroused much enthusiasm: WASHINGTON. D. C., . 10, 1904 To the National Irrigation It is a pleasure to send my greeting to you, both as President of the United States and as a man who has lived in the West and is eager discharge, except for specific wrongdoing, | would, under the circumstances, operate with ’ great ln]ury to colored Americans, hereby pray and petition you, Theodore Roosevelt, Presi- | dent of the United States head of the army, | to intervene to the end that the discharge of | Smith may be rescinded. ? A Jubilee Mission to Open. A Jubilee Mission will be opened next Sunday in St. Mary's Cathedral at the 11 o'clock mass by the Vincen- tian missionary priests. The purpose of the mission is to give Catholics an opportunity to comply with the con- ditions of the jubilee which has been ! declared by Pope Pius X. The time L in.-¢ I e Boat for the jubilee expires by December sspe atever an for ite prosperity. Whatever o Moestion. n | 8, and the mission will last two weeks. political controversy, ‘v|e ‘m,n unite ;:- :h: | One of the conditions of the jubilee is e o o1 roveme: Joet Auty. Gk Jpter S ot of . b trery | to pay three visits to the cathedral. and every other resource of nnu‘r‘:l ireat numbers of Catholics will be origin’ contribute to the very ut-| {3 "fhe "Teérmanent prosperity of our coun: making these visits during the com- congratulate you b are o ing two weeks, and an opportunity of ing for what once . g L4 T o longer engaged In a attending the evening exercises of ¢ education for the passage °¢( 8 the mission will be extended to them. ct. On the contrary, your first i b,,’."“.. ackimved. You have yeb JThe preachers will be elogquent Vin consider what has been done and what centian priests of the East, and regu- A! & done under that act by the reclamation | |or exercises will be held morning and B e lin am 1 Biscuss the | evening. The mission will open with broad pre ¢ irrigation methods It was through your efforts and men like you | the United States, as a na- | consider means to Eive blems of and | golemn high mass next Sunday. practices that people - pr—— Hom, Unadriook o attack the desert and to do | ADVERTISEMENTS. L away with it, not only so far as there 1s | water now that purpose, but to the fallest | extend r which water may be developed | hereafter. Such an attack r;n hle dsurce:'lh{u':y only w based on accural nowledge. e facts as to stream flow had been ascertaine in many parts of the Jinited States, and the sclentific basis for & national reclamation, | se would have taken years to | was already in a large part at | REMOVAL SALE We offer some rare indocemepts in Emtly Teduced Prices accumulate, ha The fact that so much progress has | y been made in the reclamation service | is a etriking example of the advantag oci- entific jon by the general L.nv-rn.l be true that, to the man | interest is limited by immediate re- | the admirable work of the reclamation at times seems slow, but we are ding for a great future, and it Is far| more important that the works built should ! be perm nt and suce should be completed in haste. no unwise hurry: neither will ment whose there be any | \LL I\TFRFGTG JOINED. Most of (he great problems of organization and methods have now been solved, and preg- ress in construction and settiement is being made with increasing rapidity. The passage of the reciamation law was a great step to- ward realizing the best use 13 to produce water tor 1 Notiee. irrigation. But, always place, the best use of public lands is_their use by the mau who has come to st There are unfortunately in every part of our country & few men whose interests are purely temporary who are eager 10 skim the cream and go, 10 the detriment of the natural reservoir upon which national Irrigation depends to the permanent loss of every agency which makes for the true development and lasiing greatness of the fir- | rigable States. Such interests cannot be al lowed to control. Now that your first great object has been secompliched in the passage of the reclamation law you should make yourseives the guardians of the future and the unrelenting and watch- ful enemies of every attempt to waste any of the great resources in the forestry, grazing and mineral wealth, the foundation stones of the newer and greater West for frrigation and | every other interest which you represent. The period of exclusiveness is past. The stock in- lerests are no longer Independent of the mining | interests, nor elther of them independent of the | irrigator. A closer interweaving than ever be- | fore is at hand among all the great interests of | the whole country. One cannot prosper with- | out the other. So the Jfuture growth and | Kreatness of the other Western Interests de- tend, in the first dezree, upon the development of irrigation, and the deveiopment-of frriga- tion will depend upon the protection and wise use of the existing forests and the creation of new ones, and the proper control of the graz- | ing. Your work for the good of one interest is for the good of all. THEODORE ROOSEVELT. | Senator Newlands of Nevada and | Governor Pardee of California are the most talked of men for the next presi- | dent of the congress. and in every Upstairs, - Rooms 7-11, Det, Kearny aad Grant ave, our 6w quar- 1615 10 be angounsed later. e | MILTON JACOBI PROVES | A BRILLIANT SOLOIST | Interprets the Masters and Wins the | Plaudits and Admiration of His Audience, Milton Jacobi, a pupil of Hugo Mans- feldt, gave a public pigao recital Tues. day night at Steinway Hall and sur- | prised even his most ardent admirers, | who have heard the youthful genius in ' | private. | You can make Ina moment bracing beef tea with water heated on an nlcohol lamp, and a | In masterful manner, with conception | Get the jar | of the great composers truly remark- with this {able and with the ease of a veteran, signature in he interpreted Schubert as Schubert’s blue: loyal subjects would have him inter- ]prel«d and rattled off picturesque | | dainties of that great man Dvorak ; until the audience demanded more and | more of it. | Banguet to George Webster. | Geot:e ‘Webster, l;tuge director at the Cehtral Theater, was the guest of ‘ honor at a banquet given last evening m honor of his twenty-five years of | | theatrical life. Mr. Webster began | | his career under the tutelage of the | noted actor, W. E. Sheridan, at the | ,Budwln Theater in the production of | “King Louis XL” At that time Web- ster was playing a small part in the i production, and ene of the actors who | was scheduled to interpret the role ! ot the drunken Scotchman was taken | ' suddenly ill. Sheridan called Web- { | ster to one side and gave him the | | part. After the performance Sheri-| | @an praised Webster in the following | manner: “Fine performance young tman' but he was too drunk.” In the same cast were Laura Donn, Joe Gris- mer, Theodore Roberts and Annie Adems. the mother of Maud Adams. i CUTLERY EVERY BLADE WARRANTED “m-msn Largest, : D N iS:&::: \: ALWAY.S RELIABLE ‘ West., | P MARKET = JONES 6739 i ’: ;_‘ lLsEvu-L\Ts. 3 7' AMUSEMENTS. ¢ CALIFORNIAq COLUMBIA 0% ....THIS WEEK ONLY.... The Big Laugh Maker. Funniest of All Farces. A Friend : of the Family LAST FOUR NIGHTS E SATURDAY. r his party Is Ik e chills and ents George Ade's Drama, 5 i G[{um_{ CHAIRMAN MAXINE ELLIOTT the Clyde Fitch Comedy, HER OWN WAY SEATS NOW READY. $2, §1 50, $1. 730, S0e 2l Matinee Thanksgiving Day. ‘lE‘e Runaways Musical The Great 1 Week of the Musical Comedy Triumph T Messenger Boy EEEERAKING D(lllfl || Be s,- isl Thanksgiving Mat. MESSENGER BOY Usual Tivoll Prices—28c, 50¢, T8c. ts always selling. Reg. mat. Saturday. SPECIAL- SUNDAY APTERNOON, NOV. 20th MME. FANNIE Graat Opers. Prices—25c, 50, T8, $1. SELLING. SEATS ALCAZAR =i B. D. Price, General Manager, TO-NIGET—ALL THIS WEEK. “Compares with New York cast. A Big Ranner Bill Mr. and Mrs. Mark Murphy; Oarlisle’s | Dogs and Ponies; Augusta Glose., and the Three Ramoniers. Last Times of the Twelve Navajo Giris; Canfleld and Carleton; Wee Jeanie Fletcher and | JOHN T. XKELLY AND COMPANY. Kegular Matinees Every Wednesday, Thurs- | . .Compares with New p.mm“‘f?""‘“au“ Saturday aad Sunday. F —10¢, 25¢ “'Played it as artists should.”"—Examiner. 5 ;- Clyde Fitch's Powerful Play, - AND asezz | The Climbers GR HOUSE | Evgs, 25c to 75¢. Mats. Sat. & Sun., 250 te 50 Thanksgiving week, NEXT MONDAY-—Firs§ San Franctsco Production THE VILLAGE POSTMASTER. | The Best of Rustic Comedies—300 Nights 1 | New York, Five Years in the East. GENTRAL=E2 Market Street, Near Eighth...Phone South 583 TO-NIGHT—ALL THIS WEEX. Tremerdons Production of the Best of AN Dramas. Winchester Sterling Story of Love and War. Excitiog Scenic Effects! Hilarious Comedy? LAST ,THREE NIGHTS. MATINEE SATURDAY. The International Success The FATAL WEDDING. NEXT SUNDAY MATINEE Tee Show Girl THE BEST OF ALL GIRL SHOWS. | MATINEE THANKSGIVING DAY. Moy FiNEST eT ST e Laggw (Absclutely Fireproof.) BISHOP, Lessee and Manager. THE GREATEST Tn "Is“]‘ PLAY YET Oliver Morosco Offers HOWARD GOULD—J. H. GILMOUR Anrl me Majestic Theater Company in That Intensely Emotional Drama, Hearts Aflame appearance of ADELE Bbocx. ATINEE. ... kB b PRICES—Eve, 10c to S0c; Mats. 100, 18c, 280, ton Here of the Stupendous Melodrama FQUEEN THE WHITE SLAVES."™ 1 st s S S e R san i o e 25C | mign-Class Specialties Every Afternces and Evening in the Theater, ——TO-NIGHT— GALA AMATEUR PERFORMANCE Concluding With—— NEW LIVING PICTURES. DON'T FAIL TO SEE THE JOHNSTOWN FLOOD The Reighing Sensation of Coney Isiand and the World's Fair. - DA AMING OF HELBNY o Lo | TAKE AN AFTERNOON OFF | Or Come To-Night and See the | enAnnn VAUDEVILLE PERFORM- i % mc:w | A NEVER TO BE FORGOTTEN sPEcTAa.lL | ADMISSION. ......10c | CHILDREN...... 10c and 20c—No Higher. When Phoning Ask for The Chu Ten New EEADLINERS Every Week. | MISCELLANEOUS AMUSEMENTS. Grand Prize Carnival Ball! SAN FRANCISCO AERIE No. & EAGLES { SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 19, 1904 CHILDREN 10 CENTS AT ALL TIMES And to any part of the theater. Only Original Eurcpean Moving Pictures. facime! New Califonia Club | OAKLAND TRACK. | | Prizes will be awarded for mw 1 best sustained character and tumes. lickey BASEBALL. |SAN FRANCISCO vs. PORTLAND AT RECREATION PARK. Eighth and Harrison sts. Commencing SATURDAY. November 12 Racing every week day. rain or shine. Races start at 2:13 p. m. sharp, ‘ For special trains stopping at the track take 5, ¥ Ferry. foot of Marked street, at 12:00, 18:30, 1:00," 1:30 of #:00. Returdiing traine | ieave the frack at 4:10 and 4:45 p. m. and immediately after the last Face THOMAS H. WILLIAMS, President. PERCY W. TREAT. Secretary, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. 5 Stockton st. LADIES FREE Adyanee sale of jeats at - Fegkly Cal $1 00 nerTo

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