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. THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1903 PARTMENTS STATE NEEDS ——— Police and Fire Commission- Declare What They Will Require in Budget| ASKS MORE PATROLMEN { f Dinan Wishes Provi- 1 to Be Made for 200 Members of Force Fire mmissioners and the Po. d before the F the Board of Su- statements of ‘the needed by € coming fiscal year. ent wants $1,034,310 erday their Police I ent $941,680. al ovements were nissiops, Chief ceneus en- t to 200 more captains and tion, as provided The Fire Commis- re engines o the < . ot . C mittee agreed with t s s that new en- & s 4 to replace the T st syon Main street * stre former, Super- A lared, abso- two new-engines for the House other for Pa- partmen he as- have 10,000 1 4000 feet avall- en doing du point that ¥ en's p as d ed she two more )epartment year's by Commis- these appoint- Chief Wittman tment were large appointments v presenting m, asked the budget enough to £ association fornia and Dupont '$35 600 $4000; cap- 160 $14,400 t | Missi , $1800; e asked: 860; 2 ca e ains, €eants. ser- nter, 1ting on, sup- et Pphotograph al and wood, $1000; repairs to ns, $5030; police contingent fund, San Fran- d, $1080. w, $300 Gate' Park, San Fran- 5 to eccommodate $25,000; ice stat 3 fons—South th Ocean Golden —————— COURT MUST DETERMINE WHO SHALL STAND EXPENSE Violation of Fire Ordinance Gives Rise to a Unigue Question of Law. me months ago the s granted Contractor Board of P. Ander- son a it to cover an alleyway etween f recently constructed by D. Abrams at Broadway and Franklin street. The work of/ covering the leyway was just completed when the police came along, observed that the was erected in violation of ordinance and took Abrams custody. His astonishment was ater than that of the contractor, lly was compelled to remove the g Then, a8 he had not bepefited from emporary improvements, Abrams refused to pay Anderson $569 he asked for the work, saying that Anderson ehould have first been sure that plans were in keeping with all build- g laws. The question as to where loss shall fall was submitted to Judge Graham yesterday for decision. Pl <o~ the Captain Timm Discharged. l' | Worshipers to . wn Ancient Gather To-day Sanctuary. 'FLORAL TREASURES FOR THE ALTAR, — BY LAURA BRIDE POWERS. | San Francisco does love 1ts old Mis- i slon, after all. It € up yesterday and proclaimed it aloud, and with its declarations of love are wiped out - many years of apathy and neglect. To-day the doors of the old sanctuary will be flung open, and the blessed eucharist wili be borne in reverence to the altar, the same old altar reared by Indian hands in the long ago. Here will it rest through the day, en- ned in a bower of blossoms, and as of old, the worshipers will come to| kneel before the beautiful shrine, even | as did the neophytes in the days of | F isco Palou, the founder. | | Among the worshipers will come de- scendants of the Noes, the Bernals, the Valencias and the Ruffinos—they who days before the gringo came lands for leagues about the But ail is lost now—even > Tino adobe goes down before he Juggernaut of Progress. All is lost now of the old days, the days when the land was young, and greed and haste and envy knew no place—all save the old mission and its | memories. To-day the old s coincide ates, visit hundreds of people will visit tuary, whose founding is th the birth of the United ing the day of prayer for ecause its doors will be | the . swung wide open to-day, and all who | will may enter. That San Franciscans are awake to | the value, esthetic, religious and ethi- ai, of the old mission—and that they ieve its doors should be open each people is shown by the fol- | cerpts from interviews: CHARLES WARREN STODDARD- not open to the people? Why, the pathetic and patient mother of thank ng b all through its San Francisco has grown t: ttle shrine, sacred to RADER—As a citizen of am naturally interested in res, and should be glad to he publie. Unquestionably ft { historical structure in the city fess that 1 have never been within church; having tried once and failing, I er tried again. { tourists from other parts of the world ame here. Catholic and Protestant alike, I think, heve the priviiege of looking ssion im which San Francisco her Brennan | 4 ears is, of | se, quite natural sary, but I am | he will lend his lon to the Lana- | marks League in their endeavor to provide a | retaker to look after the mission, on the one hand, and the people on ihe other. FEANK J AN—I read your story | in The Call | the f b 014 manctuary is | r bellevé that Father ugves to open. the d.ml | i ch when assurances are | fund was given essentially | of making the missions avallable as a means CHARLES SEPGBWICH AIKEN—Mission Dolores s the only historic structure in Sen Francisco—holding & story of romance and his- tory that is of thrilling interest, not only to us Californians, but to every tourist that comes to our eity. Therefore I think some plan should be adopted whereby the church may be open— under proper supervision, of course. As proof of the popularity of the old mis- elons when the Sunset Magasine les a Miseion story hetween its covers the demand for the ue 1s doubled. JOHN-J. LERMEN—With the rapid growth of our city the value of land has increased so that the old has, of necessity, given way to the new; sentiment hes been almost lost, and to-day there are left in our city but few landmarks of any historic value. In time even these will pass away—all except one— old Misslon Dolores. It is and wili be the one connecting link between the past and present, a reminder te the visitor that San Francisco was buflded on the rock of Chris- tlanity and nurtured in the cradle of sentiment and romance. Boston has its old South Church, New York its Trint nd San cisco should ever have its Misal Dolores. By all means keep the church open. Keep its doors open and let the visitor ever be welcome. HELP FATHER BRENNAN. But by all means help Father Brennan, its pastor. to do this—good Father Brennan, whom 1 have known since childhood, and who I kuow will gladly co-operate with us of the Landmark League if we can make it possible for him to do so. And when all our old landmarks shall have passed away there will then be left to us one monument of a time end*a life we shall never see again. Like the roses in its churchyard, Mission Dolores will, ‘as it were, give forth a perfume rem- iniscent of the purity and simplicity of its founders and sweet with the memories of an unseifishness whose object was the saving of_souls rather_than the making of dollars. RUFUS P. JENNINGS—I have heard the lament of thousands of tourists who have vis- ited every mission in the State and on going out to Mission Dolores were denied admission. This matter, however, can be easily adjusted =0 the people who are really interested can enter the old sanctuary at will FRANK H. POWERS—Eveh since the de- ocision of The Hague tribunal that the Pious | fund should be paid to the church, I have felt | certain that the broad-mindedness of the Arch— | bishop and bishops having In charge the fund would do everything possible toward carry ing out the original {dea at the time of t creation of the Pious fund; that is, to mal GREIF'S OFFICE Grand Jury Is to Have the Books of County Clerk Examined by an Expert ANDREWS THREATENED Told Publications Will Be TLaunched to Assail "Him. Pretty Woman Asks Loan A committee from the Grand Jury will investigate the CountyClerk's office to-day. The jurors will take an ex- pert with them and a rigid examina- tiowr of the books will be made. Numerous attempts are being made | to intimidate Andrews. Some of the _ tricks resorted to are novel, to say the | least. Some seem purpgseless. A few | days ago a young woman, petite and pretty, went to the office of the Grand Jury. She was in trouble, she sald, and understood that Mr. Andrews sometimes made loans. Would he lend her some money on her jewels? She was told that Andrews was not in the loan husiness and left, after shedding a few teang of disappointment, A Grand Jury detective followed her and found that she had been sent by some one who was interested in trapping the arch enemy of graft. Andrews was given to understand lately that if he did not “‘quit” a paper would be got out for the purpose of “Knocking” him. | asked about this and other alleged | threats. “Yes,” he admitted, ‘“‘at- | tempts have been made to intimidate { me. Some of them were rather inge- | nious. But nothing can .call me off from the work I have started to do.” Three grand jurors, Andrews, Speck | and Bryan, visited the Broadway jail | yesterday in company with Dr. Rot- | tanzi. They pronounced the old struc- | ture outrageously unsanitary. “It is | unfit for human habitation—the place lis reeking with filth,” declared the | foreman. The Grand Jury will rec- | ommend that the jail be condemned. | The same committee visited branch { county jails 1 and 2 and the Magda- |lene Asylum. All of these places were found to be in a sanitary condition. the missions available to the general publ STt The strength of Mr. McEnerney's argument | PERSONAL, hecore The Hague tribunal was that this Plous | R of bringing the people living near the mi: sions to the Catholic faith, and that theref it was inequitable for the Mexican Gover ment to use the money for any other purpose. Therefore 1 feel that the opening of the Mis— sion Dolores as & meens of creating public i terest in the missions’ work is the first prao. tical step toward renewing Interest in the o jects of those benevolent Spantards who created the s fund. These missions are to us what the ancient ruins are to Greece, the Pyramids to Bgypt {and the cathedrals to Italy. Thus is it seen that San Franciscans do love their old Mission—that they love it for its memories and for the things that it stands for. To-day, through the kindly offices of Mrs, Henry P. Gleeson and a corps of friends, the old church wiil be beautiful to look upon, the conservatory of the Golden Gate Park having been levied upon for its treasures. Among its visitors to-day will be Charles Warren Stoddard, the famous | writer and deep lover of the missions, whom I shall have the honor of ac- companying into the church of his childhood. What memories it will awaken, after fifty years of absence! o' CHOIRS PREPA : FOR EASTER SUNDA@Y RE % Beautiful Sacred Numb Activity relgns in the choir lofts and practicing-yooms of the churches of the city, the preparation for the great Eas- ter Sunday services taking up most of the daily and evening hours of organ- ists and singers, Beautiful works of the genius and inspired composers are once more un- der diligent study, that their soulful in- terpretation may bring to the wor- shipers a full realization of the import of the day of joy. There will be soloists of the highest repute, choirs of numerical strength and finish, and all the fervor of the chojrmaster and organist will be pres- | ent in the direction. | The Call, following its usual custom, will publish the programmes, some of ! the first to be received being as fol- lows: st tor, m Paul's Church, Rev. W. M. Relll, California street, near Fillmore; celebration of holy communicn; 11 m., rming prayer with secend celebration of holy communion; processional hymn 110 ¢ Fuithful, Raise the Strain” (Sulltvan); sponses, Tallis Festival; Easter psalm, **‘Christ, Our Passover’ (Elvey); proper psalms, 2, b7, 1111; “Gloria Patrl,”” grand chant (Humphrey); ““Te Deum’ in F (Schilling); *‘Jubtlate Deo” in ¥ (Taylor): introit hymn 12 “Kyrle,” “Gloria Tibi,”" “‘Sursum Cords,” ‘‘Sanctus,” in E flat (Woodward); hymn 112; offertory an. them, ““They Have Taken Away My Lord’ (Stainer); communion hymn 284 (Sulllvan); “Gloria In Exocelsis”” (old chant); ‘Nunc Dimittis” in E flat (Freemantie); “Sevenfold | Amen” (Stainer); recessional 114, ““Chrigt, the Lord is Risen” (German). Evening, 17:45 o clock—Prooessional hymn 110, “Come Ye Faithful, Raise the Strain' festival responses (Tallis); proper ; “Gloria_Patrl,” grand ; ‘“‘Cantate Domino" in A major (Bridgewater); ‘‘Deus Misereatur’” in | A meajor (Bridgewater); vesper hyma; carol, ““The World Itself Keeps Easter Day'’'; hymn 112; cantata, *‘Vietory” (Dr. H. J. Stewart); hymn 116; offertory anthem, ‘‘Christ Being | Raiged’”” (Elvey); benediction hymn 7 (Barn- Ly): “‘Sevemfold Amen’ (Stainer); reces- sional hymn 114, “‘Christ, the Lord, Is Risen’ Sullivan); paaime. i3, 114, 118 Captain Harry Timm, master of the | (German), The music will be rendered by the an b fagdal®ne, was dis- | quartet and chorus cholr; Wray Taylor, or- D Lay o ‘ s dis- | et and cholrmaster. charged from custody yesterday by |"'Grace Church, Californis street, corner 1 States Commissioner Heacock | Stockton, Rev. David J. Bvans, rector. Cele- rge of having permitted | bration of Holy Communion, 8 a m. Musio n members of his crew to | by choir of ladies; morning service with second severs cscape ashore. The dismissal was on | Sp'°bpation: 11 o'clook: musle by, M'&"{g’,; the same grounds as that of Captain | Holy Baster uin” Schutte of the Professor Koch, | and “Jubliate, Iy that the Government had fail- | “Eyrie” and . show that the accused intended }’;;I“l‘l_‘ Y. | ennelle '(Gounod);' *'Gloris s seamen should escape. in G (Dr. Banett). Eunday 7 e 1o Gre. hedral service, 7: p. m., psalter .- e \fagnificat. and Numc Dimittis,” GRAPE-NUTS. Your Hotel will serve Welsh P‘;‘-bfl.flu Church, Fourteenth strect near Valencia, Rev. John Rhys Evans, pastor, will preach in the morning in Welsh. |7 The following musical me with ref- | erence to the festival will be rendered in the | vening by & full chcrus: Easter anthem, | @= ULS J immanks be o Gos” (Sudan); carol, “0 Won- | derful Easter Morning” (Deane! anthem, 5 “Consider the Lilles’ (Exoell); quartet, “'O, Calvary”* ered! ““The True ghty Vietor” i you ask. Order the fcod served dry and with cream to pour over it, ctor, Richard J.' Hughes. CoTnehorr Is. com or" Soprancs—aiss Gwen Willinms, Miss Anna Owene, Miss Flor- ence’Davies, Miss Raymie Thomas, Miss Eliz. ebeth Hughes, Mrs. ral- ers to Be Sung Hughes, Dyved Evans. Bassos—Dr. Eilis Jones, Gwilyn Ll. Evans, H. J. Llovd, Rich- ard Williams, F. Russell, Robt. Davies. HOLY WEEK IS BEING DEVOUTLY OBSERVED Good Friday Services at Many of the Churches, Where Choirs Will Render Sacred Music. Low masses were sung at St. Mary's Cathedral yesterday. At 6 o'clock in the morning Archbishop Montgomery sang the mass, at 7 o'clock the Very Rev. Father Prendergast, vicar gen- | eral, officlated and the Rev. Father 9 Jerome o’clock. Hannigan officiated at There will be a solemn se: vice ‘at St. Mary's at 10 o’clock this morning. At the Cathedral Mission of the Good maritan, Second and Folsom streets, a vested choir of forty voices will render Stainer’s “Crucifixion” at 8 "o’clock Good Friday evening under the direction of Willlam H. Holt, or- ganist of Grace Church, Other services Good Friday will be as follows: Th torio “‘Calvary,” by Spohr, ver, tn Trinity Church, Bush street. ‘coratr of ough, by the full cholf, at 8 o'clock at night. Solofsts—Miss Millia ' Frynn, Mrs Helen Warshauer, Miss Una Fairweather, Chester Rosekrans, Robert C. H';'v'i'fi}y' Peter J. Oksen, ur W. Morgenstern, am Wright; Louls H. Eaton, and director of th'-h 3 The quartet and cholr of St. Paul's Churoh, California and render gelections from ‘The crgu;nu,"mfi, as Stainer, and the "Pudoa.:l::\:‘h- o mn. ‘well as soveral chorals, 3 An interdenominational oo of the women 9€ the churches will be held in Calvary Presby- erfan Church from 2 until 4 p. m. There will be a solemn morning ser- | vice at 11 o’'clock at the First lish Lutheran Church, Geary between Gough and Octavia, Dr. E. H. Hadlock pastor. Beautiful anthems will be sung. —_———— HOUSESWIVES MAY LOOK FOR THEIR FULL-WEIGHT BUTTER Dealers Have Adopted Resol ‘Which Places Them in Accord ‘With New Aect. The wholesale butter dealers of San Francisco. have passed a resolution agreeing to adopt and encourage the use of standard size packages or squares of butter in accordance with the law which was passed b Legislature, gl The resolution sets forth that the dealers will do all in their power to compel the enforcement of the law and will notify the proper authorities of any discrepancies in the weight of Putter packages coming within the aw. It was resolved that a standard one- pound square of butter shall be of the dimensions of 1%x3 inches and of length sufficient to contain one pound. Coples of the resolutions are to be sent to the Humboldt County Cream- ery Exchange, the Creamery Oper- ;mru' Exchx:so a:;: t:u creamery and airy men throughou the coast who market their butter in San Mco. inviting co-operation in accomplishing the objects of the law, £ for the purpose | | Is at the Grand. S. D. Bridge of Monterey, Mexico, | s at the Palace. | Willlam T. Kirkpatrick of Mont., is at the Palace. | W. A. Gett and wife of Marysville are staying at the Lick. | Henry G. Turner, an attorney of | Modesto, is at the Ocecldental. | . T. B. Rickey, one of Carson’s capital- | ists, is registered at the Palace, | David Treacy, a well-known resident of New York, is at the Palace. Lieutenant R. C. Moody, who is at- tached to the cruiser Chicago, arrived | at the St. Francls yesterday. Mr. Charles Keilus of the Hub leaves ‘ for the East this morning on a busi- ness trip, to be gone filve or six weeks. Newton, Mass., is represented at the | Palace by H. A. Wilder, Miss F. Wilder, Mr. and Mrs. J. Howard Nich- ols and Miss Nichols. . Butte, Mrs. Robert Nixon, wife of the well- known editor of the Yreka Journal, and her two youngest daughters, are visiting San Franelsco. | | | | | 1 Chris Jorgensen, the well-known scenic artist, and wife have arrived ‘!rom Yosemite Valley and are stay- ing at the St. Francis. 1 W. D. Cameron of New York and L. J. Stevenson of Grand Rapids, who are interested in mining in the West, arrived ‘at the Palace yesterday. J. T. Marchand of Washington, at- | torney for the Interstate Commerce ‘Commlulon, arrived here yesterday | and 1s registered at the Palace. He is | on his way to Los Angeles on matters connected with the commission. Among yesterday’s arrivals from Central America were P. Escalon, son of the President of Salvador; Is- | mael G. Fuentes, private secretary of | the Secretary of War of Salvador, and | Alfonse Moline, & wealthy resident of the same republic. They are here on a pleasure trip and are staying at the Palace. O Californians in New York. NEW YORK, April 19.—The fol- | lowing Californians have arrived in New York: From San Francisco—L, Smith, at the Holland; C. M. Bates and L. J. Pennett, at the Gerard; P. R. Cornish and wife, at the Murray Hill; M. | Grau, at the Bristol; A. J. Sarrell, at {the Breslin; F. E. Southern and L. Tannahill, at the Albert; N. L. Walk- er, at the Grand; Miss Muller, at the Belvidere; E. T. Nichols, at the Astor; Miss B, Stevens, at the Cumberland; C. Zwirlein and wife, at the Navarre. From Santa Barbara—A. Thomas and wife, at the Plaza, From San gun—n. B. Atwood, at { the Grand Union. From Los Angeles—H. Jevne and | wife and Miss V. Jevne, at the Astor; | T. Holland, at the Broadway Central. —_—— Divorce Court Kept Busy. Decrees of divorce on the ground of desertion were granted erday to George Green from Margaret Green, | Edith A. Wollweber from Walter L. ‘Wollweber, Jefferson O. Brooks from Ada M. Brooks, Charles Horn from Anna Horn, Martha Edelstain from F Hdelstain and Emma L. Ford- ing from H. L. Fording. Suits for di- ! vorce were filed by John J. Stewart | against Gertrude Ruth Stewart for de- | sertion, Cruz Sanches Osgood against | John Osgood for desertion, Grace T. Leach against Balley Kay Leach for | failure to provide, Florence I. Dalton :fn.uut Louis S. Dalton for desertion. | Mrs, Dalton alleges that she married ! Dalton at Martinez on December 23, 11908, and that on the day following | he left her. Martha T. Yeazell has ! sued Edward T. Yeazell for mainte- 'nance. She says he deserted her, or rather, drove her from their home on the 13th inst. and has since refused | to -:gport her. She asks for $50 a . month. i —_—— Connelly Is Discharged. Judge Hebbard ordered a writ of habeas corpus issued in | favor of Frank Connelly, releasing him from custody on a charge of lar- ! ceny prefe; against him by Louis | Broyer. ‘oyer claimed that while he was intoxicated Connelly stole a watch from him. The evidence taken before ! Judge Fritz, however, failed to estab- 1 lish the w and Connelly, to pre- 1 vent a possibilif swer, applied for a writ of habeas corpus. After reading over the evi- dence taken in the case, Judge Heb- bard ordered that the writ issue. RSk that T Wi i WANTS ROADWAY .—The Univer- He smiled when | H. B. Gillis, an attorney of Yreka, | DOORS OF DOLORES|WILL INSPECT |DEATH THREAT TO SWING OPEN STOPS SUICIDE Robert Young Loses His De- sire to Dic When Spe- cial’s Pistol Covers Him FIGHT IN LUMBER PILE Watchman Fired Upon by Man Who Wishes to Blow Out His Brains in Peace _— “Stop killing yourself, or I'll shoot you.” That threat made Robert Young .abandon an attempt on his own life yesterday. Young was holding a pistol to his head and was about to pull the trigger when Special Policeman H. M. Stone leveled a revolver at him and or- dered him 'to throw up his hands. Young dropped his pistol and surren- | dered. “I wanted to commit sulcide in peace,” he explained at the City Pris- on. “I didn’'t want to get killed at the same time by any one else, so I surren- dered.” Before Young made the attempi at suiclde he and the special had a short battle In the lumber yard of the Simp- | son Lumber Company, at the foot of | Powell street. Stone was going his rounds when his dog started after some one hidden in the lumber, Stone started after the stranger, when a bullet whizzed by his ear. The plucky watch- man, undaunted, kept after the fellow, The dog got a half-Nelson on the man’s trousers and would not let go. Stone | came upon the man behind ‘a pile of timber. The fellow raised his pistol to his head just as Stone came in sight *‘Quit killing yourself,” ordered Stone sharply, and Young Iimmediately dropped his pistol. -Stone placed him under arrest and he was taken to the City Prison, where he was charged with discharging firearms within the city limits, The stranger refused to give any account of himself. The lumber pile is the one that the police searched a few days ago for Torturici. “I wouldn’t have shot if he hadn't tried to stop me from committing sui- cide,” declared Young. “Can’t a man shoot himself without being shot by some one else?” —_————— ISLAM TEMPLE SHRINERS INITIATE A LARGE OLASS One Hundred and Five Victims Travel Over the Hot Sands to Un- ravel Mysteries. Islam Templs, Anclent Arabic Or- der of Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, 105 innocent victims over the hot sands for the purpose of imparting to them the Oriental mysteries that can only be ascertained by “holding on to the rope.” The actlve work was per- formed by the Arab Patrol, attired for the first time in khaki uniforms. The ceremonial session was at- tended by 1100 nobles, who, after the work of the night, joined the newly | initiated members at a banquet, which { was inagurated with mineral- water and terminated with a liberal supply of “zem zem,” which in the temple is recognized as the.water of life. ADVERTISEMENTS. Thousands of Women ARE MADE WELL AND STRONG Really Does Make Sick Women Well thousands of Ameri- ean women have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- ble Compound. Their letters are on file in Mrs. Pinkham’s office, and prove this statement to be a fact and not a mere boast. | Overshadowing indeed is the success }of this great medicine, and compared with it all other medicines and treat- ment for women are experiments. Why has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound accomplished its wide-~ spread results for goed ? has it lived and thrived and done 1ts glorious work for a quarter of & century ? Simply and surely because of its ster~ ling worth. The reason no other med- Icine has even approached its success Is plainly and positively because there Is no other medicine in the world so good for women's ills. The wonderful power of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound over the diseases of womankind is not be- cause it is astimulant—not because it is a palliative, but simply because it is the most wonderful tonic and recon- structor ever d‘i;eoverem m;od d!reofi ':lly upon the uterine system, cuRING disease and displacements ux restoring health and vigor. Marve! outhl:nm are ;e 5 all parts of the coun ‘women who have been cured, tr"?\n nurses who have witnessed cures, and physicians who have recognized the virtue in Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound, and are fair emough hufl;: credit where it is due. If physi dared to be frank and , hundreds of them would acknow! that they constantly prescribe Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vi ble Compound in severe cases of ei%‘mfla ills, as they know by ax&erlenea that it will effect a cure. ‘omen who are troubled with painful menstruation, backache, Thousands u; was In its glory last night, for it took | Sucoess of Lydla E. Pinkham’s Vegetable | Compound Rests Upen the Faot that it | ADVERTISEMENTS. For More Than Fifty Years the SINGER has been recognized as maintaining the Highest Standard of Excellence now sold at quality considered, than By this Sign you may know and will find Singer Stores Everywhere A small payment- | SAN FRANCISCO : ALAMEDA—13a1 Park St. BERKELEY—z014 Shattuck St. 1580 Market Street. 210 Stockton Street. among Family Sewing-Machines and is lower prices any other. Whether you propose the purchase of a machine or not there is much to interest most women at any Singer Store— and all are cordially invited. ‘down, the rest at convenient intervals. Four different Kinds and a wide range of prices to suit. Sold only by Singer Sewing Machine Company 1818 Devisadero Street. 1217 Stockton Street. OAKLAND—js10 Thirteenth St SAN JOSE—38 So. Second St 'R F. N. INNES, Director. SEASON BOOXS—§10.00, $7.50, $5.00 Mechanics’ April 30 General Sale, Same Place, April 24. =TO-DAY= When You Get Your On Coupen Books and Advance Tickets for MAY FESTIVALS AT SHERMAN, CLAY & CO.'S. - SINGLE SHATS—$1.00 and TSe Pavilion to May Belasco & Mayer, Propristors. E. D. Price, anager. ALCAZAR™ TO-NIGHT—MATS. SAT. AND SUN, Merely Laughter—That’s All! FROM MEXIC Evgs., 25c to TS¢. Mats., Sat., Sun., 25c to 80a. NEXT MONDAY—The Ideal Romance, WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER. Founded Upon the Favorite Novel by Charles Major and Played by Julia Marlowe. ‘This Theater Does Not Advertise in the Evening Bulletin. GENTRAL=Z: MAYER PROPS Market st., near Eighth. Phone South §33. TO-NIGHT—ALL THI . S WEBK. ATS. SATURDAY AND SUNDATY. Side Splitting Farce Comedy, The Corner Grocery Prices—Bvgs., 10c to 50o. Mats., 100, 180, 20 April 24, Irish Festival -ROBERT EMMET. This Theater Does Not Advertise In the Evening Bulletin. ¢ CALIFORNIA Edward Ackerman, Lesses & Manager. Supported FRANK X,n the Pz:'rhll ‘Modern Drama, THE CROSSWAYS Manners, author of Langtry. As played by Mrs, Langtry last season in Lon- don and New York. - Next Mon.—Miss Anglin's test play "THD BIERNAL FEMINTVE. Seats Now on Sale. This Theater does not advertise in the Evening Bulletin. 14 This Theater Does Not Advertise in the COLUMBIA 225 OPERA VIRGINA CATHTN RAMONA Popular Prices—25e, 50c, 78e. OPENING OF THE UMMER SEASON NEXT SUNDAY MATINES (o) Florence STONE And The Ferris Company ==GRAUSTARK SUMMER PRICES—13c, 350, 50e. Bargain Matinees Wed., Sat. and Sun. BEST SEATS 2e. SDATS READY THIS MORNING. This Theater Does Not Advertise in the Evening Bulletin. ONLY MATINEEH SATURDAY. BETTER THAN THE Ball and Stbarcs Famous Meskal Comedn FLORODORA By arrangement with Fisher and Ryley. SPLENDID PRODUCTION — Excellent Cast. See the California Beauty Sexte First Time at Popular Prices, 25¢. 50¢, 75¢ This Theater Does Not Advertise in the Evening Bulletin. FAT GIRLS’ 3-LEGGED RACE. ORIGINAL COMPOSITIONS —BY— MAURICE LEON DRIVER STEINWAY HALL, MONDAY APRIL M by =X TR of being held to an- | g{nlfing (or flatulence), leucorrheea, falling, inflammation or ulceration of the uterus, ovarian troubles, that ;;b!:flngdwn" taelin:r. dizziness, tness, indigestion, nervous pros- tration, or the blues, should take im- consequences an res' healf and ttrsl%'h‘: h:n‘ Ly!dl‘h E. Pink- ham's Ve, Compoun Yy write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice. It's free and always STUDDIFORD RED FEATHER PRICES, $1.50, $1, TG, B0c, 0o May 1st—SOTHERN AND MARLOWE. This Theater Does Not Advertise in the —n oisco (s 1n any oiher By | LIEBIG : COMPANY’S EXTRACT OF BEEF - | NERKLY CALL 8 PER TRAR