The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 16, 1906, Page 9

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 16. 1906. JAPANESE ART WORK PRAISED BY CRITICS » +1 The first exhibition of Japanese art under the ausp.ces of the Japan | S £ Society of America, of which President Roosevelt is 2 member, was | held last night at Mark H(pL'r& Institute. A reception by the members | of ety was given in conjunction with the exhibition. ! i i 2 -+ Smart Receptxon at Opemng of the Exhibition <> \1 P } II 'l SORS RESCIND SPUR TRACK PERMIT Street Committee Directs the Works Board to Tear Up Rails Ilegally Laid. SEQUOIA CLUB CELEBRATES ST. VALENTINE'S NIGHT and Delightful F amme of Voeal lnurumr-flnl Music Js Feature of the Entertainment repaving of | veral contracts | deemed good Compan , from Twenty 4 POSTUM CEREAL. UNDER WHICH KIN “The More Postum the More Food—the More Coffee the More Poison.” adopted res walk and street work on Bryant, Harri- n. -fourth hth avenue, and the grad-| cth street from Kentucky Mechanics’ Benefit. for the big charity fund of San Theatrical Mechanics' e at the Alhambra this afternoon. The curtain will go ute on the first part of ogramme to follow e contributed by theater in the city. Among the novei- will be & burlesque boxing match between James Edward Britt and Sem Berger and Jefereed by Count Magri. the dimunitive hus- band of Mrs. Tom Thumb. T. M. A o chesira of twenty pieces, under the direction of Genaro Saldierna and G. Callihan, will fur- Dish the music for the occasion and & crowded Touse is expected. Mayor Schmitz will deliver the sédress of weloome. Benefit for Injured Fireman. Stationary Firemen's Union No. 86 will give & benefit st the Chutes on Tuesfzy, February 26, for Robert Smith, a member of the union who was recently infured. atiractions st the tavorits pleasure resort, uding & tug-of- Prizs will be sivén to ]u:e Drettsest baby by Firl boy under three Mayor Schmitz pmmuu to deliver an | 326ion on the vecasion, Theatrical 1 in readiness of the more coffee. Food Coffee, and made | 4 the required time. ad the little book, The ille, that comes in every Postum has no stronger ad- my husband! He tells our ow to make it, apd that he got the winter without a spell of has not had a headache he used to be subject to vous headaches. r you drink Postum the . get; the stronger you offee the more poison you get g on by Postum Co. Battle b . ends h reugh grip znd months—] n ! {1 | a to Pacific, | of two | street on | CHINESE SHow -~ NUCH LOVALTY iExhibit a Strong Devotion to the Christian Religion and Missionary Work IN PROGRESS {Lee Sing Establishes a College and a Stanford .| BELIEVES o B e The fourth annual meeting of the nese Methodist Episcopal Mission- ety opened yesterday at the nese Methodist Episcopal ton street. Dr. Charles ded and Dr. Lau Ming Doc tary. president congratulated the so- upon the progress in the past d then the Rev. Dr. E. R. Wil iams were the assemblage. 4 that there is'a good China and elsewhere here may be rmies and building war- i1l be no warfare s d ves form t be forces but ultimately the gospel aid that even in me and murder , but he de- rule of Jesus would ghout the world. conferences. se of Chinese evange- try and China. He the Chinese could aries. Hon Fan announced th: g a weal had offered Missions (Congregational) n) for the establishment Hongkong to be known For some reason the of- accepted, but Lee Sing established Fong, B. A, Stan- to the presidency. a non-Christian, - Lee Sing Fong to open the sessions morning wit read from the Rev. the society's mission that the societ ionary nounced 1 X mond were e latter part of the-delib= R EPWORTH LEAGUE ALLIANCE HOLDS ITS QUARTERLY RALLY Meeting at Simpson Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church Attended by a Large Delegation. ge was awarded to the h Leag: pariors of the ¢ ts were served ety e D SR e ame Law Violators Punished. ‘ogelsang of the Fish ¢ hat_Charles Plews of V Han’l-«"n of Eureka has been §1 W. M. Sproston of St. Helena has $50 and Frank and Henry Ghotrsso of ave separated themselves from $25 onio T o Mandoll of Westport has paid r catching trout out of season. —————— Humane Society Meets, & of the Soclety for the Pre- elty 1o Animals held yesterday McCurrie reported that 160 been afforded reifef during Jang- nication was received from ry Butier of the Mexican Humane Se- stating that efforts were being made fighting in the southern | republic 5 { day by one of t | ariving 2 crippled horse. Man Is Chosen President! Church, | Dr. W. 8. Mat- and the | roduced, | reparations | aid, when the secep- | | temporarily | ing Kal of Portland, | their own people than y Chinese merch: am: the American | the col-| b Bible reading and | Yee | 1 he detailed the work of | Smyth and | ADVERTISEMENTS. RED CRUSS DESHES | “JOMTIONS T0 KO FIMINE SUFFERERS Help for Hungry Jap. anese Solicited by. Society. s The head of the California branch of the American Na- tional Red Cross Associa- tion has issued the following ! | concerning contributions to ! | aid the famine sufferers in Japan: In accordance with the ap- peal of President Roosevelt of February 13, for aid for Mrs. Martha Pohlman of 55 Chester Avéenue, Newark, N. J., who is a graduate Nurse from the Blockley School, at Philadelphia, and for ix years Chief Clinic six Nurse at the Philadelphia Hospital, writes the letter printed below. She has the advantage of personal experience, besides her professional education, and what she has to say may be absolutely relied upon. Many other women are afflicted asshe was. They can regain health in the same way. Itis prudent to heed such advice from such a source. Mrs. Pohlman writes: | i the thousands of persons on ¢t g firmlyf a . . after ei ears of experience { | the verge of starvation in Sith Trda E. Phthancs table Compound, that it e safest and best medicine far any suffering woman to “Immedmnl m; mxrhgg: fmmd that m; health n to fail me. I be- Northern Japan by reason of the famine existing there, the public is informed that the California branch of the i ati came weak and with American .\aponal Red | Svere = ol pats e | Cross will receive contribu- fearful backaches and fre- spells. The doctors for me, yet I did quent dk?:iy tions for such sufferers and I . 1 would blogt | attend to the ;_)ror:fit trans- | | “"‘n —— 3,(1',,,1“,,2?, ission reof. All contri- become nauseated. | m15.5‘0r th?"eu S } down through my limbs so I oonldl | | butions of money can be i Efi walk. It was as bad a case of female | | trouble as I have ever known. Lydia E. sent to Hon. Horace Davis, treasurer of the State branch society, either at the office of the Sperry Flour Com- pany, 133 Spear street, or at the Savings and Loan So- ciety, on the corner of Sut- ter and Montgomery streets, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, howerver, cured me within four months. Since that time I bave had occasion to recommend it to & number of patients suffering from all forms of female dificulties, and I find that ‘while it is considered unprofessional to rec- ommend a patent medicine, I can honestly recommend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegotable Compound, for I have found that it cures 1 ills, where all other medicine fails. It | is & grand medicine for sick women.” | Money cannot buy such testimony as | this—merit alone can produce such re- | sults, and the ablest specialists now | agree that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- | table Compound is the most univer- sally successful remedy for all female | diseases known to medicine. WM. \\ MORROW, President. San Francisco, February | A TRAINED NURSE After Vears of Experience, Advises Women im | Regard to Their Health. bility, irritability, pervousness, lleep- lessness, melancholy, ‘“‘all-gone” and “‘want-to-be-left-alone” feelings, blues and hopelessness, they should remem- ber there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound at once removes such troubles. No other female medicine in the world has received such widespread and ungualified endorsement. The needlesssuffering of women from diseases peculiar to their sex is terrible to see. The money which they pay to doctors who do not help them is an enormous waste. The pain is cured and the money is saved by Lydia E. | Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It is well for women who are ill to write Mrs. Pinkham. at Lyon, Mass. ‘When women are troubled with ir-| | regular, suppressed or painful periods, weakness, displacement or uleeration of the female organs, that bearing-| down feeling, inflammation, backache bloating (or flatulence), general debili- | ty, indigestion, and nervous prostra-| 15, 1906. PERSONAL. | Among recent arrivals at the Palace | { | | | | | | | | | | i [ | e { | Hotel iz L. J. Rose Jr. of Oxnard. | tion, or are beset with such symptoms | Re: red at the Palace Hotel are | asdizziness,faintness, lassitude, excita- | | Baylies C. Clark and wife of Oroville. M. Fortune and wife and Miss Ethel The present Mrs. Pinkham is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham, her assistant for many years before her decease, and for twenty-five years since her advice has been freely given | to sick women. In her gréat experi- ence, which covers many years, she has probably had to deal with dozens of cases just like yours. is strietly confidential. Lvdla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Fail. | Fortune of Winnipeg, Manitoba, are at | the Palace Hotel W. A, Perry a | are at the Palace F Among the guests of the Palace Ho- tel are Mr. and M A. Demorest and H. Demorest of New York. James Ei Bigthe and wife of Mason City, Iowa, are e Palace Hotel S E. Sexton a vife, Ernest Sexton of Kansas City, o F. C. Niles and wife of the same place, are at the Pal- ace Hotel. E. Fitzgibbon and are at the Palace. E. F. Wittler of St. Louis is at the | st. Francis Thomas Derby, manager of the New Almaden quicksilver mine, near San) Jose, is at the St. Francie. 1 Bert C. Ball of Portland, Or., is at the St. Francis Hotel. H. E. Burner of Cleveland, Ohio, is at the Hotel St. Francls, accompanied by his wife and family. J. Frank Watson, president of the | Merchants’ National Bank, Portland, | | Or., is at the St. Francis. B. Campbell, fourth vice president of‘ the Great Northern Railroad. with head- | uarters at St. Paul, is at the St. Fran- | cls. 1 Eugene E. Hay and wife of Minneapolis | are at the St. Francis. { Samuel G. Fuiton, prominent in railroad circles on this coast, is at the St. Francis, accompanied by his wife. i Former Governor Henry T. Gage of | Los Angeles and Daniel Kevane of Sac- ramento, formerly secretary of the State Board of Examiners, were at the | Palace Hotel last evening. The ex- Governor and W. F. Herrin held a con- ference last night. L I e Californians in New York. NEW YORK, Feb. 15.—The follgving Cali- fornians are in New York from San Franch ¢o—W. R. Blake and Dr. E R Sewell at the | Imperial; C. A. Serra. at the Albemarle. I "From Los Angeles—Mrs. A. Burzwald, at the varre. wife of New York tel. SPECIAL 60« Ta.lkmgMachme Records SO0 Vo are selling 10-inch Zonop! one ‘e(m’ds (positively the best de for 50c each. No other store sells any family of Chicago | i | | | i | Also Vietor d the lowest Eastern prices—35c up. 20.000 records constantly on hand. Kohler @& Chase Cor. Post. and Kearny ORDINARY DEPOSITS The Renters’Loan & Trust Co. Savings Bank 222 Montgomery St., San Fraacisco Receives Deposits of $i up pet i TS i Californians in Paris, | Interest Compounded Semi- PARIS, Feb. 15.—The following Californians | Annaally registered at the Herald Bureau to-day: Mr. | “Banking by Mgil” an Nustrated and Mrs. A. Gunst, Miss Vera Coleman, B. J. Booklet, Seat Free. Bowes and Mr. and Mys. George Fish Jr. of San Francisco; Osmun Johnson and family of Modesto, Cal TERM DEPOSITS O Thite, the man who clalmed that his wife was trying to rafiroad hm to an asylum, was re- Jeased on probatich yesterday by order of Judge Graham. i | | | cough syrup. It cine, pleurisy, consumpti AYER'S HAIR VIGOR—For the bair. AYER'S 8, 4 b A Doctor’s Medicine Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is not a simple doctor’s medicine. hard cases, severe and desperate cases. Especially good in bronchitis, doctor all about it. We have no secrets! We publish the formulas of all our medicines. -flihi:z-fl-”‘“.w..- Macufscturers of AYER’S PILLS—For constipation. the blood. AYER'S AGUE CURE—For malaria and ague., : Always something new —at the— PALACE HOTEL SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES UNDER CROCKER, WOOLWORTH BANK FREE TO TRANSIENT GUESTS. Opposite Market-Street Entrance | Raing! New Jnckey, California il OAKLAND RACE TRACK Racing! is a strong medi- It cures { —The AMUSEMENTS. ALHAMBRA THEATER—spei THIS AFTERNOON At THIRTEESTH ANNT In Ald of the CHARITY FUND SAN FRANCISCO LODGE NO. 21. | Theatrical Mechanical Association CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE! LA EVENT OF THE YEAR! Welcome § M Schmiez! ter Represented! JIMMY BBITT SAM BERGER! In Buriesque Boxing Contest. Reserved Seats $1 and 30c Address o nd Jones Streets. Proprietors. SIGHT Matinees Saturday and The Most Gorgeous Specta THE BLACK CROOK ntire Albambra Company in the Cast. 5/)—&%: of Fifty Graceful Dancers—30 Marvelous Mechanical and Electrical Effects. Scenery of Unequaled Magnificence. Prices—Evgs.. 10c to 3c: Mats. 10, 15c, A COLOSSAL SHOW! Pantomime Monkeys: Les Auberts; Bradley and Baras, and Orpheum Mo- tion Piectures. Last Times of the Barowsky Troupe: Luixi Ressl, With His Musical Horse, “Emir;” J. Francis Dooley. Assisted by Dorothy Bremmer and Ethel Rose, and James H. Cullen. Regular Matinees Every Wednesday, Thurs- day, Saturday and Sunday. PRICES—10c, 25c and S0c. ALCAZA POSITIVELY THIS wm ONLY. TO-NIGHT—MATS. SAT. AND SUN. First Time In America of the Reigning Senm- sation of Germany, Belasco & Mayer, Proprietors, o D Erice. Manager. ALMA MATER Another Romance of German University Life Deer Fight—The Corps Great_Duel Scene—Triple { dent Songs. Next Mon.—Washington's Birthday First San Francisco Production of I?r."y THERG AND BACK New York and London Farcical Hit. ROLLER SKATING NICS' PAVILION RINK B T T ltl it 122 on. Ask your own | |s¥ s ki el bt llo last “b’:lrm which are re- ! served for ladies ln‘ e m-“" i+ last MiSs MARY CARRicK FAREWELL FPIANO RECITAL A'l' l_m“: HALI- ll’ EDD{ ST, Beservea m“u!n ’.‘o".::"h General Ad- mission, i : I THE LAST MASK CARNIVAL of the season will be xiven WEDJESDAY EVENING, Fab. 21 BRUSHES &2 ur milis, foundries, llm Daper- blemen, tar-roofers, m?m etc BUCHANAN BRoOS. ‘Brush Masufacturers, 609 Sacramento St ¢ Her advice | 25e. | Lew Sully: Mignonette Kokin: Galetti's | Banquet—The | Quartet—Naw Stu- | | Eves., 25¢c to T3e; Mats. Sat, Sun., e to S0e. MAJESTIC Last Three Nights. Last Mat. merrow (Saturday) at 2. Nelhe Steewart, And Musgrove's Dramatic Co. ia Sweet Nell of Old Drury Seats $1 50, §1, 50c and 23c. Commenecing Next Tuesday— OFF THE ROAD A Jolly Farce, Gadski The Great Prima Donna MONDAY EVE. FEB 19, WED. AND SAT. MATS., FEB. 21-24 ts, $1, ST 50 and $2, now om sale Sherman, Clay & Co.'s, cor. Kearny and Sutter sta LAST THREE NIGHTS-Mat. To-Morrow. THE GEISHA MONDAY NIGHT Special Mat. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDATY. FIRST TIME IN THIS CITY The Piquant Musical Mixture ISLE OF SPICE One Cont tmucus Laugh, Set to Musie. 130 NIGHTS IN 173 NIGH 200 NIGHTS FIRST APPEARANC GILBERT GREGORY and BERT YOUNE | o SEATS NOW FRARCSONS GOLUMBIA bt THIS AND NEXT WEEK. Nightly, Including Sunday—Matinee Sat. SPECIAL MATINEE W. INGTON'S Edward A. Braden Offers Henry W. Savage's Production of GEORGE ADE'S Amusing Comedy, THE COUNTY CHAIRMAN | A GREAT CAST AND PRODUCTION. | Coming—FLORENCE ROBERTS. 0 ONE CONTINUOUS LAUGH! 28c—MATINEE TO-DAY—2%e TO-NIGHT—ALL THIS WEEK. Matinees Every Tues. Fri. Sat. and Sunday. The Up-to-Date Extravaganza Company, Miner's “BOHEMIAN BURLESQUERS™ In a Two-Act Musical Comedy Entitled “A BOHEMIAN BEAUTY” Also a Strong Ofio of Vaudeville Artists 20—Stunning Girls who can | __Popular Prices—Even: | 13¢ (@n —eeerv-dy Matinees, 25c (reserved) NKEE DOODLE GIRLS."” | i | { | GRANDHOUSE LAST TWO NIGHTS—MAT. TO-MORROW. WM. H. WEST BIG JUBILEE - MINSTRELS! BEGINNINEG NEXT SUNDAY MATINEE. 'MURRAY and MACK | IN “AROUND THE TOWN.” ‘GENTRAL THEATER =" Direction H. W. Bishop. Ernest E. Howell, Mgr. TO-NIGHT AND ALL THIS WEEK Matinees Saturday and Sunday. P Landers Steve ns MONTE CRISTO Strong cast: EDNA AKCHER CRAWFORD. MARIS HOWE, ELMER . CLARENCE MON- TAINE, WALTER SEYMOUR and all the ral faverites. | MRS. GENERAL TOM THUMB | Assisted by Count and Barem MAGRI; | Bothwell Browne’s Galety Girls Presenting “DILLY-DALLY,” | And a Splendid Continnous in the Theater, Afternoons at 3 and Evenings at 9. A HOST OF ATTRACTIONS ON THE GROUNDS. 3 BABY LIONS IN THE Z0O. CAKE WALK SATURDAY vmm ADMISSION......10c CHILDREN ACADEMY OF SCIENGES Illll Market st., between Fourth and FIfth. ™LECTURES ON CALIFORNIA Daily from 2 to 4 p. m. (except Sunday). Mtd"w FOR 'm mxsmxm FEBRUARY CALIFORNIA INDUSTRIES—Presented trom 2 0 2:30. by Rev. Fran= et 4 014 Friends and New in the Realms of Art.™ Great Paigtings From Various Galleries. Seats §1, T5c and 50c. on sale st Sherman, Clay & Co's g

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