Order no. 1625, §§ 1-2, SAN FRANCISCO, THE GENERAL ORDERS OF THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS PROVIDING REGULATIONS FOR THE GOVERNMENT (Bunker & Hiester, 1881).
“ORDER No. 1625.
The People of the City and County of San Francisco do ordain as follows:
SECTION 1. It shall be unlawful for any person or persons owning, conducting or managing a shooting gallery or galleries in the City and County of San Francisco, to keep open the same, or to discharge or permit to be discharged any cartridge or cartridges therein, between the hours of eleven o’clock P. M. and daylight of the following morning, save and except upon Saturdays, when the same may be kept open and permitted up to the hour of twelve o’clock midnight.
SECTION 2. Any person violating the provisions of this order shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and be punished by a fine not exceeding one thousand ($1,000) dollars, or by imprisonment not exceeding six months, or by both such fine and imprisonment.
In Board of Supervisors, San Francisco, April 4, 1881.
After having been published five successive days, according to law, taken up and passed by the following vote:
Ayes—Supervisors Schottler, Litchfield, Drake, Whitney, Eastman, Fraser, Bayly, Torrey, Stetson.
Noes—Supervisors Mason, Doane.
Absent—Supervisor Taylor.
JNO. A. RUSSELL, Clerk.
The above order, No. 1,625, not having been approved by his Honor the Mayor and ex-officio President of the Board of Supervisors, or returned to this Board with his objection thereto, within ten days of the date of presentation thereof, has become valid in accordance with the provisions of Section No. 68 of the Consolidation Act.
San Francisco, April 18, 1881.
JNO. A. RUSSELL, Clerk.”
The General Orders of the Board of Supervisors Providing Regulations for the Government of the City and County of San Francisco (San Francisco, CA: Bunker & Hiester, 1881), 149-50. Order Number 1625—Prohibiting the Keeping Open of Shooting Galleries, or the Discharge of Cartridges Therein Between Certain Hours of the Day and Night, §§ 1-2. Became valid April 18, 1881.