The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 13, 1896, Page 11

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, JULY 13, 1896. THREE-CORNERED ANNUAL TUSSLE, Supervisors and Assessor on the Rack of Pub- lic Opinion. BETWEEN TWO EVILS A Mass-Meeting That Furnished Much Food ‘or Political Thought. RATS AND FEVER IN JAIL A Gorgecus Patrol Sys'em That Came and Vanished in a Month. OAKLAND OFFICE SAN FRANCIS00 CALL,) 908 Broadway, July 12. | The annual tussle between wealth, the Assessor and hss commenced, and this year the battle is regarded with more than the usual nt of interest. Three out of five Su- sors will be elected this November, the trio, who are all anxious for re- n, are worse off than the proverbial between the deep ses and something Pelouze, Johnson and Bailey are the s ones, and if they steer their political barks to victory next November they will prove themselves diplomats of more than ordinary ability. The complication is pretty. To a politi- cal studeni it is superb, as it offers more ground for probabilities than has ever been seen in this county. The great point the pons asinorum of the situation is the question of reducing the assessments of the banks and corporations, noiably the Southern Pacific property, from the figures fixed by the Assessor. It is a situation ult to approach either with pen or word of mouth, for the Lonesty of both sides can be assailed, no matter what they say or do. Take Assessor Dalton’s posi- He has raised the assessments tc mam- moth figures when compared with those that were compiled by men known to be friendly to tbe railroad. Yet he declares he has been guided by the best of advice, and perhaps one good proof of this is that several other Assessorsin the State have followed his example. Dalton certainly Las revolutionized the assesement rotls, but he he has met with such strenuous op- position that whatever merit his work may have possessed has been considerably neu- tralized, and every «ffort made gives his work the appearance of having been un- dertaken for the purpose of political clap- trap. It has even been hinted by his extreme enemies that Assessor Dalton has an eye on the Governorship. All these in- lejnwions make. his-position -unpleasant in some respects, and would discourage him if he could be discouraged. Dalton, however, ought to know by this time thatit ‘was not the votes of the men who put him 1n office who are now opposing his assess- ments and slurring bis motives. The Supervisors are infinitely worse off. They arein a very hades of trouble. On Monday night there will be a mass-maeet- ing at the Tabernacle, and in the call are these significant words: An honest, fearless Assessor has done his duty by the people of Alameda County. Prop- erty values have been fairly assessed, and the great corporate interests of the county have been treated as justly as the small landowner or the possessor of a moderate home. From experiences gained last year it is probable that the County Supervisors, sitting as & County Board of Equalization, will sttempt to undo the work of our Assessor. That the voice of the people may be heard in indorsement of the assessment and in protest of any reduction of it by the Board of Equalization, the under- signed, representing 21! political parties, pro- pose & mass-meeting for Monday evening, July 13, at the Tabernacle, with local speakers cap- able of explaining the position of the people. As the question of the assessments re- ferred to is now in the hands of the Su- pervisors the call for the meeting can only be construed as a political movement, pure ana simple. In Great Britain it would be called coercion. If the Super- visors have any consciences they will surely use them, independent of a mass- meeting. If they have not, a mass-meet- ing will not affect them. If the assess- ments are reduced the outgoing Super- visors are doomed; if they are not re- duced, the manipulators of the mass- meeting will take all the glory, and will declare that they “stiffened up” the board. This way of “doing” politics is suggestive of unfair play, because the men most af- {:cmd bave no means by which they gan, ith decency, repty. It should be remem- bered that tneir treatment of the assess- ments last year shounld have sealed their fate, and if it did not, then a repetition of their work will not produce any more ef- fect now. Bailey and Pelouze have made their records—such as they are—and their consciences are as proof against mass- meetings as their acts are from impeach- ment under the present judicial adminis- tration of the county. The chief mover of the Bupervisorial opposition, W. H. Friend, is in a worse fix than any one. Ha has made great efforts toward reform and deserves great credit for what he has done. But he is now neutralizing bis own-work. He is himself to face the public as a candidate for Super- visor. This knowledge somewhat robs his reform record of its value, and when he makes & patriotic speech at the Taber- nacle his enemies wili at once proclaim that his desire to see the Assessor sus- tained is the natural consequence of his ambition to succeed one of the Super- visors whom he *‘fears” will attempt to ‘‘undo the work of our Assessor.”” If Mr., Friend should announce from the plat- form that he is not seeking anything more difficult to obtain than glory he can accomplish a great local work between now and November, Once again the City Prison is to the front. For several years successive grand juries and health officers have ‘recom- mended” that prisoners be kept in a place ‘where there is no danger of them dying from the effect of poisonous gases. The recommendations must be very bulky by tois time, but the decayed, unhealthy 'priaon still remains. On several occasions boys have pushed the tops from their cells sud have walked out; other prisoners have pushed through a portion of the erum- bling stone wall and have walked to lib- erty—and yet nothing is done by way of relief. % Health Officer Bradley entered on his the Board of Equalization | /‘,zi S /. cichgo’s 1) ol Practiced in Different Cities. IREeqewErOUS Tenw. STvee. JRKINJIS—%JRilY wavE n ‘/rLE’fl/rfl . FrrRmoisE rILLEY. ———y Some of the Methods of Catching and Killing Dogs That Poundmaster Weitzel Has Been: Advised Are Swoor Twice' In Atlanta There Is No Pound and No Dog-Catcher. The Phila- delphia Poundmaster Sets the Fashion of His Irofession in Visiting Cards. official career a few days ago, and the first thing he did was to “'recommend” in re- gard to the prison. Itis unfit for its pur- pose in every respect. There is no proper accommodation for women at all. There is no matron, no ambulance but a clumsy patrol wagon, no light and no ventilation. There are rats, vapors, bad sewerage, dark alleys galore and pestilential cells, and yet nobody dreams but that Dr. Bradley’s rec- ommendation will share the fate of its volumes of predecessors. A few weeks ago Oakland was flooded with patrolmen. At all hoursof the night in the center of the city big, burly men in uniforms were met at. every street .corner and in every doorway. Citizens wondered why the Police Commissioners had decided 50 suddenly that Oakland needed so much protection, and what was of far more in- terest they were anxious to know where the funds were to come from to support it. | For a few weeks the nightly procession of patrolmen was in evidence, but they grad- ually disappeared and last night a report was made to the Police Station that only one was leit. The affair was a private ven- | ture and the merchants were expected to support it. The merchants, however, have a moderate amount of faith in the regular Polic: Department, the streets are once more deserted at night and the portly pa- trolmen have gone back to driving ex- press wagons and digging ditches. 8. W. B. THE SALOON QUESTION. Dr. Bovard Addresses an Open Letter to the City Trustees. | ALAMEDA, CaL., July 12.—Dr. Bovard of the Park-street M. E. Church read an open letter at his evening service as a pre- lude to bis sermon, addressed to “The Honorable Board of Trustees of the City of Alameda.”” He appeals to the trustees to consider three requests—to license no more saloons, to enforce the present ordi- nance to the full extent of its provisions by ruling out the duplicated signers of pe- titions and to suppress the gambling-dens at any cost. “I believe,”” said the doctor, “‘that I ex- press the sentiments of nearly every citi- zen of Alameda in congratulating you upon_the general good order and high moral standard you bave maintainea in our fair city. he evils and abuses of which I am about to speak stand out the more glaringly and inflict a deeper insult because they contrast so strongly with the good character of the city. “Without attempiing to discuss the merits of any application for saloon licenses now before your honorable board, I am compeiled by a strong sense of duty to my congregation, and in some sense to my fellow-citizens, to give voice to the almost universal conviction in this city that we want no additional saloons.” The doctor calls the attention of the board to section 4 of the city’s ordinance, No. 167, which provides that twenty-five heads of families or vroprietors of busi- ness places shall sign the recommendation for the license. ““Upon examination of the list of signers I find that some of these heads of families have repeated their privilege from two to six times, thus acting in the capacity and discharging the functions of six cilizens instead of one.” The doctor says that in the “1500” block on Park street there are five saloons, with only sixty actual signers, instead of 125; on the ‘1300” block, three saloons, with only forty-four signers, and that the nine saloons on Park street have onlé 119 sign- ers, whereas they should have 225. Thedoctor contends that under the ordi- nance no man has the right to sign more than one saloon-keeper’s petition. The closing portion of the lstter draws the trustees’ atiention ‘“‘to the most scen- dalous and fl; nt violation of the ordi- nance prohibiting gambling.” The doc- tor wants to know ‘“why the police officers do not clean out these vipers’ nests, It can hardly be su:rond that they are the only persons in Alameda who are unaware of these abuses. Perhaps they think it is less trouble to let them alone. e e et From the Korea. OAKLAND, Car, July 12.—Bishop E. R. Hendrix, who bas lately returned from Korea, preached at the Asbury M. E. Church to-night. Wherever the Bishop has been he has always tried to speciall; ‘ndu_nel the commercial interests of CALf! ornia. In Native Dress. OAKLAND, Cavn, July 12—Dr. Eric Lewis spoke at the Y. M, C. A. this after- noon on the Soudan. He hes just returned from that country and gave an interesting lecture in native costume. There are nearly 13,000 breweries in | England. PRAISES ASCEND FROM THE GLEN Salvationists Open Their Fifth Annual Gath- ering. A BIG CITY OF TENTS. A Spirit of Communism Per- vades the Dwellers in the Camp. RECEPTIONS AND REUNIONS. Everything Given Over to Salvation, and Even the Bar Is Closed. OAxLAND OrFFIcE SAN FRANCISCO CALL.% 808 Broadway, July 12. Hundreds of pretty snow-white tents repose in Trestle Glen. Flitting about everywhere among the trees and canvas houses are people in picturesque cos- tumes, while from every tent-pole can be seen the stars and stripes and the banner of the Salvation Army. The fifth annual encampment of the fol- lowers of General Booth opened to-day and the pretty glen was as lively as a fair. If the Volunteer movement has drawn away¥from the regular Salvationists it is not apparent at the camp-meetine, which is more numerously attended than any vrevious gathering of the kind. As a visitor listens to the singing it re- calls the times of the Covenanters who gathered in Glencoe, and tle freedom and vrotection guaranteed the Salvaiionists, as contrasted with the oppression from the English soldiery under the dastardly command of Graham of Claverhouse, rep- resent exactly the progress of religious freedom in two centuries, Officers are there from all over the State and an impromptu reunion isin progress the whole day. The tenters were holding receptions continuously and many ¢lasped hands who only have the opportunity to do 80 at the annual campmeeeting. A blind man walking through the glen could have told the nature of the gather- ing. The ear 2lone would solve any doubt on that point. “Hallelujah, so your're still saved.” “‘God bless you, sister.” “Praise the Lord, there's brother Jones." ‘*Yes, and I'm still happy on the way.’’ “God bless Father Adams.” “How’s Visalia? +8till tighting the devil.”” These are scraps of the salutes and con- versations that are heard all over the glen from moring till night, and after the light in the western sky has disappeared little hymns of praise can be he: issu- ng from the interior of the tents in- mates chant their farewell to the day and ask protection through the night. The large hall erected for and used nearly all the Y”r as a danceball does not look natural filled with Salvationists. The whole glen is turned over to the Salva- tionists for two weeks. Even the refresh- ment-room and bar i losed, nor will it be opened until the last “halleiujab’ is uttered and the place isabandoned to the world, the flesh and the devil, till next year’s meeting. . Brigadier Keppel and his staff Ionnnlly opened the camp at 7 A. M. *“The Attack’ was the subject, and 1t was treated ina very aggressive fgshion. Major McIntyre spoke at 11 A. M. on “Save ibe Others”; Btaff Captain Thomas told of **True Won- ders” 1n the afternoon, and at night Briga- dier and Mrs. Keppel talked about “Sheep and Goats.” The large hall was packed at every service, but even this did not seem to thin the numbers on the grounds, who. appeared as_numerous as when the meet- in;fln»ened. 'he cro the yolume' sound that ascended from | the glen when all joined in chorus could be heard half a mile off. There is a marked appearance of com- munism among Salvationists in camp. The banner at the door of the tentisa standing invitation, and officers and soldiers can be detected making tours of discovery for oid friends, but strictly con- fining themselves to tents which have the army coat of arms. Ensign McFee and his wife of Lifeboat fame were on the grounds. Bergeant- Major Brown of Oakland, who established the work that now flourishes in San Quen- tin, is in camp. Sergeant Brown's quarters should be used as a model for campers. He has a large family,and his tent contains more to the square foot than can be found un- derany canvasin the glen. The sergeant, although he saves souls at night and Sun- day, is a hard-working builder during the and is one of the most unassumin, men in uniform. The programme for Monday is: “Persistency,” Ensign Jackson and Captain Jones; “Bankrupt Lives,”’ Ad- ;\uunt and Mrs. McFee; “Our Faulty Neighbors,” Ensign Evans; “Men Want- ed,” Captain and Mrs. Manly. PIONEER PASSE3 AWAY. William Ashlie Died Yesterday Morn- ing at Berkeley. BERKELEY, Car., July 12—William Ashlie died this morning at his residerce in Berkeley. Mr. Ashlie was an old pio- neer of Berkeley, baving lived here forty years. He was at one time owner of the Newberry rancn. He leaves no family, his wife baving died twelve years ago. Mr. Ashlie was 69 years of age. He leaves two brothers, James Ashlie of Oak- land and Mark Ashlie of Berkeley. ——————— Berkeley Boxing Fever. BERKELEY, CAL., July 12.—As stated several days ago, the Crescent Athletic Club of Berkeley will have a series of box- ing bouts at their exhibition to be given next Tuesday evening. A number of ama- teur local knights of the glove will par- ticipate in the fistic exhibitions. The club has several very clever boxers, and it is expected that the performances on Tues-* day night will tend to revive the interest in the sport in the college town. Several medals are “E and hot bouts are antici- pated, with tie possibility of a knockout. The principal event of the evening will be a match between A. O.. Pulztser and R, Creelman. The five other contests will consist of four rounds each. C. Demetrak will stand up against H. Richter, John Armstrong against C. Mikkelson and C. C. Emerson against J. McClellan. Evers of the Acme Club in Oakland will try conclusions with Ward of the Crescents, and Smidt and Fische!, two vouths of Berkeley, will also meet in the rin [ WEITIEL WANTS A MODEL POUD. Many Large Cities Advise Him How to Gain His Wish. {HE MAKES DISCOVERIES. Dog-Killing Has Been Brought Up to a Scientific Point. IS MORE AT SEA THAN EVER. Pounds That Are Interesting and Poundmasters That Are Facelious. OaxLAND OFFIcE 8aN FrANcisco CALL,} 908 Broadway, July 12. H. L. Weitzel, poundmaster of Oakland, made a discovery to-day. A poundkeeper is no longerlooked upon as a human brute who takes supreme pleasure in tormenting, starving and kill- ing all animals that he can turn loose and catch. The time 1s coming, and in some cities bhas already come, when the poundkeeper is regarded as a humane official whose du- ties are second only to those of the red cross varieties. Poundmaster Weitzel knows more to- night about pounds and dogs and the method of killing them than any other poundmaster in the country. He satat his desk all of to-day studying. Some weeks ago he sent letters to all the pound- masters in the large cities of the United States. To-day he was studying their an- swers. Some were a revelation, many amusing, but all were interesting. Mr, Weitzel is ambitious to have a model pound in this city. It is under the con- trol of the Humane BSociety, and this has proved to be the best system for pound government yet devised. Atlanta, Ga., is the dog’s paradise of the country. In that Southern city curs and mongrel canines of all descriptions roam at will. They fear not the policeman with poisoned meat, nor the man with the scoop-net. City Clerk J. W. Phillip, writes: *‘We have no dog pound, and do not catch dogs.”” If dogs could but be ad- vised of the news what an exodus there would be from the Pacific Coast to the At- lantic. At Galveston, nine mounted policemen catch stock and dogs, and are paid what to Oaklanders would be two weeks’ salary, viz., $50 a month. Chief of Police W. O. Jones says his men catch about 350 dogs during each summer month, and only 1 per cent is redeemed. The 346)4 are ca- joled into an air-tight room, under which is a furnace adapted for burning sulphur. When the connection is made, the stray dogs are gently asphyxiated. A peculiarity of the Galveston ordinance is that it costs $3 to redeem a goat and only $1 per head of stock. This will sound strange to the Oakland cow-owner who has to pay $4 every time his cow his lassoed by the poundman. About 400 dogs are caught at St. Louis, and the pound costs $300 a month. When the dogs are not redeemed Poundmaster R. L. Price treats them to a fatal inhala- tion of sulphur fumes. The pound department of the city of Chicago is an important part of the gov- ernment. There are eight stock pounds and six dog-catchers on waeons, and on each wagon is a regular police officer. About 2000 dogs are caught every month during the season of six months, and very few are redeemed. This is the way Super- intendent Eli Montgomery writes of the manner of destroying dogs: ‘‘We have an airtight box that will hold fifty or seventy- five dogs, and a charcoal furnace with pipe connecting with the box. After kind- ling a fire in the furnace with charcoal we place sulphur on the fire, the fumes of which are conducted into the box, produc- ing deatb in a very few minutes. The Buiffalo dog pound is conducted by the Humane Society, but i8 under the con- trol of the police. About 700 loose dogs are caught every month, and are placed in a box filled with gas. “It takes about fif- teen seconds before the dogs are stiff,” .says Dr. W, Clinton of the Erie County Humane Society. “No pain or suffering is noticed, and this method gives general satisfaction.” The desire to use a gun that prevails in Arkansas runs even to shooting dogs, Judg- ing by the fees the poundmaster cannot receive a very large fortune, asit would appear that he gets a large partof his satisfaction in using his gun. Chief of Police Frank McMahon says: “We catoh dogs with a wire loop and put them in a wagon on the spot. We kill them by shooting them in the forehead with a were very entfimlnsflc, and | H, L. Weitzel, Oakland’s Poundmaster, Whose Love for Dumb Animals Has Promnted Him to Gather Data From All the Pounds in the Country. HAuction Sales GEO. F._ LAMSON, AUCTIONEER. Office—410 Kearny St. GRAND AUCTION SALE THIS DAY. Monday........... ..July 13, 1898, JAt 2 o'clock P. 3., On the premises, SCOTT STREEY, NEAR HAYES, Of ELEGANT NEW FURNITURE, CARPETS and BRIC-A-BRAC. Elegant Parior Se: in bro- caded satin damask: rich Dew pattern Carpeta; elegunt Bric-a-brac: 2 lovely Onk Chamoer Suits; finest Hair Mattrisses: handsome Dining-room Set in oak: Palace Table and Chairs to match; a grand new, improved Range: fine Linoleum. with sll the rooms fllled with new, choice articles of Household Goods. Remember the hour—2 P. 3. GEO. F. LAMSON, Auctioneer. PAVILION AUCTION HOUSE, 318-321 sutter St., above Grant Ave. AT SALESROOM THIS DAY, MONDAY. July 18, 1896, at 10:30°A. 3., a Large Line of Parlor, Bedroom, Lining-room, Library and Kitchen Furniture and Carpets of every de- scription. =. BASCH, Auctioneer. THIS DAY, AT 11 A. M., SAUSAGE FACTORY AND PORK STORE—-LARGE STOCK. 433 Broadway, Near Montgomery. thirty-eignt Winchester rifle, and hardly ever have to shoot twice at the same dog. The poundkeeper rents the pound, and gets 35 cents for cattle and horses and 10 cents for dogs anda goats. The State law requires the stock-catcher, where stock is known to belong outside of city limits, to drive them to the limits and not impound them.”” Chief of Police Moseley of Memphis, Tenn., tells of an ingenious method of ridding the city of vagrant dogs. He says: ‘““The pound is under the direction of the Chief of Police, and the pound ot}i~ cer is appointed by the Police Commis- sioners. He isa uniformed policeman and receives the same pay, $75 per mouth. We employ no deputies, but use one or two negroes who are working out misdemeanor fines to go with the officer and drive in the stock. Our method of destroying dogs is to prepare about 200 small pieces of cooked meat, in which we insert a small quantity of strychnine with the point of & sharp knife. Each officer on night duty takes about twelve of these pieces, which are put in a small paper bag, and as va- grant dogs pass about on his beat he throws them a piece of the meat, and in a few minutes the work is done. The city pays a scavenger $50 a month to haul away any dead animal found in the city, and this includes vpoisoned dogs.” Trump canines in New York and Brook- lyn are treated very tenderly. ‘“‘The whole of such work is now entirely under the control of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals,’ said John P. Haines, the president. *“The men engaged in the work are paid a monthly salary. Each man is under a $1000 bond and their compensation is not regulated by the number of dogs which they seize. The dogs are caught by hand only and are killed by illuminating gas, which, afteran experience of many years, we find is the most humane and at the same time the most convenient and economical method yet devised.” The Humane Society also conducts the pound at Cincinnati and the 164 dogs caught each month are driven intoa blg box. The lid is put on, the gas turned o: and in about eighteen to twenty minutes their spirits have departed. Poundmaster John Foster of Portland, Oregon, is the only man that resorts to drowning. ‘We destroy about a hundred dogs a month,” said Mr. Foster. *‘Inkill- ing them we piace them in an iron cage. They are then lowered in the Columbia River in numbers of 20 to 25, and after- ward sent to the crematory.’” All stray dogs at the National capital are caught in a net and shot through the brain. About 250 dogs are treated this wey every month. The pound is con- ducted by the Health Office and costs $200 per month. Pound master G. H. McLaughlin of Phil- adelphia is a facetious individual. His visiting card contains the inscription: “Have you been an Oda Fellow twenty- one years? If so, come and join wus.” About one-half of the card is taken up with the most snarlish specimen of acur ever caught in a poundman’s net, George Washington Lavender is the name of a poundmaster of Memphis, Tenn. He is evidently a gentleman of color, as his letter-heads are gorgeously printed in the color signified by ais name. He does not ‘believe In hurrying, as his letter in- dicates. It reads: H. L. Witzel—Yores of the 22 to hand want- ing one City Pound reports and regulations I will make you oute one in a few dayes and forward it to you' with the gratest Rleshure. I am Eleven years in the Buisiness & will try to give you the best repourt that I posibley can. Respectfuly Yores, i GEORGE WASHINGTON LAVENDER. After reducing all his information into a concise report Mr. Weitzell will present it to the Humane Society of Alameda county. Captured the Band. OAKLAND, Can., July 12.—Sergeant Hodgkins and Officer Clark made a good haul Jast night about 11 o’clock, which furnished two loads for the patrol wagon. They raided a Chinese gambling den at 853 Eighth street and caught two dealers and seventeen men, all Chinese and Jap- anese, in the middle of a game of “pie quee,”’ as the Chinamen call it. The policemen guarded the hotuse at both fronc and rear doors and captured alto- gether just sixteen Chinamen and the little brown Japs. —_—————— Visit From Dr. Greene. BERKELEY, Carn, July 12—Dr. Ed- ward E. Greene, former head of the depart- ment of botany at the State University, who is now professor at Washington Uni- versity, the Catholic institution in the District of Cotumbia, will visit Berkeley at tbe end of the srespnt month. . Professor Greene resigned his position atthe Uni« versity of California last July to accept the chair of botany at the newly astab- lished institution in Washington. —————— No Life on the Moon. In the sbsence of an indication of any sort of life whatever on the moon, with no air nor water, together with the fact that no chanpge of any descrip- tion has been noticed by the keen and trained eyes which have jealously scrutinized its surface from the time oi the first telescopic efforts to the present we are compelled to conclude that there are no people who live in the moon. The wonX:uul combination of mountain and crater, valley and peak, is, after all, only a vast graveyard; and if living beings ever roamed over its plains and navigated its great ""§ now dry, or frozen with appalling cold, they have been gathered to the natione of the dead; -{l traces of them having vanished, the tall shafts of the mountains watch over their last resting-place, and, with the crater rings, constitute their eternal and magnificent mausoleum.—Ladies'’ Home Journal. < J. C. MUTHER, AUCTIONEER. Office—601 California street, corner Kearny. Monday.. uly 13, 1896, Sommencing at 11 4. M., All the fine and well-seiected stock ofa Dry Goods and Notion Store, at the cor- ner of Post and Baker streets. P. S.—This is a fine stock, and my instructions are tosell all without reserve or lim RAILROAD TRAVEL. ——— e . SOUTHERN IC COMPANY. (e HYSTRAL) ro duc to arrive at RANCISCO. Tra acaville, Rum: mento, Oroville snd R 0ga and 8:304A Niles, Sau_ Jose, Secramento, Maryavillo wad Red fuff. .. Darbara and J.08 Angeles $:004 Martinez and Stockton. 9:004 Valle, ian Sacramento River Steamors 11:30P Port Costa and Way Stati 4:00r Martinez, San ILamon, Valioio, Napa, Calistogs, Ll Verano &nd Sauta Roda.. .. Dulda 4:007 Benicia, V: nd, Kuiglits Tanding, ~ Marssville, Oroville and Sacrainento......... 10:45a 4:80p Niles, Ban Jose, Livermore and 41907 Merced, Berends; Krid s n Yosethite) and Fresno JTELN 8100 New Orleans xpress, Fresio, Bakerse 901d, Santa ariara. Tas Avgelos tug, Bl Paso, New Orleans ast. 10:154 5:007 Sauta for Mojave and East 16:154 5:002 Vallcio... 113454 8:000 Enropean M| 0:454 6:00r Haywards, 7454 17:00p Vallejo {7452 T:00p O n ville, e Portland, Puget Hound and 1 .. 10:454 ON (Narrow Gauge). JZ DIVE ta Oruz Excursion, Senta Cruz and Prancipll Way Stations . 18:05% 8:154 Newark, Ceuterville, San Jose, Felto Boulder! Sa and Wi Stations, sis0r *2:1152 Newark, z Almaden, Felton, Toulder Creek, Banta Cruz and Principal Way Statios "1 ownsand Sts. Way_ Stations (New In *6:454 San Jose and only)... e 9147 R g & Pacifio Grove, an cipal Way Stations......s.... 18:857 Prin #1154 8an Jose, Tres Pinos, Sunta Ori ific Grove, Paso’ Robles, Saz S8R and Prin- Melrose, Seminary Park, Fitehbnrg, San Leandro and Haywards. :00p 9 Runs through to Niles. 11319p.) ¢ From Niles: 1155005 CREEK ROUTE FERRY. Prom SAN PRANGIS00—Foot of Market Street (Slip 80)— 5 9:00 11:00A. 11:00 *2:00 33:00 *6:00 - 8:00 'QIM *3:00 - $4:00 A for Moming. P for Afternoon. * Sundays excepted. +Saturdays only $ Sundays only. t Monday, Thursday and Saturday nights only. § Saturilays and Sundays for Santa Cruz. SANFRANCISCO & NORTH PA- (IFIC RAILWAY (0. Tiburon Ferry—Foot of Market St. . San Franoisco to San Rafael. WEEK DAYS—7:30, 9:00, 11:00 A.3: 12: $:30, 6:10, 6:30 £. 1. Thursdays—xirs iip e M. Saturdays—Extra trips & 1:5‘ and P SUNDAYS—7:50, 9:80, 11:00 1:30, 8 3100, 620 b ok e San Rafacl to San Franetsco. WEEK DAYS—6:15, 7:50, 9:10, 11:10 A, x.; (40, 8:10 ¥, . Saturdays—Extra tripg o , 96, 11:10 4. 30.; 1:40, 81 5:00, 6:28 prok. ! LML Between San Francisco and Schpetzen P same schedule as above. ¢ e T Leave At 8an Francisco, | JReffect | gun Francisca. Weex | Sux- Soy. | Wi Davs. | pavs, |Destinailon.| 008 | PR T80 47350 ax| Novato, ~|10:40 ax| 8:40 xxt »x(9:30 ax| Petaluma, | 6:05 Px|10:10 ax x|5:00 Px|Santa Rosi.| 7:80 | 6:15 px Fulton, 7380 Ax| ‘Windsor, 10:10 ax Healdsburs, Geyserville, :80 3¢/7:80 ax| Cloverdale. | 7:30 »x| 6:15 px Yielh 7180 Ax Hopland & 10:10 ax 8:30 x| 7:30aM| Ukiah. | 7:30 vu| 6:15 mu T80 Ax 10:10 ax 7:30 Ax|Guerneville. | 7:50 1 3:30 e 6:15 P 7i30 Ax(T:80 4| Sonoma |10140 Ax| 8:40 Ax an #x[5:00 #x| Glen Eilen. | 6:05 »x| 6:15 »x a3 7180 A3 10740 4x(10:30 ax. 130 P2 5:00 x| Sebastopol. |TGi55 pU 15115 wxc Stages connect at Sants Rosa for Mark West Bprings: at Geyserville for Skaggs Springs: ab Cloverdale for the Geysers; at Pleta for Highland Springs, Kelseyville, Soda’ Bay and Lake Hopland for Lakeport and Bartiett Sp Ukian for Vichy Springs, Sarataga Springs, B Lakes, Laurel Dell Lake, Upper Lake, Pomo, Potter Valley, John Day's, Riverside, Lierley’s, Buck- nell’s, Sanhedrin” Heights, Huilville, Booneville, Greenwood, Orr's Hot Springs. Mendoeino City, Fort Bragg, Westport, Usal, Willets, Cahto, Co- velo, Laytonviile, Harrls, Scotia and Eureka. Saturday to Monday round-trip ticksts at reduged On Sundays round-irip tickets to all points be yond San Ratael at haif rates. Ticket Offices, 650 Market st., Chronicle buflding. H.C WHITING, x : Atlgptic Pacific RAILROAD Trains leave and arrive at Market-Street Ferry. SANTA FE EXPRESS. To Chicago via A. & r.{SPs Direct Line > Leaves every day at 5 ». M., carryiig Pullman Palace Drawing-room Sleepers, also Modern Up. hoistered Tourlst Sleeping-cars, with clegn linen and bedding and in charge of a porter, run dafly through to Chicago via Kansas City. for Denver and St. Louis. Persona’ly conducted Boston Excursions via Kansas Ciiy, Chicago, Montreal and the White Mountains leave every Wednesday. ‘The best railway from Callfornia to the New rails, new ifes: nod interesting scenery: and good meals in Harve; ining-rooms. Ticket Office—644 Market Street, Chronicle Building, Telephone Main 1531, NORTH PACIFIC (0AST RAILROAD Sausalito Ferry). From San Francisco, Commencing june 15, 1898 ‘Annex cars WEEKDAYS. For Mil Valley and San_Rafael —7:00, *8:00 *9:16 1U:15, 11:45, A. .3 *1:45, 3:20, 4:15, 5:18, #5:00, 6:35 P. M. tra trips_for San on Mondays, Wednes SUNDAYS. I? Mill Valley and San Rafael—*8: 8 6:45, 8:30 p. M. Exira trip 10 Savsalitoas 00 A. . Trains marked * run to San Quentin. **12:39 THROUGH TRAINS. or Reyes ana way statlons—8:00 A. x, For rom Reyes, Cazadero and Exi Ratael ahys and Saturdays ot 11190 2 20 10:00, 11:30 A, 3. ; #%12:80, *1:30, #2:1, :.‘% 2.3 does not run to Mill Valley. For Point 8a:uidays: 9 A M. oo be x; 5:15 P. 3. weckdnys, o way BiA0 A, 3¢ Sundavs: 1:40 P, M, weekdava., ———o

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