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20 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1898. DEMOCRATS ENGAGE IN FIST FIGHT Campaign Committee Rooms the Scene of the Encounter. Larry Buckley and Pat- rick Hayes Were the Combatants. Row Over the Possession of| District Enroliment Records. BUT LITTLE BLOOD SHED. | | WHEN SHALL THESE THREE MEET AGAIN? The five-masted schooner Louis, the pllot-boat Gracie S and lightship No. 70 were all in a bunch yesterday, Captain Jordan had just been transferred from the pilot-boat to the schooner and the away for port when the snapshot from which the above was drawn was taken. latter was The Louis went squaring from the Sound to Callao, Peru, with a cargo of lumber, and while there Captain Hatch diled. First Mate Franz brought the schooner to Portland and from Portland to San Francisco. Lively Times Are Expected at To- | performance the Alcazar's new fireproof dropped. Its Sartain will be formally dropped. Its J t 3 subject 18 “The Garden of Love, SRR e e has been painted by Stevens under the Assembly District. tion of the house artist, Edward 5. “In the foreground six pairs of | in gay attire give reas for the t mental chateau almost veiled The serenity that has thus far marked the proceedings of the Harney Democrats in preparing for district enroliment was marred last night by Al encoun- ter of the good old o e The scene of the e rooms of the camr £ the mittee in the j burlesque, “Sinbad the Saflor,” has been “Sinbad” seems good appointed as vet. background i itle, while in_the r view bit of ater the luxuriant | olia e of the water's ban TIVOLIL S bellig | gor several weeks more. To-morrow night Larry Bu both | the Bay City Wheelmen will attend in a of the Twenty-elghth As body in honor of “Bob” Mitchell, who is While no great amount an old member of their organization. The Ral i tice Sreis Bay City rch, composed by Wheelman | SLECHa anl VIt as dpenr A. R. Cuna, will be played by the Tivoll | ly while they lasted to A o pede from the committee rooms to the corridors and lobby of the hote ORPHEUM. s lr);( ‘tr::ll:&:\"umn:‘ ,d“]):lxm; . "&"‘l‘; {1):} The Orpheum retains its excellent Hyde alst ¥ 5 n Sunday afternoon, when the district named representing | comedians until Sunday afternoon t e side and Everything we and pro ner until closed Sa v night. It t Buckle executed his grand b0k possession of the enroll- 0 doing signal vic- his factio »-morrow is the fon of twenty-five to serve m ea ates t ht those began to ties by calling Buck- ent_that was returned 1 o r-| ashed out formance is the same with the exception of s al California to-morrc | Melba in “Traviata. Rossini's sung he new bill will be pr“ h nd a few varlations in the turns. CALIFORNIA. There will be a fashionable crush at the night to welcome On_Thursd. “Barber of Sexille” will be on Saturday nirht “Lucia” will be he Dbill. PASSION PLAY. v night | Last night commenced the second week of the cineomatographic reproductions of the “Passion Play” at the Young Men's Auditorium. The has been strengthened by new colored 1s of the | views in addition to the 5000 feet of mov- ing films and the two uozen slides al- ready shown, and Mrs. John Morr has been engaged to sing and Herr Relder of New York to play upon the organ. Nearly all the local clergy have attended and ap- | proved the entertainment. SYMPHONY. is the complete pro- vmphony concert to be on Thurs after- The following was give and take noon Hans Helling” (Marsch- less timid ones, “in | per): v 4 (1. Zech J mony,” separated the | Suit ; Rhapsodie ted further (T property. Buckley P e of the enrollment sheet, CHUTES. a fact that promises much for the inter- = = est attached to to-morow’s election in| The wild animals and the docile little | inhart’s strongholc lady are S.... the attractions at the s meeting of the here is some new va ville in for the how ing 1 w A CLEAN BUT DULL FARCE-COMEDY on 3 Alden, whose father has been murdered, Poor Playwriting and a Tame | ! s Star in “ Delmonico’s mountains of Pennsylvania (where the | SusiEy a nts, owing to their dual oce at Six. ation of mining coal and stilling whisky, | LM INE S are of an uncertain and cynical tempe | ment) and sets the ball rolling by fal Melodrama of Many Crimes at Moros- | i co’s—0ld Bills at the Other Theaters. 3 I h c “Delmonico’s at comparatively clean an Is the title of a innocuous, but very foolish 1litt ree which was | detection of the man who murde played at the Columbia Theater last | father, and who she sw night, without either justify its exist- | the full penalty for his ence or explaining the of Miss Marie Jansen. The main idea in the farce is not bad. A middle-aged physician tires of the trustfulness of his wife and the peacefulne tellar ambitions | t by making himself out to be a regular devil. This he accomplishes by means of a photograph with @ bogus Inscription on it and a spurious sing Unconsclously he in vain the name celebrated vaude- ville ac rns of the plot and | turns up at 1 t Delmonico’s punctually on | MBS 3 ; 1 from a hor- L rible death by his Sweetheart, who re- the hour of G (as per spurious letter), | covers from being choked to denth s bent on vindication and comic vengeance. | arrives, riding on a coal car, just In time t the ide tional invention that is denied it by author it m be half hour of harmie ent shape the e 1o serve for a s fun. In its pres- “Delmonico’s at Six’ two t acts of utter vacaney and one (the last) n of belated and misdirected hustle. A star | f of ten times the candle power. of Miss | Jansen might tw gan It seems almost that_the | comic opera New York | Rev. should take nd the center of the stage jt tan vogue be Marie Jansen cannot sing any better than o of the | f St. Vincent de Paul Society ok 1 the Tivoli, who are glad to after the poor of St. h. ofon incomes ‘of §16 5 woo Father Younan leaves for New York on fs of the defunct school—mock-heroics ar le drool She has rather a pretty face and prettier | legs. I mentlon these latter not because | I am an cspecially capabie scrutator of | such members, but because In their day | comic opera Gy stood for a good deal of sensa- | $a, T Phi tional praisc from the New York crmrs‘i«})(u,uv{-l}?;nwle?::r:%:olt(;ngnn:dhérm“&‘fi‘lx\‘l’rll;): and be e they are strenuously insisted | A. M. Holliday, who was arrested on a i s DS et o | charge of obtaining money by false pre- With the exception of Jessic Bradbury, | (fhses, Holllday disappeared from ' the who is exorbitantly bad as a French mald | the police have thus far baer oo nd and preposterou ular song; and £00d in a bit of pop- lice Bertram, who is : in the part of sub- | < Charles, who | s a Bowery is of an undis- has moments Sandow, the company turbed mediocrity. BALDWIN, “A Stranger In New Yori” entered its eecond and last week to light attendance. Ferris Hartman z ting the final touches on “The Purser,” | which on Monday night at the Baldwin will be presented for the first time to an Americzn audfence, ALCAZAR | d his company are put- | “TheStrange Adventures of Miss Brown" has caught on and continues all of this week at the Alcazar. Then comes “The Gay Parisians,” with L. R. Stockwell and Howard Scott in the cast. At to-night's ventor, who tells her of his pa her { he is just the sort of an individual that can be relied on in the hour of need. She self, so he starts to hunt up the unknown desperado_on s of his fireside | casual spectator begins to wonder if the and determines to relieve the monotony | hero had any sort of an idea of the job he undertook when he started. leads him all over the mountains, where | he is robbed and shot at; through an in- sane asylum, where he is forced to letter. | with the entire force of brutal a with a shovel and a lead pipe, which is brought to an end by of the arch fiend from an electric shock his assoclates. The hero. heroine, and all 4 Francis Church, Vallejo street and Mont- 0 soon as their metropoli- | gome ¥ ath ; her | Apm) name of the city and county to recover signs the resolutions adopted by Con- gress, the fact will not only be an- |nounced on all The Call bulletin | boards, but will be signaled by hoist- {ing the national flag in the place of | The Call flag on the Claus Spreckels building. If the signature is not given until to-night, it will be sig- | naled by a display of red fire from | the lantern for an hour. | the signals. SCHULZ—In e free theater. i e e i MORGCSCO’S. “The Diamond Breaker,” a play with | our acts and forty crimes to the agt, as played at Morosco's last night. There | enteen people and a coal crusher o The coal crusher did_re- as it was the only thing 1t had no lines to speak, | tly none to forget. is of the kind known as a nical drama,” and its plot hinges | a young girl b Rex | the name of mother a widow. Th ts” somewhére 18 leaving he lady 8 | the | in n love with a poor but h and, incidentally, ur ecefves his attentions with compl t informs him that for the pr cannot think of marrying mm, s 1 little errand to perform, namel >w this young man is not the kind see his girl go on an errand by her- his own bexins account. to develon itself When he Dplot the The girl S nts; clubbed and then hrown down a chute leading foward the | wchinery, and finaily save nto a coal mine, where he is firs o slide down a pole and rescue him. In the fourth act there is more villainy, the death ind the demise or Imprisonment of all he minor heroes and heroineftes, are made proportionately happy. The acting its the pi —————— “Charity” His Subject. The eloquent Paulist missionary, the E. H. Younan, will lecture in St. v avenue, to-morrow evening, on ' The lecture is for the benefit “Chari 21, and this will be the last oppor- tunity of hearing the reverend gentleman « on this coast. —_—————— The Bondsmen Now Suffer. Suit was commenced yesterday in the locate him, ——— If President McKinley to-day Watch for —— e DIED. this city, April 15, 180 Schulz, beloved husband of ‘Mra. Logiis Schulz, father of Gretchen Herby, Fitz, Paul, ax, Otto and Ernst Schu.z. Born at Dues seldorf, Germany, Di 3 = | hama yesterday [ flag flying. On the wa: VHERE IS T BARK MIDAS? No successor to ihe Tivolt's jollv Faster| Underwriters and Ship- fIE ping Men Fear for Her Safety. She Was Out in the Storm That Nearly Wrecked the Bark ‘Willscott. Gold-Hunters From All Parts of the Union Are Engaging to Kotzebue. N It is feared in shipping circles that the | British bark Mic now days from Nag: Japa down with all 3 sailed fom the Orie later than the Mida. their destination and, in son The Willscott, that s have the same day as the caught in the Willscot reached Portland in safety. The following ves to thirty-six days. The Hiogo on Febru Lenig on Februa kohama on March 9 Passage out sixty-fve | ©OF § BCTED IN vessels that | arrived gale, me time and | arged their cargoes gone to sea ags fled eight day: fore her, had to put in here in distress. She was caught in a terrific storm and dismasted, while the Puritan, which sailed Midas, was also but has s made the run from Japan to coast ports in from twenty-four Barmbeg 15 and the Pass of the Amazone left and the Nomea on left skipper stands 6 feet 4 inches in his stock- ings, so the fall was a serious one, not only for his leg and arm, but also for his dignity. People from all parts of the Union are going to the Kotzebue Sound gold fields on the barkentine Jane A. Falkinburg. Among those who have taken passage are L. and S. Thomas of Michigan, S. B. Roberts of Tow: George 1. and R. E. Reeves of India Nels Est, Louis Lar- sen and Louis Hill of Kentucky; Clarence and Charles F. Maxson and George H. Lewis of New York, a party of three from the Brush Manufacturing Company of San Francisco; Olif P. Anderson of Stanislaus County; Preston R. Davis, County Surveyor of Santa Rosa, and his son, J. W. Davis; James A. Shaw, a large vinevardist of Sonoma; J. N. Henshaw, Sonoma; C. M. Tozer of Tulare; W. Getz and R. Johnson of San Francisco; Alex- ander and J. M. Campbell, J. W. Bowles, J. H. Elkington of Fresno; J. J. Skofield of Tuolumne; Henry Johnson of Stanis- laus; W. C. Larcom of San Jose; J. L. Chase and George Webb of Wyoming, and Charles McAllister and O. Rowland of San Francisco. - >. D. Lane, Louis Lane and S. H. How- San Francisco have also pur- chased their tickets, and are going to take up the steam-launch Fancy with them. She Is 23 feet long and 6 feet broad, and Mr. Lane intends to prospect every creek that runs into the Kubuck River. The fine river steamer Kotzebue, that is to carry the other passengers. is almost r]‘:mplmml, and will be launched in a few | days. THE CORRIDORS. J. S. McBride of San Jose 1s at the Lick. at be- H. W. Walker, from Willows, is at the Grand. Dr. S. A. Deual, from Vanecla, is at the Grand. C. H. Phillips of San Jose Is at the Oc- cidental. | Jackson Hatch of San Jose is at the Baldwin. E. B. Stowe, from Stockton, is at the California. J. H. Plerce of Buffalo is registered at the Palace. T. K. Beard, from Modesto, is a guest arch 10, while the Mistley Hall left At theiLine agasaki on .February 27 and the Se- | ek : mantha on the same day. In view of these | thflflr‘t‘r?d (.,""“’" Clarke and wife are at facts, It is no wonder, then, that shipping -l 2O and insurance men are anxious about the | J. M. Sims of Honolulu is registered at Midas | the Occidental. “The anxiously looked for tramp steamer | George H. Cross, from Boston, is a Venus arrived from Hongkong via Yoko- morning with the yellow to Yokohama Chief ) taken sick, and when the vessel put in at Nagasaki he was put ashore, suffering from small- During the run to San Francisco d Horace Brown was taken sick, and was still confined to his room Drs. enau ordered the Venus into Engineer Peter Harvey po Chief Stewa when the 1 came to an Hill and Ro: anchor. ntine, where she will be thoroughly | gu at the Palace. Charles B. guest at the Palace. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Oliver of Chicago are at the California. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Missen of Salem, N. C., are at the Grand. H. B. Clawson, a capitalist from Salt Lake City, is at the Palace. 0Oo00O0O0OOOQOOCO I2ddy of New Mexico is a “What s this?"” qua o asked the confl- fumigated, after which she will dock. OF INTEREST g dence man of the The Venus took the place of the Coptic | © walter at the free for this trip. The latter vessel was dis- | O TO ALL O lunch counter as abled in a hurricane, and had to dock at | 0 NATURALISTS. © he brought over Hongkong for repai almost the entire trip of the Venus. but has an un- rgo, among which is 115,- on the British bark from Green-street He and brought_no pa usually heavy ¢ 000 maits of rice Fred Gast, a sallor his ngers, e ¥ about 1 a. m. ship's boat Gast stumbled lumber and fell overboard. must have struck the lying in the slip between Vallejo street not come to could be found arch was his hat. after ay morning. Dahigren started for the vessel and while looking for the it snowed during She o his 5 cent steam Q000000 O0OO andreached for a plate on which he proceeded to heap a quarter's worth of food. *“That,” replied the chef, “is a new dish called raw fish and mitte harrie. The raw fish is com- posed principally of fish and the mitte harrie is a sauce made of salt water, lime julce and cocoanut milk. Try some?” over some s fall he | “I don’t mind if T do. I never heard of s that is | this particular dish before,” he procecded, Green and nd sunk. His remains did the surface, and all that a most diligent as he started to pile enough to make a middleweight whale on his plate, *‘but I have tasted some queer things in my time. " The tug Vigilant is back among the *I remember when I was connected with Spreckels fleet again, and Captain John | the diamond mines in South America I Silovich is once more happy. = There | ys.q to consider myself quite a gourmet, was a_hitch over the price of the vessel, only too glad to | and Mr. Spreckels w get his vessel back again. Captair steamers yesterday. Cap went from the Fuiton to eneme to the Fulton. The Mare Island and Vallejo steamer Monticello is to be laid up for a few days, and the tug Sea Queen will take her place. The Monticello is to have her guards ex- tended and other repairs made which will make her a first-class sea boat F. Clark, a waiter employed urant on Pine street, met with a pecu- vesterday, and _had treated ‘at the Harbor Receiving Just as Clark was | swinging door with | in his hands a diner | open, and | He was very badly cut by the broken glass, and a dozen stitches had to be taken.in liar accident Hospital by Dr. Green. a trayful of order: in a hurry, flung the Clark’s head went clean th his [§ alp by Dr. Green. crutches for several d: buildin; door Htain rough it. A number Fulton and McIntyre changed Johnson the Hueneme and Captain McIntyre went from the Hu- at a rest- his ptain Whitesides of the bark North- ern Light nearly broke his leg yesterda; and, as it is, he will have to go around on | 3 of piles to be used in the foundation of a | n East strect were lying on the ! and never let slip an opportunity of try- ing my taste on something new. I went through the whole gamut of South Amer- ican delicacies from plain beans cooked In jaguar fat to fancy butterflies brochette, but I think the most toothsome morsel I ever ran across was a spare rib from the fourth auarter of a boa constrictor that 1 shot myself while out birdsnest- ing in the Andes at a place called High Ball, some 7000 feet above the sea level. We merely smeared the meat over with a little juice obtained by crushing some leaves of the Pampata and, sticking It on the end of a native lance, allowed it to slowly broil over the camp fire. And, upon my word, I don’t believe I ever tasted anything half so sweet in all my experfence.” “I can readily belleve that,”” said the quiet man at the other end of the !unch counter, who had been taking in theé con- versation. *“But, if you will pardon me for saying so, there is one thing which seems rather strange to me and which I would like you to explain. Where is the fourth quarter on a snake to be street. hey were wet and slippery, hav- | rounqz ng been just drawn from the bay. Cap- | Omn0* ; tain Whitesides attempted to walk over 1 am glad you asked,” replied the con- instead of around them. and in conse- | fidence man, “as I always like to be the quence got a very ugly fal L The genial | means of glving information to those who, / BUT BE SURE YOU BUY NO BELT TILL YOU SEE DR. PIERCE’ ADVERTISEMENTS. ELECTRIG BELTS pav Are good things 1f properly made, but some of ‘the things which are sold ks “electric belts” at high prices by . unprincipied quacks are actually not worth 5 cents apiece.. If you want a good belt, one to last a_reasonable length of time, and Bl you with Electricity from the soles of your feet to the top of your head, you MUST have “‘Dr. Pierces’,” for it Is the BEST and is warranted to be exnctly as represented. TESTIMONIALS we have enough of to fill this entire newspaper, and tells for yoursel Send for our Free Book, No. 2. a1l about it. Or call at ofiice and examine the goods It gives price list IF RUPTURED, ask also for our latest “PAMPHLET No. b Rag ADDRESS, or call on the Pierce Electric Co., 620 Market St PP. PALACE HOTEL,-S. F. - SEATTLE OFFICE—Sullivan block, 712 First ave., Seattle, Wash. " probably, have not had the same oppor- tunities of picking up knowledge by travel that have been mine. The fourth quarter of a snake, sir, is always to be found about midway becween the third and fifth quarters, and runs directly along the spine from top to bottom.” “Of course, how foolish of me not to have known that,” sald tbe quiet one. “I thank you, sir, for your kindness. ‘Won’t you have something to drink?’ Louisville, Ky., are at the Palace. of Ferndale, is a guest at the Occidental. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Tobin have come the Palace. i J. W. F. Diss, a wealthy merchant of companied by his wife. Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Gregg and family arrivals at the Occidental. is down on a business trip to the city. He is registered at the Grand. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Bodman of New York are staying at the Palace while on a visit of pleasure to the coast. | Mr. and Mrs. John Jacob Otter of | Dr. S. B. Swift, a prominent physician | up from Burlingame and are staying at San Bernardino, is at the California, ac- | of Cleveland O., are among yesterday's | Robert Nixon Jr., of the Yreka Journal, | fj No out Richard White, editor of the Gazette of Montreal, Canada, arrived at the Palace | last night. He is on & tour of the West- ern States, and will leave for home on | Thursday. ———————————— ADVERTISEMENTS. It gains your favor instan- taneously by reason of its high merits and holds it with a firm grip. VAL, AL LT BRR G Co. Louis Cahen & Son, Wholesale Dealers, 416-418 Sacramento Street, San Francisco, SUPPLIES { = KLONDIKE should include BORDEN’S Peerless Brand EVAPORATED CREAM UNSWEETENED The high reputation for keeping T:mv is already well estab- lished; hence, no experiment. NEW YORK CONDENSED MILK CO. = J OE POHEIM THE TAILOR' The best fitting clothes and the best quality clothes at prices 20 per cent. less than asked by any other tailoring establishment on Pacific Coast. PRICES BELOW: rante suire 70 onoeR +o omoxn | $3.50 $10.00 | 4-50 sAmMPLES 3350 3% awo nuies 150 0. FOR GELF- 12:50 2.0 15 wiasumemewr 29 oo o rmee B0 ) 201-203 TMontgomery St. 844-846 Market St. | 1110-1112 Market St. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. The largest tail- oring establish- ment on Pactfic Coast. DR.MCNULTY, fI'HIS WELL-KNOWN AND RELIABLE OLu L Spexlalist cnres Private,Nervous, Blood wid Skin Diseases of Men only. Maniy Power restored. Over 20years' experience. Send for Book, free. Patlents cured at Home. Terms reasonable. Hours, 9 to3 dally;6:30 to8.30 ev'gs, Sundays, 10to12. Consulta- tonfree and sacredly confldential. Cali oraddress P. ROSCOE McNULTY, M. D., 26} Kearny Street. San Francisco. €'al WONG W00, CHINESE TEA AND HERB SANITARIUM, 776 CLAY ST., San Franciece, Cal. All diseases cured exclusive- ly by Chinese herbs, over 3000 varieties being used. ADVICE 9:30 to 11 a. m., 1 to 3 and 7 to (L MR FREE. Hours, 9 p. m. Baja California [ANA BITTERS 1s a poweriul jhiruu.siac and speciuc wiic for the sexual and urinary organs of both sexes, and a great remedy for diseases of the kidneys and bladder. A great Restorative, Invigorator and Nervine. Sell its owa Merits; no long-winded testimonlals necessary. A . ALFS & BRUNE, Agents, 8. Fe-(Send for Circular.) RATILROAD TRAVEL. NORTH PACIFIC COAST RAILROAD. Via Sausalito Ferry. From San FPrancisco, Commencing September e WEEK DAYS. For Mill Valley and San Rafael—*7:25, *9:30, 11:30 &, m.; *1:45, 3:45, *5:15, 6:00, 6:30 p. Extra trips for San Rafael on Mondays, Wed: nesdays and Saturdays at 11:30 p. m. SUNDAYS. For Mill Valley and San Rafacl—s:00, *10:00, *11:30 &, m.; *1:16, 5:00, *4:30, 6:15 p. m. 0 San ‘Quentin. AINS. 7:25 a. m. week days for Cazadero and way sta- tions; 1:45 p. m. Saturdays (mixed train) for Duncan’ Mills and way stations; §:00 a. m. - Sundays for Point Reyes and way stations. ADVERTISEMENTS. for miners. 148-page logue. The Pets Of Every Klondike Camp. fit complete without one. Strong, light-weight models Send name and address on a postal card for illustrated cata- It is free. Wirchester Repeating ArmsCo. NEW HAVEN, CONN. 418 Market St., San Francisco, Cal. i ¥ / Farmek: This is the third time since Spring you have lost your well enough some Ripans night, or one time because you don’t feel to work. Tabules and take one at If you will buy after each meal for a day or two, you'll be all right, and stay so, too, if you take one when you notice that you begin to dozen a year, feel bad. but I always keep them in I don’t use a RAILROAD TRAVEL. SAN FRANGISCU and HORTH PACIFIC RAILWAY Co. Tiburon Ferry, Foot of Market St. BAN O TO SAN RAFAEL. WEEK_ DA 0, 9:00, 11:00 a. m.; 12:35, . p. m. Thursdays—Extra trip Saturdays—Extra trips at 1:30 m. . 9:80, 11:00 & m.; 1:30, 3:30, L TO SAN FRANCISCO. 6:10, 7:50, 9:20, 11:10 a. m.; 5 Saturdays—Extra trips m. . 11:10 a. m.; 1:40, 3:40, Betiveen rancisco and Schuetzen Park same schedule as abov Leave = Arrive €an Franciseo. | ‘BeT5% | gan Franclsea | oot Week | Sun- | pogdon Sun. | Week Days. | days. | Desti days | days. . ]10:40a.m.] 8:40am am. | Petalnma, Wp.m.| €ania Rosa. ~ Fulton, Windsor, | Geyserviile, .m. |8:00a’'m. | Cloverdale, Healdsburg, . e Z I ‘S:(Xm..m.“ Guerneville 1 7:85p.m. Ason;:;;\i T ]10:40a.m.) 5:40am. n A | | Ellen. | 6:10p.m.| 6:22; | aj Op.m.| Glen jeyse 3 ale for the E Highland Sprin; Soda Bay, Lakeport and ;' at Ukiah f Vichy Springs, Saratoga , Blue Lake! Laurel Dell Lake, Upper Lake, Pomo, Pott alley, John Day’s, Riverside, Lieriey’s, Buck- anhedrin Heights, Hullville, Boonviile, Hot Springs, Mendocino . City, Fort Westport, Usal. 5 day to Monday round-trip tickets at re- te On Sundays round-trip tickets to all points beyond San Rafael at half rates. Ticket Offices—650 Market ~street, Chronicle building. A. W. FOSTER. RYAN, ass. Agt. R X. Pres. and Gen. Manager. Gen. P: ¥ CALIFORNIA Leaves San Francisco at 4:30 p. m. MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS, Carries first-class passengers only, but with- out extra charge. DI G CAR, BUFFET SMOKING CAR. Pullman Palace Drawing-Rcom Sleepers, 8% days to Chicago, 4% days to New York THE ATLANTIC EXPRESS Leaves daiiy at 4:30 p. m., carrying Pullman Palace and Pullman Tourist Sleeping Cars on fast time. Direct conne~' 1 in Chicago and Kansas City for all Eastern points. Trains arri- and depart frcm Market-street Fecry., San Frac isco ticket office, 6., Market street,y Chronicle building. Telephone Main 1620. . Oakland office. 1113 Broadway. _Sacra- mento office, 201 J street. San Jose, 7 West Santa Clara’street. THE SAN FRANCISCO AND SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY RAILWAY COMPANY, From September 10, 1897, trains will run as tollowis: e From September 10, 1897, trains will run as follows: Southbound. | Northbound. Passen- | Mixed | Mixea | Passen- ger | Sunday |Stations | Sund er Daily - [Excepted [ixcerita] paily 6:40 a.m. [12: Stopping at intermediate points when re- quired. 3 Connectlons—At Stockton with steamboats of C. N. & L Co. leaving San Francisco and Stockton at 6 p. m. daily; at Merced with stages to and from Snellings, Coulterville, etc.; also with stage for Hornitos, Mariposa, etc.; at Lankershim with stage to and from Madera. RAILROAD TRAVEL. BOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY. (PACIFIC 8YNTAL) Trains lenve no SAN ¥ (Msiz Line, Foot of Market S Frou APRIL 10, 18 e, Orovilleand Redding odland ... 7:004 Vacaville snd Run 804 Martinez, San Lar “aliatoga and San: . it s, Ogilen and Fast.. C 8:004 Al B804 Niles, S or A 9:004 New Orleans lixpress, Merced, Ray- mond, Kresuo, Bakersfieid, Swnia Barmra, Los Augeles, Deming, Naw Orleans and ¥ rtinez, Mercod i Pas :004 Vallio, T ota, Hanford and 0> Livermore s «. Livernore, Ban Jose, Niles and Way Stations % .. $10:134 O Martiner, San* Ramion, * Vallejo, ¢ Napn, Calistogn, 15l Versno and I X #1104 Woodland, Marysrille, Oro" ville B0P Niles, 5 tockton 0r Lathrop, Modesto, Merced, Berenda, Fresuo, Mojave (for Randsburg. Savts Barbara and Los Aug 71434 4:30F Sauta Fo Ronte, Atluntic Lxpre for M, a 6:45r U3:80F “ Sunser Linsited,” Los Angeles, El Paso, Fort Worth, Litt t. , g0 anl East uvact Limited Aone; i Enst furopenn Mail, Ogden and iy wurds, Nils uid San Jose allejo regon e, 00 ¢ 8:007 O 8:154 DS LOCAL. (Foot of Market Street.) Melrose, Seminary Park, Fitchburg, Elmhurst, San Leandro, South San Leandro, Estadillo, Lorenzo, Cherry and Haywards. 4 Ruus through to Niles. ¢ From Niles. 9:000 Hii:ise ) COANT DIVISION (Narrow Gange). Foot of Market Street.) 17:454 Sarta Cruz Fxcursion, Santa Oruz . and Principal Way 8! 18:007 | | | | | CREEK ROUTE FERRY. SAK FRANCISCO—Poot of Market (Slia 8)— 5 9:00 11:004.3. *2:00 o) 0 *6:00e.m. 1 13:00 *4:0 1 From 03 KLAND—Foot of Broudway. ¢ 2:00 1:00 $2:00 COANT DIVISE (Third and 1 Way Siations (New tmaden Wednesdays only) BT 17:80a Sunday Escursion for San Bauts Cruz, Pacific Grove i and Privecipal Way Station s P @ wini Prine Toss and Way Jose wnd Wav Stuti ¢ Sundays only. ‘hursday and Sarur.iay nights HOUNT TAMALPAIR SCENIC RAILWAY. Leave San Francisco, commencing November , 1897 Week Days—9:30 a. m., 1:45 p. m. Sundays—S8:00, 10:00, 11:30 a. m., 1:15 p. m. Round trip from Msil Valley, $1. THOS. COOK & Agents, 621 Market n S s NOTARY PUBLIC AND ATTORNEY-AT LAW, Tenth Floor, Room 1015, Claus Spreckels Bldg. Telephone Brown 31, Residence, 821 California street, below Powell, Francisco.