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A COML SHIP ON FIRE AT THE GAS WORKS, Cavaliere Ciampa’s Narrow Escape. FIVE TUGS WORKED ON HER OAKUM, SAILS AND OIL IN THE LAZARETTE ABLAZE. Transports Ready to Sail—Schooners in Hard Luck—Strike on the Morgan City—For the Klondike Again. A fire broke out in the lazarette of the Italtan ship Cavaliere Clampa early yi terday afternoon and it was with diffi- culty that the tugs Reliance and Alert succeeded in putti it out one time the danger looked so great that the ship's lines were cast off and the tugs started to tow her to the mud flats to fill her full of wate s it was, the cabin floor had to be torn up and a bulkhead knocked the fire The Cavaliere Ciampa. rrived here from Monday 1 she went to the gas | to discharge and yesterday the w of unloading her began. -About 2 p. m. a fire was discovered in the after lazarette. The place was full of sails, rope, oakum, oil and other inflammable | material, and in a few minutes the cabin was full of smoke. Flames quickly fol- lowed, and Captain Maresca lost no time in giving an alarm. A telephone message brought the tugs Reliance and Alert to the scene, but found almost im- ble to reach f The smoke o dense in cabin that it was dangerous to so_an attempt was made to get a hose to play on the fire by cutting away the after bulkhead. In this way the Rel Alert got five streams into t tte, but still the n sent to the Po- | t off the vessel's her to the mud t to be moved manded and cabin and tore | e lazarette. into this opening inder control. Alert were hard ands of gallons of e ip the tug Mon- ame along she also made fas stream of water on the fire. | 2 King and Sea Queen that time the fire and the danger was and Alert remained night, and it will take of to-day to pump the | vessel agaln. | the fire was confined to spread to_the | would ha | is being nila. The | or some rison stre: who wili t0 go by her are | expected that th -morrow or Frida; ( s been docked at Folsom | t Senator will go alongside | s soon as the Mari- | Both these vessel Ma , and s she carries | s boys the| « tter will return | t would land the | early in May. | to all the quarters to_grumble can help it steamer Humboldt came out erday and is again go- | ke trade At the close vas thoroughly over- | good as new, after | was laid up at Antloch for the | She was brought down y ked at her old berth at Washin e will leave for & .n! will hereafter run soldiers’ s a & +OHO+O40O40404040 4D 404040+ OQO?OOWOQOQOOO kaguay direct. All on the route stop at and vea, but the | 3 the two | Captain Bonnifield ex- r 8 and the Seven Sisters or Nehalem River. They bar and s a load ing was 80 low that The Asto- the scheoners can be taken without removin of their cut a new scean of sufficient depth ough. The new chan- mide of the harbor, north side, Is now en- eighteen feet of cel er repairs will cost $5000, | & is also injured to the n, which eailed from | for San FTHH" ile making her d to sail out el the wind fell ted on Miowera y drif; REAL. | | | E S| A TEACHER'S DUTY ! Extends to Food and Drink. 1 noticed of my little pupils, | brother and sister, when reaching up | for a book or any article that I desired | In fact, at | ay in order to reach the seat | sea on January 17 with 2543 tons of | THE SAN- FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1899. THE ITALIAN SHIP CAVALIERE CIAMPA ON FIRE AT THE GAS WORKS. times when the world .in its voliflu} | faiths claimed not the purifying effect o | Christianity, as’ compared wit] ‘he. de- | moralizing er of politics of to-day. It is needless to say that the men of { to-day suffered by the comparison made by the rabbi. He casually referred to the present situation at Sacramento, and said that if this nation was a Christian nation, as it claimed to be, and the state of affairs existed at Sacramento as they have been represented, that then no can- | didate could be elected as long as man retained his honesty. \ THE PEOPLE OWN THE TRANSFERS They Have the Undoubted Right .o Give Them Away. Judge Mogan does not believe in city ordinances connected with corporations making unreasonable burdens upon the citizens, and from that standpoint he yes- | terday dismissed the case of Michael | Freeman, a boiler-maker, charged with | iving away a transfar of the Market- | street Railroad Company. | Last Sunday Freeman took a car to the park, intending to go to the Cliff House. l\\'hen he reached Halght and Stanyan streets he decided to go to the park and | | gave his transfer to a boy. He was ar- | | rested, and the case was argued before | | the Judge yesterday. Attorney Kelly for | lthe company read the ordinance, which | says that no person shall ‘“issue, deliver, give or sell or offer to deliver, give or sell any transfer, check or ticket.” He contended that the transfer ticket was given as a privilege to be used only by the individual to whom it was issued. | Attorney: McGregor for the defendnant argued that the transfer belonged to the passenger and he had a right to dispose Of it as he saw fit. The Judge took that’ view of the matter, holding that the ticket was given in lieu of the nickel. He said it mlihl be different with the person i who got the transfer from the passenger, but that point was not at issue. He did not believe in ordinances being passed to impose unreasonable burdens upon the | citizens. He therefore dismissed the case. % —_————— POSSIBLE GRAND JURORS. Names Drawn by the Superior Court in Bank, The Superfor Court met in bank yester- day for the purpose of drawing names of citizens to serve on the Grand and petty Jurles during the present year. The names -of 144 citizens were selected for the Grand | | Jury panel, and from this number two | Grand Jurfes during the year. The names of 2400 trial | Jurors wers' drawn by the twelve Judges, the number being 1200 less than at | drawn last year. Following 1s the list of talesmen for the Grand Jury: Judge Seawéll, Department 1—A. C. Freese, JIohn P. Dunn, Willlam M. Hinton, H. H. Young, 8. H. Danlels, E. J. Le Breton, B. A Denicke, Lewls R. Mead, John M. Klein, I. Gutte, Peter J. Dunne, Timothy P. Rlordan. Judge Daingerfield, 'Department 3—W. §. Gage, A. Jacobs, Lipman Kaiser, John H. A. Frederick, 'John T. ‘Sullivan, Bremer, W. John J. Ryan, Alfred J. Vanderwhite, William | | i | White, B."P. Flint, John Morton, Thomas J. Walsh. Judge George H. Bahrs, Department 3— | Frank P. Sherman, James B. Smith, George F. | . Charles G. Clinch, Edward R. Rock, | Frederick Lurmann, Charles F. Thierbach, Wertheimer, A. Repsold, F. A. Kuhls, S. [ Bernstein, William H. Leahy. Judge J. C. Hebbard, —Department 4— William Crocker, George H. Luchsinger, Wil- llam H. Little, A. C. Robinson, Willlam J. Ruddick, John' L. Haskell, E. Parrish, Bernard Schweitzer, John C. Wolf, Herman | Hermanson, M. M. Regensburger, 1. 1. Thomp- son. Judge John Hunt, Department 5—Charles | . Capp; Ludwig Altschul, Theodore E. Smith, K | [ Reef. pumps were tested : the vessel was making no wa and after the seen that the cap- ed her off, ed and it A tug to L:rum\"hmz. and it looks as though th would another strike before transport gets away. te ere the tain decided to come on to San Francisco e There is trouble wi crew of the Death of . N. Choyneki. transport Morgan City r a cut in s z wages. Formerly the s were paid | Isidor N. Choynski, the well-known po- $30 and the quartermasters $3 a month. | litical writer and editor of Public Opin- Now the rate is §25 and & month re- | jon, died yesterday at his residence, 1209 s Nor, d”“l»“ h':“- T“'I?l‘merly | Golden Gate avenue. Besides a widow, Mr Sl s Doy AR oh oynski leaves five four sons four quartermasters and & mess boy each | ang "2 Gaugnter. | Ong. of hia sons,. Fers for the sallors and “firsmes. Sow, the | BTt " was an officer in 'the Califorsia AR i B el et i€ | Heavy Artillery during the late war;: P s . Trermere e s15 s | while' Joseph Choynski. the pugilist, an: been sion the crew got the usual w the second e 10 acc Captain | or boarding house and secured a cre | the lower other son, i s known throughout the co ge, but on occasion they were tendered amount. ' The men refused to lower figure and walked out. dillon then went to Lane's sail- Hills of Eternity Cemetery. er pt of American journalism | day’s Call. at rate. Now these men are n- uble begam last pavday: Since | TV ~Mr, Choynski was @ native of Ger. el has been in port the men have | wiil he held to-morrow morning from his paid off twice. On the first occa- | ate dence, the interment being in e Hall Caine expresses his opiniont: in next Sun- | G+THO+OTHO+O+0+O+0+0+ 0404040+ O+0+ 0404 0+04040404040 | = © [ + ) to hand to them, trembled more or less | 4 from the finge shoulder. |10 cc s was not shy- |4 vas some physical | © and upon inquiring I discov- | that they were in the habit of g coffee every morning fcrlo ast. 1 warned the children to |4 off the coffee, for 1 knew it was of their trouble, and would if continued in. I always ruin urge children to use Postum Food Cof- | them fee, for.I know that to be healthful, | strengthening and a perfectly natural liquid food. A short time thereafter | the little folks spoken of were entirely | well of their slight palsy. | It is a distressing state of affairs | where parents permit children to use| ordinary coffee. Many cases have come to my notice where the taste of Postum was not liked, but in all such cases ‘the disllke[ arises from the failure to properly boil | it It is a very tasteless liquid when | underboiled, and a very _delicious, | strong, rich, satisfying coffee \\'henl | | | boiled long enough to bring out the flavor and food value. Dr. Helen Coe, 267 W. Ferry street, Buffalo, N. Y. +0+0+0+0+C+0+0+040+040 2 g : g THEIR CRAWS WERE FILLED WITH GOLD Remarkable Enterprise of Some Intelligent Fowls. N Saturday last The Call published the exclusive account of the find- ing of a rich ledge of gold in this city in the neighborhood of Noe, Cas- tro and Hartford streets, in the particular district bounded by Nine- teenth and Twentieth streets. Jonathan Anderson, a builder, claims to have discovered this vein of gold two years ago, while engaged In diggzing a sewer on Hagtford street. It has been generally known in the neighborhood that there was a vein of gold in that vicinity. Rumor has it that paying rock has been taken from individual lots in small quantity., This ledge of quartz runs beneath a num- ber of dwellings, which precludes the idea of mining the gold unless the houses be first torn down, and the uncertainty of the quality and quantity of the rock has so far prevented this from being done. It remained for John Q. A. Patterson, who lives at the southeast corner of Hartford and Nineteenth streets, to discover a means by which this precious ore may be mined. A chicken, a thin white chicken, was the medfum through which Patterson made his discovery. In ail the history of California a chicken has never before posed as a miner. Now that these ‘feathered animals have entered a new field, where they may be even more useful than in the-Soup, it is safe to say that their value will be enhanced and that in the future they will be exclusively raised for another purpose than that of being eaten. Patterson was recently digging a foundation for a small house which he erected on the corner he has purchased. He had in the yard a numBer of fowls, that scratched and dug to their hearts' content in the earth thrown up. It was mostly gravel. Now, if there is anything that a chicken of educated tastes likes it is gravel. - Well. Patterson's chickens ate gravel all the day. They made no distinctions; they ate any kind of gravel that was thrown up from the foundation trenches. Only a short while ago Patterson killed some of these same chickens that had eaten the gravel, and to his amazement he found in their craws a quantity of small gold. One old rooster is sald to have had an ounce of this gold deposit. This particular chicken was worth at least $20. Of course, this will naturally have the effect of raising the price on chickens that come from that portion of the city. Hereafter they will be sold by the gram and ounce. Some of the market men are already trying to corner the market on all the fowls that have been ralsed In the neighborhood of the gold vein. and one particularly enterprising poultry vender says he will hereafter guarantee to his customers a gold-filled craw with every chicken that they may pur- chase. All the residents of the neighborhood have begun to feed their fowls on gravel. One man, who has a vacant lot, expects to plow it up and then.turn loose a lot of starved chickens in it. He expects to reap a golden harvest from the craws of the fowls. The golden egg story is being knocked out by the enterprise of these energetic broilers. Hen mining bjds fair to become an accepted industry, and chicken placers will be regularly Jhandled by the local real estate men. STUDENTS ON A HUNT FOR A Chauncey R. Winslow, John W. Carmany, Wil- liam M. Newhall, Wiillam J. Bryan, James | Denman, Alfred 'W. Manning, Thomas G. | Taylor, P. F. Butler, Michael Flood | Judgé Frank H. Dunne, Depariment 6— | Frederick Staude, John Bennett, Conrad Herr- | man, F. B, Lorigan, Samuel man, George | D. Clark, Jeremiah O'Leary, Moses Stern, Wil- | liam Hoag, Willlam J. Golcher, Isaac Walter, | | Berthold Kahn. | Judse Edward A. Belcher, Department 7- | Charles L. Field, P. Danforth, C. S. Bene- | | 2 dict, C. G. Young, A. P. Redding, Lippmin Sachs, William Clutf, W. H. Crfm, john K. C. | Hobbs, A. H. Vail, William F: Smith, James | €. Spaulding. | | piudge Frank J. Muracky. Department s | Felix Gross, Robert McEiroy, P. F. Notan, P. | Boland, Paul F. Kingston, John A. Stanton, R e Thomas M. Cluff, Carl A. Henry, R. M. Ho- taling, Willlam F. Ambroze, Homer S. King, | Frank H. Kildufr. s s 3 udge J. V. Coffey, epartment S5—James Seeking Learning Un= |t Sicany: (2ot thorse ames | | | ming. P|er’F9"l\re)’d;mL‘ kD?,\’M“ H. Walter, £ H A stus Tillman, ! . Healy, Patrick der Difficulties. uEy e Plover, John R. Doyle, Michaél Kane, Willlam Jay Smith, Jo Gord: Judge James M. utt, Department Wendell Baston, Z. U. Dodge, J P. D. Code, Charles Reed Stern, Louis Lask, Ernest Dohrmann, Frank J. PDougall. 10— A. Weston, E. M. Fritz, Phijlp A. Leigh'F. W Symmes, Charles C." Mc- | HEAD’S DIRECTOR WORK P oty Judge William P. Lawlor, Department 11. R Willlam Haas, John Mulhern, J. P. Bering | Arthur G. Matthew Nunhan, Meyer | THE NEIGHBORING SCHOOLS Ehrman, P. Ayres, B. Adolph 5 > . Daniel Keefe, | Henry ‘M. Whitely. Judge Carroll Cook, Department 12— Houghton, George W. 'Beaver, J. F. Kennedy | : Irving M. Scott, Jacob Levi Jr.' H. J. Burn | J. L. MeLaughlin, John F. Wuizen, J. P. M | Pupils Circulate a Petition to Be | Mure Alfred Lilienfeld, Morris ~Brandt, J. | Presented to the Board of Education This Even- ing. mil ALL CROWDED. ADVERTISEMENTS. SINGULAR STATEMENT. The unusual spectacle of a band of students hunting for a school was wit- | nessed in the Mission last Monday even- | ing. Tt was occasioned by the sudden | | From Mrs. Rank to Mrs. Pinkham, The following letter to Mrs. Pink- ham from Mrs. M. RANk, No. 2,354 East Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa., is a remarkable statement of re- lief from utter discouragement. She | says: *‘ Inever can find words with which to thank you for what Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me. “Some years ago I had womb trouble and doctored for a long time, not see- ing any improvement. At times I | would feel well enough, and other closing of the Mission Evening School last Friday, by order of Director Head of the | Board of Education. The eighty pupls | assembled at the schoolhouse Monday | night and awaited the opening of the doors. Becoming weary, of the long de- | lay they went in a body to the residence | of one of their teachers and were told that | thelr school had gone out of business and | that they could go either to the Horace | Mann School on Valencla and Twenty- fifth streets, or to the Franklin school on | Eighth street. near Bryant, both insti- tutions efght blocks away. The boys trampled down to the Horace | Mann and found it crowded. They then | marched to the Franklin, where the same | | condition of affairs was encountered. | . i Then they_quit. times was miserable. So it went on A. H. Hutchinson, editor of “Our until last October, I felt something terrible creeping over me, I knew not what, but kept getting worse. I can hardly explain my feelings at that time. I was so depressed in spirits that I did not wish to live, although I had everything to live for. Had hys- teria, was very nervous; could not sleep and was not safe to be left alone. **Indeed, I thought I would lose my mind. No one knows what I endured. Youth,” published at 1914 Howard street, wrote to the Superintendent of Schools relative to the matter and received the | following reply: SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., January 16, 1599, A. H. Hutchinson, 1914 Howard Street, Clty— Dear Sir: Your letier at hand and permit me to eay in reply that it is the policy of the | present Board of Education to, as far as possi- | ble, curtail the expenses of our department. I | find in the Mission Evening School but seven | pupils enrolled in the hookkeeping class, To retain this teacher and class would héwn airect violation of the resolution of the Board of Education. Classes in buokkeeping are conducted in the Horace Mann Evening Schoul, | | Lincoln Evening and Business Evening. Thosé | pupils who were affected by this consolidation | may attend any of these schuols. Trusting ““1 continued this way until the last | that you will consider this just, I am, very respectfully yours, C."W. MARK, | of February, when I saw in a paper & Deputy Superintendent. | testimonial of a lady whose case was The students have circulated the fol- | similar to mi lowing petition through the Mission, | arb it Sud wio had been | ghich will be presented to the Board of | cured by Lydia E. Pinkham'’s Vegeta- Education this evening: . Py To the_Honorable Board of Education—We, | ble Compound. I determined to try it, the” undersigned, reedents ol the Migslon: | and felt better aftér the first dose. I vhose children atten e ssion Night | 3 5 i School, petition your honorable hody not (o | cOntinued taking it, and to-day am & close (he same, for e fflllowhl'!‘ Feasons | well woman, and can say from my . Both the Horace Mann and Franklin | « 3 > = Schoole are too far away for most of ihe | Beart, ‘Thank God for such a medi- children attending to walk to in time, and | gine.’” Mrs. Pinkham invites all suffering Wwomen to write to her at Lynn, Mass., for advice. All such letters are seen and answered by women only. working boys,and girls: cannot afford to pay car fare. i 2., Both the Horace Mann and the Franklin Schools age so crowded that it will be impos- sible for additional scholars to obtain neces- | sary explanations and personal attention from the teachers, while large classes are generally | disorderly. 3. The transfer at this time, even if the scholars could attend, would put the children NEHVIT Kestores VITALITY back 8o far in thelr lessons that it would be g LOST VIGOR, discouraging and might prevent some from | g ANDMANHOO‘D further attempting to obtain an education un- 3 M ) der such discouraging conditions. Gores Impetency m.,‘.,,m ] diseases, all effects ', OF excess “Christian Science and Why I s .Al w“""‘"‘w‘h gt Broke Away From It,” by Josephine Curtis Woodbury, in next Sunday’s | Call. ‘ stores the fire of youth. By mail 500 per bor, 6 bores or $2,50! writea ; with a guarantec to cure or refund the moaey. Wervita fiiedical @o., Chinton & Jackson sts., Ghicags, WALLER BROS., 3 Grant ave..San Francisco, RUPTURE. HUSE NO MORE_IRON oops or prings. Rupture retained with ease and comfort. and thousands radl- | cally CURED by DR. PIERCE' Magnetic Elastic Truss. £ Cail af cfficeor write for New Pamphlet No. L MAGNETIC ELASTIC TRUSS CoO., 620 Macket st., opp. Palace Hotel, San Francisco, Scores Politics. The Congregational Club held its regu- lar dinner last evening at the California Hotel.. The social assembly. preceded the dinner by a half hour. At its conclu- sion the guests sat down to an elegantly served repast, which was heartily en- Joyed. . H. Chamberiain presided as the toastmaster of the evening. The speaker was Rabbl Voorsanger. The tenor og his address was a comparison of the will_be selected to serve | {tated the earth—consumption. AUCTION SALES. | Mar. 9, Apr. 6. | without prev: CROWNING DISCOVERY OF THE CENTURY A New System of Medicine Discovered by an Eminent Scientist for the Positive Cure of Consumption, Lung Troubles and All Wasting Diseases. for You. et J ot a1 F ) L, e iy i e i i e o 00 e o CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED. Do you cough? l Not a step backward, but a stride out Do your lungs pain you? of the old ruts Is ur throat sore and inflamed? | Made possible only by Pasteu Do you spit up phlegm? | Koch’s, Virchow’s, Metchnikoff's lat Does your head ache? | discoveries in bacteriology, hygiene and 1s vour appetite bed? | therapeutics. Are you losing flesh? Are you pale and thin? Are your lungs delicate? Do you lack stamina? These symptoms are proof that have in your body the seeds of the mo: dangerous malady that has ever dev: In plain English, a system of modern scientific disease fighting. The system consists of three remedies which act simultaneou and supple- ment each other’s curative action. You are invited to test what this sys- tem will do for you, if you are sick, by writing for a free trial treatment to the Slocum Labor i mption, the bane of those who hav cen brougnt up in the old-fash- Send your name and full address to foned beliefs that this disease was h - | Dr. . A. Slocum Laboratories, 98 Pine | ditary, that it was fatal, that nonc | street, New York, and the three free could recover whd were once firmly | bottles of medicine will be forwarded clasped in its relentless grip. you. But now known to be curabis, made The s em is a positive cure for con- 80 by the world-stirring discoveries of | sumption, that most insidious disease, that mat whose name has been given to | and for all lung troubi and disorder: this row system of treatment. complicated by s of flesh. Coug Now known to be preventable and | Catarrh, bronchitis, sore throat, et curable by following and practicing his | Thin, pale, shivery, weak people be- hygienic teachings. The new system of medicine wiil cure you of consumption and of all di; eases which can be traced back to weak lungs as a foundation. It is not a drug system, but a s em of germ annihilation and body building. Not guesswork, but science. come fat and hearty. it. druggist ¢ em of Treatr ckages, with When large original p rections for use. full writing the doctor please tell him you read this in di- i Call. Generale Transatlantique, (French Line) VE TO HAVRE-PARIS SPECIAL AUCTiON SALE At GRAND ARCADE HORSE MAR- KET, 327 Sixth St., % THIS DAY. WEDNESDAY, January ailing every 3 from Pler 42 | River. foot of Morton street. LA NORMANDIE ........ R. First class to Havr at 11a m, cent rrd,ur".mo'\ on round ti ‘1l s s TEo 8/ | Havr . 10 per cent reduction round tri We will sell a carload ct horses from Oroville, | FEHReit 10 I OH e ranging in welght from 1) to 1300 pound: Among them are several good driving and car- | riage horses; also 10 head of horses from the Oakland Meat Company; also 20 head of all purpose horses, buggles, harness, ete, SULLIVAN & DOYLE, Livestock Auctlonee AND C. DA. 2 Bow J. F. FUGAZI & CO., Montgomery ave., fan ng Green. New York. rPflrlflr Coast Agents, § rancisco The S S. MARI- POSA sails via Hons- lulu and Auckland for ¥ S S5 i E Sydnay Wednesday, i . OCEAN TRAVEL. | % .u: HX'}{;%‘R-{T};’A e e e S P S | 5:\“]5 !r'wrl “IU‘:}cl"fl\l Pacific Coast Steamship Co. | @ WB"‘ O N ., at 2 p m Line to COOLGARDIE, Australia, and CAPE TOWN, South ca. leave Broadway 1, Skl lnkFrlncilcuw 1. D. SPRECK ‘or ‘Alaskan ports, Jan. 1, 16, 21, 26, 31 Freight Of: change at Seattle, For Victoria, Vencouver, (B. C.), Port Townsend, Seattle, Taccma, Everett. Anacortes | and New , Whatcom (Wash) 10 a. m.. Jan. 11, 1 5, ana every fiith day BAY AND RIVER STEAMERS. AHD VALLEJD. : FOR U. S, NAVY-YARD g 4 “‘Monticetlo. R b nd SV hts combany's steamers for St‘e\alTer,“\wgn' ' Alaskn and G, N. Ry.: at Tacoma ‘o N. P. RY. | S AR oy at Vancouver to C. P. Ry, o For Eureka (Humboldt Bay), 2 p. m. Jan. -1 m. and § . . 16 35, 2, 397 Feb. 3, and every Atth day there: | BUNMSYE_ .ol 2 Rt SHleT ganta Cruz, Monterey, San Simeon, Telephone Main 108 Cavucos, Port Harford. (San Luis_Obispo), — Gaviota, Santa Barbara. Ventura. Huenems. | ¢ San Pedro (Los Angeies) and 2 R’L&i‘l.’é E.“m,. Jan. 12. 16, 20, 24, 28; Feb. | iy 1, gna svery fourth day thoreatter. THE NEW FRENGH.. 1 0, stopping only at Port Har- | rord” Ea DurE opieiy. Sania’ Gurmara, Pore Rednhndo (Los Angeles), fiom e, 15 e, "Feb. 37 ana every i ay thereafter, lo;‘;trhwilmada. Mazdalena Bay. Cabo, Mazatlan. Altata. La Paz and Guaymas (Mex.), 10 4. m., J: fan Jose del | nta Rosalla | ¥ M, Feb. 9, | RES § 1der. Rightly Emissiors, Evil Dree For further information obtain folder. Nieh The company reserves fhe right to change | ofseiCabue orexcoss and us notice, steamers, sailing dates Aoty g '"“‘X' tion. Curek when all others fail. Insist o having VITALTS hrure of sailing, 7o sther. Can b éxrried in ihe vest pocket. Ty meil $1.00 arA 3 TICKET OFFICE—4 New et packagn or six for §5.00 with 1 gusrantes fo € street (Palace Hotel Belian the Minerr, Cledos Fuc T Caraey GOODALL. PRI CALUMET CUIE €., 354 Dearborn St., Chleage et s A Sold by Ow! Prug Co., S. F. and Oakland. THE 0, B. & N, 09, IERGE’S DISPATCH FAST STEAMERS ~0 FAVORITE | IRESCRIPTION From Spear-street Whar at 10 a. m. rOR WEAK WOMER. FAR Wards off Inean Montgomery $12 First Class 58 Sccond Class Including Berths Meals. Columbia_sails Jan. 3, 13, Etate of California salls Jan. Short line to Walla Walla, Spokane, Bu Helena and all points in ' the Northwest. | Through nc\;ucw all _points East. | | WARD, Geperal Agent, t streat. 630 M: GOODALL, PERKINS & CO. Big @ is_ & non-poisonong Superintendents. 2P ShEg . L Buneistanasta. | remedy for Gonryhie b CORES WG Gleet, Spermatorenms in1te 5 days. Whites, unnatural dige Gesraoued W charges, o eny infam e o e strierare. W Cion O 1eri . Prevents contagion. tion of Sol by Druggists, TEAMERS WILL LEAVE WHARF, COR- | or sent in plain wrapper, for ner First and Brannan streets, 1 p. m., for | o i ™ YOKOHAMA and HONGKONG. caliing at | ¥ "n"r"a"gai‘{fi‘l‘”& Kobe (Hiogo). Nagasakl and Shanzhal. and 3 bottics, 88 connecting at Hongkong with steamers for | Thdla, ete: No cargo received on Board on day | of sailing. | NIPPON MARU Wednesday, Jan. 25 | k s Dis AMERICA MARU s e = Dr. Gibbon’s Dispensary, HONGKONG MAR Frid 625 5iEARNY ST. Established in 1854 for the treatment of Private Diseises, Lost Manheod. Deb) or disease wearing on bodyand mirdand SKkin Diseases. T'he docior cureswhen othersfall Try him. Charges low 4 March 17 | Round-trip _tickets at reduced rates. For | freight and passage apply at company’s office, 421 Market street, corner First. | W. B. CURTIS. General Agent A WEEK'S news for & cents—The Weekly Ca Curcsguarsnteed. Call orwrite, 16 pages. In wraover. for malling. 51 ver vear. | DF.d. &'» WABBON, Box 1957, $an Francisoa