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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, PARALYSIS ENDS THE LIFE OF T, REYNOLDS Died at the Home for Incurables. WAS ONCE DANBURNS’ DEPUTY HIS LIFE WAS ONE OF VARIED FORTUNES. | e | The Fatal Disease First Attacked Him Ten Years Ago in the City of Mexico. notor He It THE KENNEDY MURDER. Mrs. Sohrman Testifies to His Desire | to Be Rid of Mrs }:agan. | on_of Mrs. | teg about a rr‘nlh‘r of Kennedy's nedy was at her lled. He r ve hm will be continued this morning. — e—— Patriotism Appreciated. 1, G. A. R., evidently on of Judge Treadw H forelgner to pay a g the stars and stripes. Mo vy night a resc thanking_the Judge for ism shown by him in passing such At POSTUM CEREAL AT INEBRIATE INSTITUTE | Whiskey and Coffee Classed To- | gether. ; ger f‘f Xhe Kenlev Institute , for over three nme some 3000 were under my care, I can eak with tain degree of positive- | ss as to the injurious effects of coffee upon the merves, and the beneficial ef- m Cereal Food Coffee, | ed. when prope “We find, as you say, that neither the v the food value can be ex- 1 after 15 or 20 minutes of | ng. It does not answer to’ it to stand on a warm CLIFTON J. BAILEY, Boston, Mass. ROOM 72, GLOBE BUILDING. “I can most heartily and advise nervous people to use it in place of coffee or tea. “Upon the nerves of many, coffee acts‘ indorse Postum | with the same poisoning effect as| liquor, morphia and tobacco, and, while acting as a stimulant, the reaction is| the same as liquor or morphia. In my | * own case, I find great benefit from using Postum Cereal Food Coffee, | ‘whereas I find nothing but harm in ;" coffee.” ~ | Beat Their Way to| | FEARED THE ARCHER’S CREW | WEALTHY PASSENGER BY THE | | Licenses for Captains and Mates. 1 not suit | | been uptown’and on returning to the wa- | became insane. | on the port. A e, "'"""J’-w:r.rnmlfnm BEFORE A NORTHWEST WIND. FLEET of coasting schooners took advantage of the change in the wind yesterday and came fiying into At 6 in the morning it was blowing six miles an hour from the southeast and at 2 in the afternoon it was piping along at thirty-six miles an hour from the northwest. \ wind goes back to the southens’ ng\\m it will rain. " Old skippers say that when the HAD T WOMEN STOWAWAYS ON THE AUSTRALIA'S the Hawaiian Isles. BARKENTINE INSANE. | Man Drowned From Steamer Australia—A Fleet of Coasters Arrive. The wind chopped around very suddenly | ¥ and brought a fleet of coasting | s into port. d at 2 p. m. 1t was bowling rate of 35 miles an hour from | Shipping men say it will blow pretty hard for the next twenty-four | . after which we will get a southerly | els that made an an- | hooner William Ren- . ich for twenty days was beating her way' against adverse winds. She sail- ed from Tacoma on January 11 and had little else but light winds, head winds and calms until she ran Into the nor'west- er. The schooners Sacramento 8 days | | from Tillamook, Jennie Thelin and Emma | Utter 7 days from Grays Hardor, Ocean S ys from Iverson's Landing, Parkersburg § days from Coquille River and Sparrow 3 days from Eureka also got in The Oceanjc Steamship Company’s Aus- tralia from Honolulu was also among the s. She brought up a very large cargo, but not many passengers. Among those who came up in the steerage were Mrs. M. Butler and Miss C. Butler. They here orlfimall) from Santa Clara in rch of wo: They could not get any- thing to do in San Francisco, and hearing that business was booming in Honolulu they determined to go there. Mother and daughmr were without funds and how to reach the Paradise of the Pacific was at first a question they could not solve. Finally they resolved to stow themselves away on the steamer Alameda which left here a month ago. They were soon dis- covered, and when the vessel reached Honolulu they were turned over to the umhorillcs When the Australla arrived from San Francisco they were put aboard | her and brought back here. The women are both honest and hard- working, und assert that they will stow thems vay on some other vessel and | land in H i again, no matter what | | comes or goes. The mother gives her age as 37 and the daughter as 17 years. They left the Australia as soon as she docked. “No_one could have treated us better than did the officers on the Alameda and Austraiia,” sald Mrs. Butler yesterday. ““We expected to find everybody angry on the Alameda when they found us out, but they weren't. We proyed that we had no money and only wanted work, so the pur- ser sald no more about it and gave us quarters in the steerage. The purser also told us that if we had no money we could not land in Honolulu, and, sure enough, we could not. They allowed us ashore, but only to put us in jail, and there we remained until the Australia arrived. un that vessel we were unbidden guests also, but everybody was kind to us, and the passage has been a very pleasant one. In spite of the setback, my daughter and I are going to try it again, an we'll land this time. Just you wait and see.” man named Joseph Sylva was drowned from the Australia while the ves- sel was at Honolulu. The deceased and a young woman named Isabella Perry had ter front wanted to board the steamer Helene, lying alongside the Australia. as they were passing from one vessel to the other the woman stumbled and fell over- board. In her fall she grabbed at Sylva and pulled him overboard also. She was rescued, but Sylva must have struck the side of ‘the steamer, as he sank and did not come up a u.ln, The body was recov- ered the next a§ the Australia’s crew. The gunboat Yorktown reached Hono- lulu on January 22. She is to join the Ben- nington at Guam, and then both vessels will proceed to Manila. During the voyage of the barkentine Archer from Honolulu to S8an Francisco Henry Heitmann, one of the passengers, He thought the captain and crew were conspiring to kill him, and !or the past nine dn{u he has refused {00 ‘When taken ashore yesterday by Sergeant Bunner and Officer Ferguson of the Harbor Police he was in a verfi weak condition. When searched at the City Hall a gold watch and chain, two checks laus Spreckels of Honolulu for $9750, a check on the Bishop Bank of Honolulu for $150. a certificate of deposit on the Bank of Hawall for $25 and $212 in | cash was found on him. Heltmann is well known here. He Is a musician, and formerly played in the Baldwin Theater. From there he went to Hawall and joined the Royal Hl'lfllu Bmd. but latterly | constantly | offices from Subseribers all over the city, |t In the morning it | an | &s It injures | mand *‘not to do it a Le has been sick and was on his way here for his health. By July 1 all masters and mates of | yessels over 708 tons burden must hold a United States license. As there is not a third of them in possession of the neces- | sary document, the new law has, of course, caused quite a flutter in maritime r Captains who have sailed the seas in command of vessels without se ‘\fll\ll"d“‘- want to know if they ant to know what the new rules ulations will be like. In answer to a query on the subject, from Gardner & Thnrwh the Custom-house brokers, Su- g Inspector General Dumont sends l"e fullowlng reply: Gentlemen: 1 am in receipt by reference of your letter of the 17th instant in reference to the promulgation of the rules and require- ments to govern the license officers under the new law relating to salling vessels over W0 tons, and in reply would say that the Board | of Supervising Inspectors, now fn session, have under consideration the formulation of rules governing the licensing of ates of - salling vessels, which rules, when approved, will be published in a circular, together w rules apply. NEWSPAPER THIEVES. Stern Justice Meted Out to Frank Cole, Who Was Caught in the Act. The practice of stealing newspapers from doorsteps after they have been de- livered by the carriers has become so common of late that the proprietors are determined to spare no expense to catch and punish the thieves. Complaints are | being recefved at newspaper the laws to which the but the thieves as a rule are too cunmng to be caught man or boy who would steal a news- It is one of emptible species of thieving meanest class of ~people e in it. It has a double L‘"(‘(l both the subscriber and the publisher. Police Judges in the past have allowed | a feeling of sympathy to sway them in most s of newspaper thieves for the sake of their families. Although some of them have been lightly punished the ma- jority have been discharged with a repr- | ain Yesterday Frank Cale, a boy 14 years of | age, was convicted by Judge Graham of | stealing newspapers from stores and oth. | er buildings in the neighborhood of Post ! and Kearny streets. He was caught In | the act last Sunday morning by Police- | man Colen, who saw him take papers | from the White House, O'Connor, Mot- | fatt & Co. and Dr. A. E. Phelan, 139 Post street. The boy Is an old offender and the | Judge sent him to the Whittier Reform | School, where he will remain for several | years. ' The strict example of Judge Gra- | ham will be followed by other Judges in all cases of newspaper thieves. M b sl Al The “Idol's Eye” All the Week. | “The Idol's Eye,” Frank Daniels’ suc- cess, is to be the bill for the remainder of | the comic opera engagement now on at | the Columbia Theater, and which is m\ come to a termination with Saturday | occasioned much discomfort | ure, 'A COLD WAVE COMES TO THE STATE AT LAST| SEVERE WI'NDSTORM IS Now PREVALENT HERE. Professor Hammon Says It Will Be Accompanied by Little if Any Rain. The backbone of the warm spell which has been with us for two weeks was broken yesterday morning about 10 o'clock and a cold wind storm set in, which has and may mean not a little damage to the products of this State. At that time the tempera- ture began to fall and a northwest wind | blew at a rapid rate, and has been stead- iy increasing since then. It was below zero from the southern boundary of Kansas as far north as the | Weather Bureau had reports, and Pro- fessor Hammon said it was safe to say | that the cold wave extended to the north e, At Dodge CML the thermometer re istered 6 degrees below zero, Denver elow, Lander 10, Chicago 12, zero, Bismarck 20 and just north of Mon- tana 28 below caused thipgs to freeze gen- erally. In this city it was 50 above and | getting colder. It has been snowing throughout the country east of the Rockies, and appar- ently was getting ready to do so on this side. The windstorm which has accom- | panied the cold weather Is getting more and more severe. The wind is from the | northwest and blowing at the rate of fifty miles an hour at Point Reyes, sixty- four at Winnemuceca, fifty-five at Mount Tamalpais and thirty-six here. At Eureka it was thirty miles, and a few hundredths of an Inch of rain fell at that place. Professor Hammon saild he could not offer any particular reason for the change | in the weather. “An area of low press- " he said, “moved into Washington early Tuesday morning, but from where | I do not know. It is moving southeast, !and will go to Utah, Nevada and New Mexico. The wind blowing toward that area of low formed a sort of trough, and | brings the wind from the Northwest to us. The storm will be accompanied by | little if any rain., There may be a slight prec| itation in Southern California, fol- lowed by a norther which will do more | harm than good. The warm weather we | have been having has done no appreciable harm, though if it should be followed by frost'in the next thirty-stx hours grave | consequences will ensue to the buds of | apricots and almonds which have formed, | and we will have but a small crop of those products. The prunes have not started | much, and so will not suffer.”” The' barometer has been falling near | here and rising everywhere else. The storm is not considered dangerous shipping. ————— George L. North’s Will. The will of the late George L. North, who died January 26bv\ns flled for pro night's performance of Smith and Her- | bate yesterday. ecedent’s estate, bert's opera, in which the star is seen as | valued at $10,000, is bequeathed to Annie | the amusing balloonist. C. North, his widow. ADVERTISEMENTS. THE SECRET OF A GOOD DISPOSITION. | Mrs. Pinkham Says a Oareful Regard for Bodily Health Makes Women Sweet and Attractive to All The world is filled with sweet women some trouble of the female organs. who are held back from usefulness by Fretfulness and nervousness rapidly destroy sweet dispositions. happy if See what Mrs. Craig says: “‘DEAR MRs. PINkHAM:—] have taken Lydia E: Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and think it is the best medicine for women inthe world. ¥ wasso weak and nerv- ous that I thought I eould notlive from one day to the next. I had prolapsus uteri and leucorrheea, and thought that Sickly all-worn-out women cannot live happy lives. Nearly every woman may be well and she will follow Mrs. Pinkham’s advice. I would die. Ihad dragging . pains in my back, burning sen- sation down to my feet, and so many miserable feelings, Peo- plesaid that I looked like a dead woman. Doctors tried to cure me, but failed. I had given up when I heard of the Pinkham medicine. Igota bottle, Idid not have much faith in it, but thought I would try it, and it made & new woman of me. I wish I could get every lady in the land to try it, for it did for me what doctors could not do.”. —Mrs. SALLIE CRAIG, Baker’s Landing, Pa. That Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a safeguard of woman'’s health is clearly proven by the thousands of letters constantly being received. Here is one from Mrs. W. P. VALENTINE, 566 Ferry Ave., Camden, N, J.: —Before writing to you I felt very bad, had terrible sick headaches, no appetite, gnawing pain in stomach, pain in my back and right. side; was tired and nervous, and so weak I comld scarcely stand. I wasnot “ DEAR MES. PINKHAM: able to do anything, had sharp pains all half a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, I found myself im- proving. I continued its use until I had taken four bottles, and felt so well thatI did not need to take any more. I am like anew person. through my body. Before I had taken Ask Mrs. Pinkham's Advice—A Woman Best understands a Woman's I1ls 1899, 9 A NEW METHOD OF MEDICAL SCIENCE Facts About the New Slocum Treatment for Weak Lungs, Consumption and All Damp Weather Diseases. Helena | | Worthy of all honor and respect is | the studious physician who spends his | life In a continual combat with disease. | Through Dr. Slocum you may now | consider yourself free from the dread engine of destruction which threatened to carry away your life. You ‘need not fear consumption. It can be cured. And those diseases of weak lungs and the respiratory organs, which pave the way for the baneful bacillus, need not be allowed to become chronic. They can be cured, too. The new Slocum System of Treatment OLD CONDITIONS MET IN THE NEW TREATMENT THAT CURES. AUCTION SALES. ELEGANT NEW FURNITURE THIS DAY (WEDNESDAY), at 11 a. m., POST STREET, NEAR MASON. FRANK W. BUTT 602 Market. SOUTHERN PFACIFIC COMPANY. (PACITIO SYSTEN.) Traine leave nud nre duo t SAN FRANCUIN (Main Line, Foot of Market Street.) arrive as A NEW WAY. Consumption Cured and Weak Lungs Restored by This Far-Famed Treatment, a Course of Which Is Offered Free to Every One of Our Readers. & iy S wh e Ep) | 2 "“:‘ m,,‘.,mvnl unt It consists of three remedies which are used simultaneously and supple- ment each other's curative action. To those of our readers who wish to test it a complete free course of treat- ment will be sent them direct from the Slocum Laboratories on request. Merely send your name and full ad- dress to Dr. T. A. Slocum, 98 Pine st., New York, when the three free bottles will be forwarded to you, together with free advice on any case. Every first-class druggist dispenses the Slocum System of Treatment in | large original packages, with full direc- charms away every symptom of these | disorders, surely and thor- oughly. | he treatment is simple, pleasant, harmless and adapted to all ages. It does not interfere with your dally { employment or your food. quickly, tions for use. If you suffer from any of the danger- | ous damp weather diseases, here is a chance for you to test for yourself the | | workings of a system of medicine which has never yet failed. When writing the | doctor please tell him you read this in | The Call. BUUUDODOOODODOOGOS = PALACE *?4 ’GRAND HOTELS Q| . SAN FRANCISCO, | Connected by a covered passegeway. D 1400 Room=—900 With Bath Attached. & 4ll Under One Mansgement. Q NOTE mAX PRIES: 1.00 per day 100 et day snd upm.-a spondence Solioited. g JOEN 0. KIREPATRIOR, Mansger. Qo 00000000000000_3 Restores VITALITY NERVIT LOST VIGOR, ‘—_AND MANHOOD y mail 50e per | T 6 o b 82, 50, with & writte guu-u«.w:urecr refund the money. | Hervita ! €o., Chnton & Jackson sts., Ghicage, WALLER BROS., 33 Grant av .san Francisco. Dr. Gibbon’s Dispensary, 625 KEARNY ST. Fstablished | in 1854 for the treatment of Private Disenses, Lost Manhood, Debility or disease wea ng bodysand mindand he doctor cures when Try bim. Charges low teed. Callorwrite, San Franclsco OCEAN TRAVEL. 'TOYO KISEN KAISHA. S'n:nn:ns WILL LEAVE WEARS. con. ner First and Brannan streets, 1 for YOKOHAMA and HONGKONG, calling 'ay Kobe (Hlogo), Nagasaki and Shanghal, and connecting at Hongkong With steamers for !naln ete. n oF- N Wedneldll Jan. 15 AMERICA HARU ‘Tuesday, Feb. fl HONGKONG MARU. Friday, lhmh 17 no:m-u;p licksts at R'du:ed nf tnlit-n passage apply at compan: loflu. n street. corner First. W. B. CURTIS, General Agent. Compagnie Generale Transatlantique, (French Line) D!RECT LINE TO HAVRE-PARIS FRANCE). Sailing every Snurdaxm S0 e . pom Bler 4% iver, foot of Morton street. LA I\ORMANDIE AMP..GNE . -March 11 to Havre, $65 and upward, 5 per cent reduction on round trip. Second class to Havre, $45, 10 per cent reduction round GENERAL AGENCY FOR UNITED Sri s AND CANADA. 3 powling Green, New York. FUGAZI & CO.. T <~Iflc Coast Agents, 5 Hont‘omary ave., San Francisco. > 8. B. AUSTRALIA salls for Honolulu ?ed:n"d" February . af sal via Honolutu and Auckland for_Sydney @ Vgeldonudu. Feb. 22, a Line to COOLGARDIE, Australia, and CAPE TOWN, South Afri 3. D, 8PRECKELS & BROS. CO., Agents, 114 M:ekvmerv street. Freight Office—321 Market st.. San Francisco. BAY AND RIVER STEAMERS, FOR U, S. NAVY-YARD AND VALLEID. Steamer ‘'Monticello.” TS50 e (ox, Thare, migh): Foidass 5 8:30 p, m. (ex. Thurs. '1"5“" %0; Sundays 10:30 &. m.. 8 p. m. and s and office, ,l‘&uon-n. Dock, Pler No. {‘filfim} w0 or No cargo recelved on board on day | OCI".A.N' mvn. Pacific Coast Steamship Co. Steamers _leave Bmd-u wharf, San Francises For 'Alaskan ports, 10 s. m., 1, 16, 2, e N change'at Seattle. For_Victoria, v:mm (B. ‘,l c), Port ’ruwn-:nd. Feb. £, and every fifth 3 le to thbis company's l(!l.m!l‘ for Alaska ana &, X ny'hcom SNF. Ry at_Vancouver to e O omboldt Bay), 3 . m., Jan. u’?sr TR ré. 5, and every B24H day ‘there- Crus, Montcrey, 8im c.'yo\fco-a. Hort Harford, (8an e Sbimpon: " gonia Barbara. Ventura, Huenem. g.‘:"?:am%"ém Ban Pedro (Los Angeles) and oA B e 13, 16, 30, 3, 18; Feb. fourin day thereater. = 1 ), 8t ng only s CoBepey, Santa Barbare, Port N xvma S an ford (San Luis Obis s Feb. 8, and Los Angelu -lnd rll!e londo (Lo- Angeles), 11 a. | Biirth oy th L5 e e m?'; Eneanada, Magdalena Bay, fan Jose del Cabo, Mazatlan, Altata, La Paz_Santa Rosal N anymes (Mex), 10 ar m., Jan. 16, Feb. & | M Yuriher information obtatn fol er. ;"l: company reserves the right lo ehn.v without rmvmus na((ce steamers, salling dates gnfl hronrs of sal TICKET ogr‘lf:nq New Montgomery street 1Pll|c= otel). DALL, KINS & CO., Gen. Agts., S 15 Market st San_ Franoisco THE 0, R. & N. G0, DISPATCH FAST STEAMERS ™0 PO BRITE.A NT From Spear-street Whart at 10 a. m. FAR $12 First Class Including Berths 58 Second Class and Meals. Columbia sails Jan. 3, 13, 23, Feb. 3. Etate of California sails Jan. 8, 18, 24, Feb. 1. Short line to Walla Walla, S Butta, Helena and all pfln:ltln in E-n. jorthwest. Through tioke FEIIS C. WARD, Gen.r‘l Agent, Market street. GOODALL, PERKINS & CO Suverintendenta. RAILROAD TRAVEL. California Limited Santa Fe Route | Connecting Owl Train Leaves San Franclsco via Los Angeles at 8 P. M. every SUNDAY, TUES. DAY, FRIDAY. Arri in Chigago at 9:82 rrvf;w’l‘n‘ %‘"o‘ ; étufina nd Tuesday—, orlwt 130 ¥ {&y.sundu and naldsy. DINING CARS, BUFFET CAR, Ob- servation Car and Fcotflc Lighted Sleeping Car. This Train is In Addition to the Daily verland Exprau. SN FRANCISCO TICKET OFFICE—g00 MARKET §1, TELEPHONE MAIN 18l Wofln—fllflw Sacramento Office—301 J Street, Ban Jose Office—7 West Santa Olars S% GOUNT TAMALPAIS SCENIC RAILWAY, (Via Sausalito Ferry.) Francisco, commencing Leave San Sunday, Rk Daye—v:m o m, 166 oo, 1085, T »m e R Nl |} UBAVE — FROM Deo. 18,158 — ARRIVE and Way ETY 7:004 Benicia, Suisun and Sacraments 51457 75004 Margsrlle, Orovil and Hedds S .. Bioe 71004 e Wty i hosae 8:53r artinez, San Ramos, Vallcjo, Napa, aud Santa Rosa A Atlautic San xpress, Ugden a: Joss, Livermore, lone, Hacramento, Place Marysville, Chico, Red Blull... a5y #:304 "Milton, Oakdals and Jamestown 4:10¢ #1004 Martinez, Tracy, Lathrop, Stocktan, Merced and Freano. 12:152 9:004 Fresuo, Bakersield. Santa liurbara, Los 'Angeles, Deming, El Paso, New Orlesns and Esst....... 19:004 Vallcjo, Martines -%m.‘: Siat 2:00x Niles, Livermore, n, Bacra- O ko Moatots, Hantord, Vieaiia, Porterville .. #1:007 Bacramento mm Sicaimers. 4:00¢ Martines Naps, -1‘5.w-hls. Ros 007 Boui ‘acay cr O B odiand, . Knights | Landiog, Orovilie. ... 41307 Niles, 3:007 San 5:307 5 “Mex 3 s:307 Tracy, Nendota, Yiojers, Bante acbara ‘aud Jios Augeles..... 2:43a Coast Limit ‘El P 15:00P mmc e = -g. I;G': Chicago and Atiwuilc hxpress for Mojaye 2 $:90r Europonn M 7 . 12152 19:452 " etAtag, ot ¥ g, Por il ‘!ou‘:»dnufl Yest . 8134 0:03¢ Bunset Limited. s es, Bl Paso, Now East LEANDRO 1 (Foot of Market Street.) Nelrore, Bomimary Park, Pito i.? mharst, uvu 4 o, South San ] 904 Tatadillo, a‘ 04 hn-w,dfl:m: An Sioer B *2:15> N 45137 111457 r'nrk. nn‘fl' y‘“ sad | GREEK HOUTE FERRY. Foom AR mmm—m of lm-;ln;am (8tp o Jose and Los on, San *7:18 11:00 *23:00 1209 *4:00 !B OD *6:00¢. Prom OAKLARD—Toot of Bread 8:00 10:004.M. $12:00 °1:00 $2:00 3. 1 ~B:00r.a. COAST DIVINION (Broad Gange). (Third and Townsend Sts. 90 Ban Jose and Way Biations (New Alsadsn Wodnsadaye o) Plios, Banta L Paso Robles, Sen nadalupe, Surt and Pacifo Grov 1nis Obispo, o ipal W 11:804 Ban Jose aud *8:43r Ban Mateo, Hed alo Alto, Saate clu-. Ban ‘mm Holister, ety oot 180 San Jove snd Way Biati +4:19¢ San Jose aud Priveipal Way Hations 51007 Ban Joss and Principal Wy Stations 3:30r San Joss aud Brinclpal Way Siations 0r Sa0 Jose aud Way Station 1 r Sau Jose and Way Stations B X Tor Morning. . Plor Aftemoos. * Sundays noe ted. $ Sunaays onl + Satnrdays onl; Pondarsan fags. " aTuesdsys and Seturdaye. nentaresad Woneutays. STharsdsrs and Sundass CALIFORNIA NORTHWESTERN RY. C LESSER { SAN FRANCISCO AND NORTH PACIFIG RAILWAY COMPANY. \ Tidbaren lm. Foot of Market St | BAN 0 TO 'm m.; u-l. Thx}xlsg;y:-—mrl o | g Extra trips at 1: | _8nd 11:3b p. m’ SR . r.lgNDA‘YS—Iffl. 9:30, 1:00 & m.; 1:30, 3238, & 'AEL TO SAN WEEK DAYS—6:10, 7:50, i:n.vuwmu:& 340, 510 p m. Saturdays—Exta trips af SUNDAYS—U0, s L0 o @3 14 e, %‘.?‘3%2“ Lan™ Francisco and Schuetzen Park same schedule as above. Arrive San Francisce. Week Days. Windsor, Beildlbflrl. ytton, Geyserville, s3; st Cloverdala fo opland. tor Duncan Springs, , Kelseyville, r, Lakeport and Bartlett :at or_Vichy Bprings, Saratoga ngs, Blue Lakes, Lagrel Del Witter 1§ e, ngg Potter ' Valle '" Bucknull" Wlomymnltfl)flmfl luced rates. kets to all luau- rvlmfl“tflp el polats ckst Otfices, 50 Markat st., Cheonicle e, e wmcx‘fi'u Gesleral Pl-ll HORTH PAI}IFIB GUAST RAILROAD. Ferry. FROM SAN Fu,n\u:.u 10, MILL VALLEX LD BAN R4, . 98, e m.; *145 s b, % EXTRA or Bu: Rafael on Mon- | days, Wednesdays and Saturdays at 11:90 p. m. *10,00, *11: & m.; *LI5 | SUNDAYS—*8:00, 4:30, Trl ins murkeg * run to San Quentin. ATRO%QAV R&I‘L TO EA\ FRANCISCO. VEEK DA 7.5, %030 a. m.: EXTRA TRIPS -4 qudnyx, Wednesdays and Saturdays at P | SUX\DAYS—‘ ) 'mco. L5 & m; :15, *3:10, o8 Trl!n.l m San_Quentin. AT Y VALLE! 18 BAN FRANCISCO, WEEK DAYS—5:45, C.tfi. 755, 940 a m.; 12 l& 2:45, l 50 5:20 p. M a Wea on Mondays, lnd lllurfl.l)l at 7:00 el '5—8:00, 10: 3 12:05, 1:20, 3:20, p. THROUGH TRAINS. 7:20 a.m. week days—Cazadero and way sta’'ns. 145 p.m. Baturdays—Duncan Mills and way 4% s.m. Sundays—Duncan Mills and way sta's. THE SAN FRANCISCO AND SAW JOAQUIN VALLEY RAILWAY COMPANY. - From Jan, 28, 1895, tralns will run as follows: South-bound \ North-bound. Mixed. |Passen- |Sunday| ger. Stations. Makersneld | 2:00am11:00am Visalia 6:40am| 1:2pm Tulare 8350 am| 1:65 pm Bwpmu at Intermediate points as required. T, particulars of stage and other connections hqufle l! ’l'rl!fll: Mumger’: Office, 321 Market < T R R R { Weeky Call, $1.00 per Year