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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1892, taurant on Broadway and a couple of minutes later he falowed. His wife was \ 2 sittitif 't 'a’ table with Stone. coby ordered cut of his w comp but he refused to go. J then \ \ e and waited for his wife and Stone they sidewulk he told one that if ! t leave his wife would kill him. The quarrcl was fficer Kyt r crder the other int the officer had to { | anv disturbance up, Mrs. Jacoby t and ked with St 3 —_—— told hi roubles to the 1 crowd that gathered All Spectators Aski Separate Trials, |CHINESE TO APPEAR AT Sl CAKEWALK CARNIVAL Oakland Office San Francisco Call, | %8 Broadway, Aug. 9. ) jurors in the Police he cases of the alleged OAKLAND, Aug. 9—The most amus- | ing feature of the Oakland Cakewalk Car- nival, which opens A at th Ix C2es position buflding, will be alleged spectators. | cakewalkers and the Ct before Judge | They rid of the many | cent fixed the trials | man , afternoon | of will require to dec ghters ¢ 16 the ese participants, to Augus them > days there will be At s at 8:30 a. m., 10:30 a. m,, | T ¥ 6 p. m. and $ p. m. e s 0 1 this morning. Garri 1t some seric swearing to t ares positive e was not f f et his name appears on Ct ek, & yoO rinter, ng nployme willing d no refer for appeared Roek ed ht away, » . © was wotai 70 PREACH FROM AN - AUTOMOBILE PULPIT Novel Project of a Berkeley Evangal- ist Whe Will State. \ tomobile BERKELEY, covel of the p- to be pre: no seer SBAND WAS arey i KILLED BY NATIVES I’ Ri3n! HER HU wr DAMAGE SUIT OVER NEVES’ VIOLENT DEATH OAKLAND. Eathar Jon been employed off Long Wha the nging ——,——— TO SING WITH THE BOSTONIANS. Miss Jennie Jehu, Alameda’s Sweet Singer, Has Signed a Contract With Barnabee. fEDA, Aug. Miss Dr. Selfridge’s Fine Raised. 9.—Dr. Ch . convicted in the Ji 1ty to animals in d from nd who nnie Jeh wis promptl New York September 11 ———————— Architects Plans to Be Stored. BERKELEY, Au All the architec- tural plans for t Hearst compe- tition which have d in Berkeley so far were taken from South Hall, upon the singing with the - Grand rancisco, where she hit in minor parts, ecided g t Francisco engagement of Bostonians her voloe was tried by | university campus, this afternoon and 1abee, and the veteran manager was | Stored in the Berkeley Commercial Bank ed that he has kept the California | DUlding on Shattuck avenue. | ralt 3 o Ci ! 'y oV aken ntralto in mind, with the result that PRECORANY JROUC SN Joss throw as been engaged to sing with the | RReVERL The T PO L iens vet 1 will be stored in a similar manner until the competition closes DROPPED DOWN A SHAFT. IT WAS A BLUFF. A Divorce Suit With a Side Epi-| sode. Fred Albert Falls Three Hundred and OAKLAND, Aug. 9.—The Jacoby Twenty Feet Without Injury. vorce case was nearly ended to-night by SMER. Mich.., Aug. 1AL A tragedy was only prevented while re ng a steam pipe in the arance of Officer Kyte just ley mine tignant and angry husband was | pelled o threatening his wife’s companion with a | bucket while 120 feet E post-mortem t to the morgue. hung on with one hand until he ched Mrs. Jacot ed a suit for divorce re-| W1 ]‘l"“-"k\ feet !‘ the top, whe \'hv : Ak ca o his partner e was unable her husband has decided to | { prkaa et wnanle itterly, declaring that all the HhAbIe . foi gy hive the slde of the woman who then dropped to the 1. To-night Jacoby suspected ft into ab x feet of tended to meet Will Stone, ’Q\_;’fl“ M’] feet serious injury. en a p went after whs : wom he alleges I8 respon-| gypposed to be his remains the S breaking up of his’ once him with his head aw him go into a res- | the water and uninjured. t prised to find happy hom | MUST PRODUCE ALL HIS LOVE-LETTERS @ ~\ AKLAND. Aug. 9—Joseph Boardman’s trovbles only began when he g o f\, married the High School pupil about one-fifth his age. A new o < | chapter of wce was added to-day to the sensaticnal sto of his life ? ® \\_/ during the past six months. 2 g Attorney Eugene Deuprey came over this afternoon from Judge & & Daingerfield’s court to serve a subpena on the aged capltalist. Mr. Deuprey ? ® Is the attorrey for N Elizabeth Gladstone, the widow who wants $2 9 & from Mr. Boardman for breach of promise and for the wounds caused to the 2 aged lady's heart because she Is not now Mrs. Boardman. fi £ "7 The subpena is a formidable document. It infers more than it s Mr. ¥ & Boardman Is ordered to appear before Notary J. J. Kerrigan in the Parrott =3 3 building on August 12 to give such information as Mre. Gladstone's attorney @ O desires in the prosecution of her swit. He is ordered to make a deposition. & & but that is the least formidable part of the order of court. He must take with © him 11 letters t ed between him and his late wife and Mrs. Glad- £ ® stone, all written evidences of requests of the deceased Mrs. Boardman, and Z © g copy of a trust deed made by Mrs. Boardman. 4 & Tt is sald that before Mrs. Boardman's déath she made a deed of trust § % in which she named Mrs. Gladstone as a beneficiary. It is also said that § B there are letters in existence that will show that Boardman fully intended to ® make Mrs. Gladstone his wife, and that such an action was even the wish of Q £ his late wife when the knew that death was not far offt. The summons was & served on Boardman to-night. 5 SOOI HOTOD &L 6 DOOSUIDTIS GO DOVOLNON & U S Yoo Te Lot o @ ALAMEDA COUNTY - MONEY READY grotesque | | completed this money can be spent on | the harbor. This statement is made on the authority of Major Heuer, the United { | States engineer in charge of the work. NEWS. VAST SUM OF OB SPEADING Congress Was Not at| All Stingy. S Oakland Office San Francisco Call, @3 Broadway, Aug. 9 The sum of $350,000 is lying idle at the Natfonal Treasury. As soon as the squab- | bling over the estuary improvements is h is ready for s the sum wh use on the h 1ded to it ct of Con d. Three y Great Hate $650.000 on th em for the imp or, “‘according se plans are those of which were prepared call for th TURNED OFF THE.GAS-. . . T00 LATE AND DIED f canal at s er 1y deep- first, while Alameda, s ex-Health Officer Dr. | always contended that the plans of Colonel Mendell were the s and th they should be ca n the money made available. t some years ago an tem, which has for complétion of the -re would be a rise wer outlet tw commenced, one Qe P e @+ @+ D@20+ C+P+0+B+ @0 P02V 20D+ 0+0+0+0+0+0 W :v'lf;'m"; SRS ‘;flr“‘(‘s‘;"“;‘ k yesterday morning Mrs. M. F. Claymore, landlady e hiBteia oF: fhrae worth street, noticed a strong odor of gas proceeding Priece thoroughfares leading Failing to oven his door, she went to the rear, @ will be the canal after it s broke a pane of glass and entered the room. She 0 ,‘.}"]'.f‘,’[{‘,;r"n(’r'.f E;]‘d;j:‘ saw Hartwig's dead body attired in a nightgown lying on the floor between e iaston!| @ nis BEd window. The room full of the fumes of illuminating ® hts of way in which the | ¢ 8as. but to ise the gas stopcock was closed. . i own f The gas jet le ben.td the couch on which Hartwig slept and @ are part | the stopcock was very loose. A touch could turn it either way, and the jhioicangs of ;y’.l{f\! el theory is t artwig acc v turned on the gas after he had turned % 1e several Oakland people - retirin was awakened by the suffocating odor, @ ing 1o have some of ind started the dow when he was overcome by the the harbor mes the floor where he E rxiated ) Ha with the window closed, and when Landlady Clay- @ ton of v ay morning she found that Hartwig had hung his ° 1l to dry and had shut the window down upon them to pre- ° | | m being blown away ® Only 30 cents d in the posse of the dead man. He had | worked in this city while as I nder. but had bheen out of employ- ment fo eral He I 1o relatives In Germany, his father, ® 3 artwig, resi Hamburg, from which place he had sent until ¢ et 1l month s to his son. ® - to use man was An inquest will be held. it go oul X ct granting the th the canal p wrowee HE CAME TO MEET r the constru the tidal can is were: Dart I Bridg Com- Co cros: e bi¢ 00; HIS SO R LDIER SON -0 >e@Q — & Com- osition 2 prog v befc re th ® s may take were San Fran- Cotton Bros. of ER REVEALED i | TO HER IN A DREAH | Sensation Created by Mrs. Thorn- | ton, Accused of Killing Her Husband. Mo., Aug. 9.--Mrs has been under ar- | several days for the 1, Joh creat Thornton, 1 a senfa- Smith of d a dream ppeare Sheriff Nate at she had b lered husband nd when she asked 3 murdered vou—let me out of th D SR SR S it S 20 I t it was revealed to her tha e o her cousin, had committed | @088 -¢- 54643 riff Smith, thinking perhaps X-MAYOR STRONG of New York. that Mrs. 01T suspicions mi E prove correct, 1 Roy und a5 Roy_to-day co to the ¢ E T the Palace Hotel, awaiting the he and Thornton !k“? 11. at outs rl.x‘— // \\ homecoming of son from the some time and he ed him in cold wars, {s W. L. Strong, ex-Mayor blaod presents a sickly aspect, and NS iR e evi iy in the last stage ks of New York and one of the weal sumption, thiest and most prominent finan e | eters of that rich ¢ He arrived yester- Change in the Sequoia. day morning on the Oregon train from ALTO, Aug. 9.—Arrangements | Portland, and will remain until the War- PALO ren, the vessel on which his son is return- slication en completed for the p magazine of Stanford, the | Ing, comes into poi She is expected campus instead of in the | either the latter part of this week or the With this change first of next. rd papers will b Mr. Stron son is Major Putnam pr Besides Strong, who went out to Manila at the inge, an effort will be made next year i e of hostllitles: with the: Span- e The Hontots bf riore vilal itacest | Presidngiouy otiostteey s Ry to the studen . Torge by the die. | ish. He was on the staff of the command- | cussion i s of questions of gen- |ing general and remained throughout | all the Spanish as well as the Tagalo trouble, winning for himself honor and stinction for meritorious service per- Gold From Alaska. ‘r;r'»rrlner‘l both in camp and field. | VICTORIA, B. C., Aug. 9.—The steamer | Mr, Strong, who was elected to th~ | Queen arrived to-night with over 20 pas- | mayoralty of New York for the term of ngers from Alaska and $200.000 in gold. | 1894-97, is a gentleman of wide influence awson men left on the Victorfan on | and great power in his native State. 30. On the way out F. Johnson of | Though the position of Mayor is the only & The first copy will appear ber § =5 ——— 1 41 ept | Bremner, Minn., who with - two others | s . hel et he | Sere eharged with Insanity, commitieq | Public office he has ever el Suicide by jumping from the steamer. | recognized as a good part of the b | | Henderson, accused of murdering a par and there are few of | r on the trails a year ago, was sen- ts in which his | ced to hang August 4. Davidson of the | | | Klondike Nugget says the output will not | behind the throne, | the big political movemen hand is not made manifest. ‘Upeaking of the probabilities of Roose- velt as our next President, Mr. Strong | said he thought that Roo: evelt was out of | eral reasons, the principal | - i » race for i N o :‘v?\’s— 'r,; which was the fact that Mr. Roose- | RED BLUFF, ‘Aug. 9—The winery of | {ofi *fimecir did not desire the office—at | George M oll, near Red Bluff, ~was | Jeast not now. The election of that gen- | | burned this forenoon and several hundred | tieman to the Governorship of New Yorlk | i . destroyed. The loss is | was the result of the enthusiasm engen- | 0, partially covered by |dered by his record while in Cuba. A | ofigin of the fire Is uu- | 't Roosevelt to the same offic known. an indo! ment by the people of O T | York of his polic dr\vl o hm,-hmrd- | g tion of his record as the hea MEXICO'S INDEPENDENCE DAY. ! Bt % ate govern- | what Mr. | is | d this is what in all | | ment_in the Unio | Roosevelt wants likelihood he will The eighty-ninth anniversary of the in- dence of Mexico will be celebrated he Mexican residents of San Francisco| As to expansion, Mr. Strong says that | in grand style on September 16. The feat- | throughout the entire t there is a in favor of retaining stromn; sentiment 21 WE nave hold of, at lea Store some sort of law territory we have acquired by the valor of our troops and the fortune of war. | Traveling with Mr. Strong are his wife | | ure of the celebration will be a grand ball and literary -entertainment in Odd Fel- lows' Hall on the evening of that day. At meeting in_Apollo Hall on Pacific street | st night the following committee was | ppointed to take charge of the arrange- ments for the celebratio | <t until we re- | 1d order in the | ! and Mr. and Mrs, Albert R. Shattuc S Sotia The party intend going home by the way A. K. Coney, Consul General of Mexico, | of ‘thie Yellowstone Park if the Warren | honorary president; Charles Baez, president: | arrives in time to permit of Mr. Strong | astavo Levy, vice president; A. de la Torre secretary: J. J. Arzave,’ assistant secre- tary: A, Montero, treasurer. An executive | committee composed of the following was also making this trip and getting home in | time to attend to some important busi- ness concerns that need his attentfon. appointed: Dr.’ A Maldonado, Ramon Garcla, e o helsco Carranza, Captain Alejandro Ro 5 g Vidal b Medina, Carmen Jimenes. Rafael o Deserted His Family. Officer Wadham of the Society for the Protection of Children is endeavoring to | locate Frank Valiant, a Portland barber. | A week ago he sent his wife and four ranging from sixteen rano, Carlos J. Mersiche, Abelino Tejeda, Este- | ban Ybarra, Prospero Espinosa, Martin_ Ohl- r, Roman G. del Palacio, Miguel J. Lun, R. Castellanos, ik —_—_———— Ic The Navigation Bureau has assigned | little children, v o1 - ths to six years, to this city, promis- | to the new cup defender Columbia the | 10" 0% oin them Immedfately. “The signal letters KPDV. A great oppor- tunity was lost in not making the .three last letters PDQ.—Crypt. i ily is now destitute. Wadham communi- cated with the Portland police and found | that the fellow skipped out to parts un. Jkhown as soon as he got rid of his fam {ly. The children have been providud for by the society’ —_———————— At Wallasey, England, three boys from OUR HEROES’ FUND BENEFIT. § | Hoylake were ordered to be birched by | th urt for stealing four pounds of AUCTION SALE TO-DAY for § | nails and placing them on & bridge over 00183 Md the L‘IIOI'L‘O seats at which hundreds of ecyclers passed. Doz- the Orpheum at high noon. ons of punctures occurred, and the bovs, e ] who confessed their guilt, were found be- hind a hedge near the bridge, whence they commanded a good view of their victims. | Serooen ARG harles Hartwig was uilt across it, and | Jay night ble squabble for some time and had f; ayed. Germany would TR NOW try uisia 0 +9+9+:0+9+0+ 8 +0¢ D +D+0+0+0+D-0+04+8+ accidentally as- ough the fact that he had been out ed to obtain remittances from be ground for believing if isolated, THE FRAWLEY COMPANY IN 0:0+0+0+9+0+0+0+0+:9+0+0+0+0:0+:0+:0+0+0+ | i | | COMEDY VEIN ' ICHELET says of the Dumas that his quantity of mind was out of ail proportion / to its quality; Andrew /) /X \ tells us that man PARPION by him might be neglected without loss; our reading convinces us that he was master hand at portraying the fictitious elder | Lang | books signed | | adventures of historical characters, and | common sense adviges us that plot and | plan of “A Fairy Godmother”” most inad- equately represent him as an author and give Mr. Clinton Stuart but little oppor- tunity to use his ability as a playwright. If the v were not so pretentious we might call it a farce, for its lack of seri- intention condemns it as such, but e bubble of a good farce is lost In a certain heaviness of line and situation that intrudes i . in_m or less | vagrant mood ughout the play. In modern setting, and without historical make a jolly, frothy in present condi- o have no rea > fourth act. It might as well go on so long as the characters live. s may lack a heart interest a; but romantic comedies never, A Fairy Godmother” has no heart interest whatever. I use the much abused we “‘romantic’ because the ithor does, cation, the while to see its :ostume play is not of m . he love scenes, save tirely flippant and there is not an incide t makes one lean forward in his chair. This is said in sorrow, for there Is bright dialogue, a beautiful scene and some good acting going to waste un- mourned. The prattiest bit_in the play the first scene between Yvonne a are Char 1 promises so much that the after disippointment is the keener. Miss jates is A very talented voung woman and singularly ‘fitted for ~the role of | Yvonne, but she plays it all at the top of her spirits and gives no hint of light and snade. She has the tenderest cadences in her voice and we have seen her do quiet passages most artistically, but it would seem as though she gave us her best (she does not believe it her best) grudgingly. It is just this being quiet and not_usin superfluous gesture that will one day, i she give heed to it, lift her many steps higher on the ridge of fame. She has a beautiful silvery laugh, musi- al as a bell when she wills it so, but she gives it to us so generously that we cease to appreciate it at its value. She should be delicately chary in the use of so rare a treasure. Finally and without qunulficmhmI her articulation is absolute- y clean, clear, vibrant and intelli = She should play Rosalind well, but‘esr;-‘e on for stopping | Wil not unless she give a good half of | her affection to the quiet, womanly, ten- der graces that nestie at the very heart of the character and give to its joyous col edy flashes an almost pathetic interest. Please, Miss Bates, let your actual per- formance this time be your potential one. “Birds that can sing" Mr. Frawley as Hercule Dubouloy floundered about restlessly in an element he knew not the nature. of and Alf Hickman, actor when erly_cast. of Roger than it deserved. Miss Moul was given her first chance lengt part, but e it had neither bread nor thickness it gave her no opportunity except in the. first pretty scene to show her talent. Mr. Reynolds. t Duke d’'Anjou. had such r hosh to to the in- er speak and so ea fluence of any wand him that his charity in o that we could h accepted with a made a stately 1 Charl W. King as Comptois spoke the few lines he had like the artist believe he is. if I but had an opportunity to prove it. He can stand still and look a speech without ever opening his lips. One thing | d ¢ ring thel m is grateful Mary Van Buren and Miss Bates can do for the whole company 1f she will, and that is, give them a few | lessons in French t Their fluency of French tongue is not remarkable and how they shall pronounce the words when they meet them seems at present to be “like a lament to the law chan- cellor,” something to be talked about rather than decided. Three fine plays are offered next wee You Like It.” “London Assuran nd Ibsen’s ‘‘Hede Gabler.” We are grateful to Mr. Fraw and not for glving us this opport unmindful_of the heavy rehearsing and tireless effort their pre mean. Big houses should en. enterprise. CH THOMPSON. CAPTAIN BURTIS AND HIS MATE SUSPENDED FOR LETTING THE WEEOTT GO UPON THE ROCKS. RLOTTE Compasses Had Not Been Swung to Ascertain Their Deviation From | the True North in This | Latitude. i Bulger, United eam Vessels, ren- erday in the matter the coast steamér upon a rock be- and Salt Point, year. The v s dered judgment of the damage Weeott, which tween Stillwater on July 12 truck we thi damaged to the extent of $230. rendering their opinion the Inspec- s laid stress upon the testimony of Captain 8. H. Burtis, to the that he had no deviation card; n the Weeott been swung for deviation since the deck around the pilot house had been built. He testified that_the polaris was out of order, t was de- pendent upon the ¢ pe Dot d Point Re ng his compa Point he Inspectors found H. Burtis been 1 ful in not gettin compasses be Franei especially as t was a large quanti of iron on the deck. He could have e: obta the variation, as the Un States Government has established m: netic ranges the tion of the co 8 bay of € Francisco. The captain also negli- gent in leaving ti charge of the chief mate, who was not familiar with the coast, and in not ordering the mate to send for or call him at a certain time. Mate E. Rouse was censured for not calling the master sooner than he did when he fir aw the land, and for not helm to starboard and head- o] off shore < license was suspended for nd the mate's license for | COURT NOTES. } a colored woman liv- putting the |n¥ the ve: he capt two four m Winifred Morton ing In Ge rank Shelton, her andlord, rd Tgnacio Cruse, an Italian, affo derable amuse- | ment to the habi Judge Mogan's court yesterday by recounting their tales | of woe. Shelton was 1sed of hitting Mrs. Morton with a cane and Crt throwing r: at her. Sheltc Morton of throw- fated by accusing Mrs. & cher and ing a ¢ dor, water pi at him, The trouble was aver Mrs. Mor- ton's dogs and cats. The Judge, after listening pat an hour to their tories, resery till to-das oseph Donde ative of tl ommittee « ) the Forty- fourth Dist at ection and James Demartini ive of the Raineyites, who h: red | before Judge Mogan | hearing both s! | dismissed both case Alfred Barletta, a_tinsmith living at| 63415 Rroadway. celebrated his birthday Tuesday by sitting at the open window of his parlor with a hatchet in one hand | likely be let off with and using his other hand to throw pleces of coal at pedestrians, His wife and three children were in Judge Mogan's court vesterday. and when the Judge convicted | him of disturbing the peace they set up | a howl. The Judge continued the case | for sentence till to-day, and Barletta wiil reprimand | W. M. Grogen, a soldier belonging to the Fourteenth Infantry, appeared before | Judge Graham yesterday on a charge of | battery upon Ah Kee, a porter for Gold- | berg, Bowen & Co. About 7 o'clock ye terday morning Grogen, who was drunk, | knocked Ah Kee down. and explained to | the Judge that he thought the Chinese was a_Filipino, and as_he was going to | fight the Filipincs he thought there was no harm in what he had done. The; Judge talked to him severely, and he went down on his knees and begged for mercy. The Judge convicted him, but suspended | sentence for_thirty days. Detective McMahon secured a warrant in Judge Graham's court Vesterday for| the arrest of Lum Sang. who murdered | Ah Gum, a Chinese woman. on July The detective exp: to have the mur- | derer under arrest soon. — ee——— Assayer Hitchcock’s Death. Bdward C. Hitchcock, an assayer. vears old, was found dead in bed day morning at 1045 Market street. had been subject to epilepuc fits. body waa taken to the Morgue. 28| He The SELECTED TO AWARD THE PARIS DIPLOMA T the age of 20 to be appointed #s one of the three men chosen from the whole United States to pass judgment on the relative merits of the different horticuitural, vitfcultural and mining exhibits of the entire world at the Paris Ex- position is something of an honor. Yet this is just what has come to T. H. Ramsay, the manager of the Vina ranch, and the best of it is he has no political influence or “pull” to thank for it. He is merely a country lad who has devoted his energy and intellect to the cultivation of the vine and the fig tree, and his appointment has been offered him because the Paris Commissioners think he is the best qualified man in the State to fill the position, which wiil pay him about $1000 in salary. If Mr. Ramsay accepts, as no doubt he will, he will be obliged to go to Paris and remain three months in the spring and summer of 199, in which length of time, it is expected, he will be able to get through the work of awarding the prizes, Mr. Ramsay is a son of Charles Ramsay, a pioneer who settled in So- lano, where he planted fhe first orchard and vinevard that was ever startedsin the State, and wWhere the present Commissioner was born in 1869, voeiese® oA SRR e R S S ook SeCin RCIR SRR SiCa SRR o father. Young Mr. Ramsay. after passing through the ordinary schooling, en- tered upon the care of the ranch property left him by the death of Thenee he went to take care of the Jor Mateo, where he remained until the time he left to accept the return from his judgment of fruit in the gay Parisian capital. s Y 00 beb T. H. RAMSAY. B S O S SRS his ¢ | Hazelwood farm in San * | management ® | of the famous Vina ranch. The Paris position will not interfere with his o | present one, as the Stanford estate will keep the place open for him until his | - ester- | X | S Positively cured by these Little Pills. ‘They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi. ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. $mall Pill, Small Dose. Small Price, ASH LiVER: KIDNEY.& ey & P SANTE LAXATIVE T INTOXICATING: visir DR JORDAN S creat @ MUSEUM GF RNATORY 1051 MAREET ST. bet. C:h&T:3, S.F.Cal, gest Anatomical Museum in the discae praitively cured by (he oldett Specialistca the Coast. Est. 36years OR. JORDAN—PRIVATE DISEASES ¢ Consultation free and st . Trewment personally or Pos.tive Cure in every case und Write for Book. P! MARRIAGE, MAILED FREE, valuable book for men) DR JORDAN &TO . £ d J Dr.Gibbon’s Dispensacy, 325 KEARNY ST tabitshed In 2854 for the treatment of 1 Disenscs, Lost Marhood Deo diseese Wearing rand minaand Skin Diseases. The doctor cureswhen « 218 'y [/ ges low Careagiaran LBAOCS. Box 1057 Austra H . Au; amship 6, at e Round the World, Samoa, New Zealand, Australia England, etc.; 3610 first class. i. D. SPRECKELS & BROS. C0., Agts., /14 Montgomery Pier 7, Foot Pacific St. Freight Office, 327 Market St. Pacific Coast Sieamship Uo Steamers leave Broadway wharf, San Franciseo: For ‘Al ports, 10 a. August 4, 8, 14, 19, 34, 2, tember 3. change at Seatt For_Victoria, Vancouver (B. C), Port Townsend, Seattle. Tacoma. Everett, and New Whatcom India, 10 a. m. August 4, 9. 1. 24, 29, September 3, And every fitth day the 2 nge at Eeattie to this compan after! change a te'to this' company amers for Alaska an st at vancouver to C. P. R (Humboldt Bay). 2 p. m., August 27, September 1, and every fifth coma te N. For_Fureka 2.7, 12, 1. % day thereafter. Santa Cruz, Monterey, San Simeon. C F,ar Port Harford (San Luls Obispo). “¥iota, Santa Barbara, Ventura, Hueneme, ast San Pedro (Los Angeles) ew;‘nfir ' a. m.. August 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, 25 ‘September 1, and every fourth day there- after. For San Diego, stopping only at Port Far- Santa Barbara, Port d (San Luis Obispo). o Angeles and Redondo (Los Angeles). 1l a. oy August 2, 8, 10, 14, 18, 32, 26, 30. September and every fourth day thereafter. ¥or Ensenada, Magdalena Bay, San Jose del Cavs, Mazatlan, Altata, La Paz, Santa Rosaita and Guaymas (Mex.). ith T arther Information obtain folder urther infor B mpany reserves the right to changs without previous notice steamers. safling dat>s re of sajlin: A ERET OFFICE—4 New Montgomery treet (Palace Hotel). PERKINS & CO.. Gen. Agta.. GOODALL. PRI farket et San Francls THE 0. R. & N. €O, PDISPATCH FAST STEAMERS TO PORTILLAND From Spear-street Wharf at 10 a. m. of each « 12 First Class Including Berth HE §8 Sccond Class and Meals. STATE OF CALIFOR. IA satls.... Aug_ 6. 16, . CAug, 1. 11, 21 Short line to Walla Walla, Helera and all points in prough tickets to all points Through HeKeE. 'C. "WARD, General Agent, 830 Market st. 26, Sept 31, Sept pokane, Bu Northw COLU GOODALL, PERKINS AMERICAN LINE. NEW YORK, SOUTEAMPTON, LONDON, PARTS Cherbourg, westbound. Stopping at From New York Every Wednesday. 10 a. m August 17| St. Panl..September § Avgust ’.V?Nzw York.....Sept. 13 August 30 St. Louls. Sept. 20 RED STAR LINE. New York and Antwero. From New York Every Wednesday. 12 noon. Kensington ‘Ang. 16| Southwark ept. 8 R ... Auk. 23| Westernland ...Sept. 13 Aug 30| Kensington ....Sept. 20 Friesland EMPIRE LINE. Seattle. St. Michael. Da'wson City. For Full information regarding freight and passage arply to £ INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION COMPANY, 30 Montgumery st., or any of its agencies. TOYO KISEN KAISHA, TEAMERS WILL LEAVE WHARF, COR- ner First and Branna; , 1 p. m., for YOKOHAMA and HO calling at Kohe (Hiogo), Nagasaki and Shanghai. ard o at Hongkong with steamers for No cargo recelved on board ca day CA MARU .....Friday, October & KONG MARU Thursday. August 17 2 MARU d-trip tickets at frelght and passage apply at company's ofd “"Rou 421 Market st., cor. First W. B. CURTIS. General Azen: COMPAGNIE GENERALE TRANSATLANTIQUE. DIRECT LINE_TO HAVRE-PARIS. _popy | Salling_every Saturday at 10 a. m. from Pler 2. North River. foot of LA BRETAGNE. August 13 August LA TOURAIN CHAMPAG €o¢ 16, F = cent reduction on r Second ¢ $45. 10 per cent red CY FOR BAY AND RBIVER STEAMERS. STOCKTON EXCURSIONS. TE MER H. J. CORCORAN VLIl leave Washington- wharf at $ a m. daily, returning from BStockton at 6 p. m. daily «Saturday excepted). Regular steamers jeave Washinston-street wharf at € p. m. daily (excepti unday). CALIFORNIA NAV. AND IX2. CO. Telephone Maln § FOR U. S, NAYY-YARD AND VALLEJO, Steamer ‘‘Monticello. MON.. Tu .. Thurs. and Sat. at 9:45 a m. ‘3 p. m. (ex. Thurs. night). Fri- days. 1 p. m. and 8:30: Sundays. 10: N0 . m. Landing and office. Mission-strest Doci, Pler Nu. 2. Teleph FARE .. teeeeee