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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1900. REFCRMSABUSES |STATELY EDIFICE FOR NPT |t O+ & e+ @ OF THE CHURCH : ‘ Firsi Action by Methodist Laity Applauded by Rev. E. R. Dille. e Reviews the Great Quadrennial Con- Extols What Was Revolutionary and an B e e S e 2 D A o Structura to Be Erecied at Valiey and Church Streets. 00 s 006004000+ 00000960000+000-00000000 TR ANS and specifications have been prepared by Architects Shea & Shea for ¢ St. Paul, at the corner of Valley and Church streets, in n shows a beautiful structure of Gothic architecture. her M. D. Connolly, pastor of the church, has already started the tions, which will be of concrete, brick and granite. When completed the ,st of the edifice will not exceed $50,000, owing to the careful management of supervision to the construction, purchase The structure will be 70 feet wide and 140 for w confe uitry vd employment of labor. ing capacity of 900, and will be read ship in one year. of picturesque outline and simple detail. Lofty spires flank the wnd well-proportioned gables project and emphasize the transept roof will be of slate and the side aisle walls are pierced with large Each gable possesses ures of ws and richly decorated with dormer ornamentations. elegant rose window, which affords grace to these special f e aisles, which ns, from which spring entire church. A speclal feature of the interior design is elevated sanctuary, permitting easy and unobstructed view hurch. The sacristies are very spacious, and the arrange- nts for placing stations of the cross, confessionals, baptistry, access to gallery 1d all other fixtures, including the pulpit, are admirable. The covered and artistic o with triple arches and clustered columns is approached by wide have vaulted ceilings of equal arches which follow d the and commodations will be provided in the church edifice for the several societles including the Holy Name Socie with a membership | jamin Ide | neariy | ulty. D T R S O S o SO SCES SFORS SRR S SN0 S WHEELER SAYS N0 BEMOIALS ARE EPECTED Le Conte Story Started to Cause Feeling Against Changes. e University Pesident Adds, However, That if Retirements Are to Be Ordered Regents Will Be No- tified Beforehand. hagh Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, June 10. “There is nothing in these stories of | | retirements.” | This is the way in which President Ben- | Wheeler to-day disposed of a | number of rumors about the Impending | retirement of the University of California | instructers. t would seem from these rumors that everybody from Professor Joseph le Conte down is to be removed from his position in the insitution of learning, but somehow President Wheeler does not agree with rumor In this matter. The president, who has supreme authority in Euch affairs under his agreement with the Regents, contents himself with this| simple announcement, but adds: | “If there are any changes to be made | they will be announced in due time to the | Regents.” There have been plenty of rumors of | changes to be made by President Wheeler | before the mext semester. but these ru- | mors have been without any except the general expecta tion that Presi- dent Wheeler had some radical plans for | the rearrangement of the University fac- | Thesé rumors have been springing up at regular intervais since President Wheeler took charge, but they have never materialized. As a matter of fact it is the general opinion that the rumors have been start- ed by some of those interested with the | object of creating @ sentiment against | changes should any be contemplated. The | circulation of the story of the retirement of Professor Joseph le Conte lends color to this statement, for there is no man at the State University more secure than “Pro- | ressor Joe,” who holds the respect of | every student and the admiration of every | professor. But President Wheeler says he has no | changes in contemplation, and if he did | have he would probably make announce- ment to the Regents before ordering them. President Wheeler has been sceKing the co-operation of the old staff and it is not likely that he will make any changes among those who have built up the State institution. If any changes are contem- plated stories about the retirement of such men as Professor le Conte will do more prejudice than anything else to create against carrying them out. COURTS WILL DECIDE THE DALTON CASE Oakland Office San Francisco Call, | 1118 Broadway, June 10. The wrangling over the indletment of County Assessor Henry P. Dalton seems to have petered out or the wranglers have | off. There have been no | taken a Sund charges by any one to-day that Grand Juries were being used to railroad any one out of or into Congress. The people have settled down to waiting for the ver- dict of the courts as to whether the Grand Jury is right about the County Assessor or the County Assessor is right about the Grand Jury. The members of the Grand Jury that found the indictment are amon; most responsible and highly trusted resi- dents of Alameda County. The breath of suspicion has never been pointed at one foundation | i the | DOCTOR SANDER GOES PISTOLING IN WHITECHAPEL Beaten by a Cripple With | Crutch, the Physician Uses Weapon. e Row With James Dickinson, a Col- ored Saloon Man, Over the Re- moval of Personal Effects Leads to Shooting. o R Oakland Office San Francisco Cail, 1118 Broadway, June 10. A’ quarrel about a stove boiler caused a shooting affray in V t Oakland’s White- chapel district this morning, the result of which was the arrest of Dr. J. A. Am- brose Sander on a charge of assault to murder, with the incidental narrow es- | cape of James Dickinson, a colored saloon- keeper, from death. Each man claims the other was the ag- gressor in the fight, which occurred be- tween them in a restaurant at 1705 Pacific street. Dr. Sander exhibits a badly bruised scalp and a battered high hat as| evidence of Dickinson's lively drub- bing with a _crutch, while the negro points to a bullet hole in the wall | and says the missile from Sander’s pistol | missed him by a hair's breadth. Dickin- | son declares that the belligerent physician | sed Mrs. Dickinson as a shield and fired | at him from behind that living bulwark. | Some time ago Sagders lost the proper- | ty where the shooting took place by fore- closure of a mortgage. Dickinson bought it in at a commissioner’s s failed to redeem and a cl the colored man. by the mortgage and Sanders made sever- There were a lot of | personal effects in this house not covered | al trips to the place to arrange for their ]r:s.ovul. The doctor’s story s as fol- I went down there this morning with William Kelly to_disconnect a stove and I found George Morton there in charge. He refused to let me touch it and while we were 'rnnxlh:nil Dickinson came along on crutches. He called me vile names and hit me twice on the head. s me. To scare him I fired a shot in the air from my pistol. 1 did not intend to move anything away that did not be- long to me. Dickinson’s version made the stove boiler the object of disturbance. He ~laimed it as a portion of the house fix- | tures, while the doctor demanded it as a portion of the personal effects to which he was entitled. The colored man declares that Sander and he mixed and the crutch was used In defense, Dickinson being crippled from an injured ankle. After that row, according to the negro, | Sander left the place, but returned in a | few moments, ran behind Mrs. Dickinson and fired at her husband, after poKing the pistol under her arm. Before a sec- ond shot could be discharged, Morton, Dickinson's handy man, disarmed the doc- tor. The police were called, but Sander was not arrested until he had reached his offices at %8 Washington street. The doctor asserted that a mob of colored men surrounded the house during the row and | he feared he would be maltreated unless | he used his pistol. SeTe——— DRAYMAN'S INJURIES RESULT IN DEATH LIVERMORE, June 10.—Stephen Moyle, a drayman whose skull was fractured by the collapse of a pile of iron water-pipe under which he was working, died at 1 o'clock this morning. The accident oc- curred yesterday morning. Coroner Mehr- | mann will hold an inquest Tuesday even- ing at the branch morgue in Livermore. 1 pikie s g el LATE SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. ARRIV SUNDAY, July 10. ! Schr Bender Bros, Wetzel, 4 days from Fish- ermans Bay. | Ger bark J C Pfluger, Hoever, 23 days from | Honolulu. DOMESTIC PORTS. COQUILLE RIVER—Seiled June 10—Schr Jo- seph and Henry, for San Francisco; schr Con- flanza, for San Francisco. e Servant—Come quick. Mr. Slowman, | your wife's mother has fallen Into the | cistern. Mr. Slowman—Oh, well, it won't hurt her. The water Is soft.—Chicago in the Goldfields is No miner should be without one. cold or heat. TFLE-~ as necessary as a pick. Unaffected by extreme ver, Omaba. *11:004 Niles, Lisermore, ¢~ Mandota, WiNCHESTER AMIMUNITION Always reliable, sold everywhere. Send name and address on a postal card for 160-page illustrated catalogue. It is free. Winchester Repeating Arms Co., NEW HAVEN, COMNN. 418 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. OCEAN TRAVEL. Paclfic Coast Steamship Co. FOR... connec pari Society, 100 members; Holy Angels’ Sodality, 110 members; of them. On the other hand, County As- Vin e Paul Society, for the relief of the poor of the parish, 150 members, | Ses8oT Dpltons hes hfl"’?fi?dfi“‘é‘(’me“mfi‘ the League of the Cross TemperanceSoclety, 200 members. St ow nineteen of the best citizens | = —— — of Alameda County have found the As-| ' sessor gullty of destroving public records | God's heritage. Ordinarily | bishops whose conduct s above criticism | and have indicted him therefor. They | phere of adulation in W 2 | have had to suffer from it. bishops | have also found him guilty of failing to | DIRECT. Tives is very condueive to compla- | are no longer allowed to choose their own | do his duty in order to protect himself, appointment For once a man becomes a bishop, other Methodist thing he does takes on a fictitious | but are assigned to it like reacners, und the taking and they have ordered him removed from The New and Palatial Steel Steamship office. | at Seattle to this company’s steamers for Al away of the it - tenure ‘and restricts ing each bishop to a digcese is sure to come in the near future.” A _bishop never preaches a poor Perish the thought! A bishop is f “different clay from his fellow iist preachers. A month at general thing for many of > is a_heaithy t. P: needed to have a |tend to upbuild the church in the cities «h lest he should be ex- land to compel better service from the Ve measure, and perhaps the | clergy. He believed it would result in neral conference sometimes serves a | more changes in pulpits than took place time rule. In conciuding he like purpose. | under the “The truth is that the political and ar- | said Methodism needed more than a great 1o | bitrary action: two or three bishops |ecclestasticism. It needed fire and divine ed a widespread disaffection, and | spirit from above. Dr. Dille declared that the removal of | the “time limit” upon pastorates would | The County Assessor says that these nineteen men were swayed by political | prejudice in making these charges. The grand jurors reply that they were swayed only by the facts. The public is waiting to see what the outcome will be. N move can be made until Wednesday, when County Assessor Dalton will appear in the criminal department of the Superior Court to plead to his indictment. Mr. Dalton has employed Fitzgerald & Abbott as his attorneys, and from now on it will be a fight and ‘a fight to a finish. R ™ Qu.4;:0.;::;1‘;###14‘4‘-}—!—1—1—1—;—;—:—!»,”% WOODMEN OF THE WORLD |HARMONY ALLIANCE ‘ HAVE A GRAND OUTING EN!OYS AN OUTINGi An Immense Throng Visits Mirabel | ANNIVERSARY HELD Its Fifth Annual Picnic Is Held at Schuetzen Park and Is Largely Pleasures at Shell Mound Attended. | Park. Mor The fifth annual picnic and reunion of| A quarter of a century ago the Nord- n e Harmony Alliance of St. Patrick’s Al- | deutscher Vercin was organized In (hls‘ p ce of America was held yesterday at city and yesterday the anniversary was | ” Pt - \ nd people | celebrated at Shell Mound Park with a Schuetzen Park. Two thousand DeODe| 1,."ana moonlight plcnle. F i n ed a day of dancing, sames and b d The contests resuited as follow: anci ;\'n! one tfl the l;rze;t seetn &z the 1t " a B . t the gate was s obscurity and made .o Bk ’ 5 yeemp-ias K. .3 | Perk for some tine ng cheerful. After i Em:u‘:nu!:;e:- neycond. estimated that fully 3000 people were pres- - A e Dl o inder 123 Gontey won, Joe | ent, and the evening trains landed many - nsolves as fancy ¥y second newcomers after the count had been | e 3 g e for giris under 16—Hattle Smith won, | g6 the names of the Samuelita Smith second. e for boys under 16—D. Harris won, J.| wives, bables and members taking the enjoy other relatives to m ., Abe Raphel the outing. . wo! second. T Vi Lunchtime found hundreds under the e EoF ol Stk SN JI C- | trees with their baskets, but Captain L. s’ race on, - e fo1 o wo | Stebe, the proprietor ol e grounds, was Sasief ON. Alies Jlor ot lanite-Mipe Fipeet ™ My s el For the majority decided to - R Married laties race—Mrs. Burns won, Mra. | par ;xvc'?: his boapitality Instead of both- g 15 years—J, O'Brien won, | Coleman second. © piien won, Joe | ““Dancing was the main attraction for = “~¥red Carson of Mission Camp second. many, but others found plenty of sport [ r of Tamalpais Camp second. at lndies race—Mrs. J. J. Wren won, Mrs. | i the bowling alley, where valuable cash ers’ WiV e—Mre. H. E. Michel P. Pierce second. | prizes were offered. There were also gifts E s second Fat men's race—W, Leonard won, J. J. Wren | unq prizes for the little ones and races and games for all. Taken on the whole, it was a most successful outing. and the success of the affair is due to the efforts of the following officers and committees: President, H. Meyer; vice president, H. Stehn; recording seeretary, C. Gchroeder; financlal sec- tetary, Carl Mueller; treasurer, Henning Thode: financial committee—F. Rathjens, A. Haxedorn, Herman Barthold; committee of ar- rangements—F. Rathjens, A G. Hagedorn, H. Miesner, E. Meyer, H. Thode; floor—August Kroenke (manager), Otto von Borstel (aseist- corge Corey won, Ralph adies 15 to 18—Katie Grady H. Cooper and L. g and Jack Ward sec- s of the affair was due to the ing committees: Frank A. O'Brien (chairman), ecretary). J. J. Dunné n. John Ganey, John aban, J. J. Sullivan, liins (chairman), P, Mur- Thomas Fay, James Brock, John Gilbride, Dennis Fitzgerald, John Doyle | A. Neuman Pyle won, 1o Gosland won, Mary | ant), F. Goos, F. Thode. Charles Peters. E. ; Murphy (chatrman), J. J. ; prizes—O. Schinkel Sr. J. Sohl, O'Brien, M. P. Corridan, 8. N. |G 1. Gaetjen, Willlam Giindemann, chaelsen . Alpers, Michaelsen | | oonard E. Ipsen, J. Dicken; bowling—Henry Behlmer, Floor—H. J. Caveney (floor director), J. J.|J. O'Brien_(assistant), J. J. Wren, J. Heffernan, George F. McCarthy. | CAPTAIN GILLIN UNDER MEDICAL TREATMENT was eawing diameter by There were ck and Beach and Smith sec- rr and Plerson Miesner, J. Gefken, C. Moeller Sr. — e BICYCLIST INJURED BY THE AMBULANCE Ran Afoul of the Vchicle While It Was on Its Way to the Receiv- auspices | the fol s Gor- | Suffering From Injuries Received ¢ (ireasuren), ing Hospital. Teeter, 7. . | While Sergeant in Charge of Willlam T. {‘oveler. a saflor, while Chinatown Squad. The many friends of Police Captaln James W, Gillin of the Mission district | | will grieve to learn that the popular guar- . G. | dian of the warm belt is confined to his 1 | home from iliness, resulting from an oper- | ation undertaken to relieve an injury re- | | celved while he was in charge of the | Chinatown squad as sergeant years ago. During bis term of duty among the Mon- golians Sergeant Giliin met with a serious accident by falling between two dead | drunk yesterday afternoon, was struck by a team at Mongomery and Sutter streets and sustained a severe lacerated wound of the scalp. As it was thought he was | fatally injured the J?llcemnn on the beat i sent in an emergency call for the hospital ambulance. The driver of the vehicle, acting under instructions from the doctor in charge, whipped ug.hll horses. ‘When ' passing Fourth and Market Gus Haben- | dek, a bicyclist, ran into the ambulance | and’ had his right leg bruised. Both men s 1 were treated by Assistant Police Surgeon .’ Charles | PIRNICKERS HIE THEM TO MOUNTAIN AND SER P T rrrrrrr TR RIS S B e e e BY NORTH GERMANS | | Day and Evening Spent in Innocent | The attend-| It was smcur a family affair, the | r Patterson. excursionists were delayed more | walls a distance of forty feet, injuring his | Morrison. knee. Since that time the limb has given an half an hour on the return to the | him considerable trouble, and recently Dr. hen e O O e EEtn Bad bes | Bm Sonn A e It srould' s Aecessary 45 | soning. o7 Hoss Belstiss o it ls caeriad Tun to @ point above Green's Station. A€ | have an operation performed. The opera- | on n"nenum China. Each one e the first section started south and was | tion was pel hairs of the rformed on Saturday, since which time the patient has been progess- rably. ln’h:‘;fi:w& district is temporarily in chi of Lieutenant M. Anderson, as- Sisted by Corporal P. S Hagarty, sing a trestle the rails spread and| of the empty cars dropped on the irestie beams. There was no great dam- age to the trestle and no one was hurt, Lut the delay was vexatious. 000 kilograms from that place in 1897 h !ohoxl s.pstial o Jpeed b o ifercmt Gengine by Whish the hairs are lsorted are numerous. P R e Y @K kkkhhk PLEASURE SEEKERS PASS QUIET DAY AT THE PARK Several New Features Are Added to Chutes Bill—Fun at Sutro Baths. That quiet which in natural sequence of events should prevall on the Sabbath was unbroken by either accldent or special | incident at the park and beach yesterday. Many pleasure-seekers were out and the drive was large, but the disagreeable wind turned the majority of the people home- ward early in the afternoon. Several new features have been added to the many at the Chutes. Two baby jaguars from South America, the stuffed form ot Beauty, whose long mane and tall made him famous throughout the country, and Frank Hall's act with Wal- lace, theé Chute's lion, have been added to the ‘feature list. The attendance at Sutro baths was un- usually large yesterday. The first event on the aquatic d;rogrnmma was won by E. McKenzie. G. Walcott carried away the second prize. The results of the other contests follow: loo-)anrd dash—P. Rielly won, A. Ray seeond. Tub race—P. Sundberg won, L. Gasters second, E. Wall third. High diving—L. Rice won, W. Carroll second. Spring-board diving — Charles Irving won, C. Jones second. Under-water swimming contest—John Anderson won, G. Irving second. 100-yard fina McKenzle won. TOOK A SHORT RUN OUTSIDE THE HEADS Naval Reserve Ship Marion Has a Taste of Blue Water of the Ocean. The Marion poked her nose out through the Golden Gate yesterday and took a ghort run out in the rollers beyond the heads. It was the first time the old ship had ventured beyond the limits of the bay for a long time and she seemed to enjoy her freedom as she wallowed in the swells and tossed herself about ltke an verle Yo he State authorities, and Ca tain James took advantage of the oppor- inspectors out into tunity to carry the blue water for a iittle way. Lfenunnm. Colonel Hosmer and Major Dickinson were the inspect -2 Th accompanied by Colo- ficers. ey were nel Miles and Major Schmidt. It was ex- ted t Captain Glass, commanding lggccr tf the :’“‘,,‘.f{"f,. v;fuld be of the oo EnE at the last moment. oo - No | t. “gle% Rock, s bro t ralts and“‘out isjusi R T e la ahip en e down thl‘o‘l‘l‘i‘l Raccoon flg they st fore rmn‘ St o a bit, ?nh _mw‘::%u&lh&,%l anc ofl at her old b‘e% WI::: street without accident. SENATOR Will sall from Seattle and Tacoma June 21, July 21 and August 27. The SENATOR sa'l- ing July 21, will make an Excursion Trip via the inland passage, and after landing at Nome will continue north thro' the Behring Straits, past East Cape on the Siberian coast, crossing the Arctic Circle, passing into the Arctic Ocean. Passengers are advised to inspsct the Senator before purchasing tickets via other steamers, as her second-class and steerage ac- commodations are superior to the first-class accommodations on most of the steamers ad- vertised for Nome. The Pacific Coast Steam- thip Co. has been running its steamers to ‘Alaska—winter_and_summer—for 2_years and is the Ploneer Pacific Ccast Line. For further information inquire of J. F. TROWBRIDGE, Ocean Dock, Seattle, Wash.; N. POSTON, 249 Washington st., Portland, Or.: W. PARRIS, 124 West Second st., Los Angeles, Cal.; GOOD- ALL, PERKINS & CO., Gen. Agts.. 10 Market st. TICKET OFFICE—4 New Montgomery st., San Francisco. 8 8. \x Valencia | \ o SECOND TRIP. LEAVES SEATTLE. ......JULY3 FIRST-CLASS LIGHTERAGE FACILITIES AT NOME. For passenger and freight rates apply to Pacific Steam Whaling Co., 80 California St., S. F. 318 1st Ave. South, Seattle, AMERICAN LINE. NEW YORK. SOUTHAMPTON. LONDOX, PARIL Stopping at Cherbourg. westbound. From New York every Wednesday, 10 a. St. Louls. New York, RED STAR LINZ wew York and Antwaes From New York every Wednesday, 12 noan. Southwark .....June 2] Kensington ... July 4 Westernland ...June 21 Noordland INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION CO., 50 Montsomery street. EMPIRE LINE, 8. 8. “OHIO,” from Seattle to Nome and St. Michael, May 2ith. Subsequent sailings from Seattle to Nome, St. Michael and_Yukon River Points, June 3. July 3L August . ¥or rates er_infor and o PIRE TRANSPORTATION CO., 30 Montgomery St. TOYO KISEN KAISHA TEAMERS WILL LEAVE WHARF, COR- ner First and Brannan streets, 1 o. m., for YOKOHAMA and HONGKONG. calling at m. Nagasaki and Shanghal, | Via Honoluhs. Round-trip _tickets at reduced rates. For freigin and pessase apply_at company's office, 421 Market street, corner First. First. W, H. AVERY, General Agent. S. CO.—HONOLULU, APIA PO 5D SYDNEY. §8. MARIPOSA (via Honolulu) to New Zea- 1and and Australia....Wed., June 13, 8 p. m. 88. AUSTRALIA (Honolulu mlfi) el OCEAN TRAVEL. Pacific Coast Steamship Co. Steamers leave Broadway wharf, San Francisco: For Alaskan ports—11 a. m.. June Chany to’ company’'s steam- Seattle. ers af For_Victoria, Vancouver (B. | C.), Port Townsend, Seatt] Everett, 11 a. m., June 10, 15, 20, . July 5, and every fifth ds ereafter; change - t Tacoma to N. P. Ry.; at Vancouver to C. P. Ry. For Eureka, Humboidt Bay—10 a. m.. June 12, 17, 22, 21, July 2, and every ffth day therearter. For Santa Cruz, Monterey, San Simeon, Cay- ucos, Port Harford (San Luis Obispo), Gaviota, Santa Barbara, Ventura, Hueneme, San Ped: t San Pedro (Los Angeles) and Newport S a. m., June 8. 12, 16, 20. 4, 28, July 2, ev;ry fourth day thereafter. ot ford (San Luis Obispo). Santa Barbara, Port Los Angeles and Redondo (Los Angeles)—11 a. m., June 10, 14, 18, 22, 26, 30, July 4, and every fourth _day ' thereafter. For Ensenada. Magdalena Bay, San Jose del Cabo, Mazatlan, Altata, La Paz, Santa Rosal | and Guaymas (Mexico)—10 a. m.. 7th of each | information obtain company's folders. The company reserves the right to change steamers, eailing dates and hours of salling withovt previous notice. CKET OFFICE—4 New Montgomery (Palnce Hotel) DALL, PERKINS & CO., Gen.. Agents. 10 Market st., San clsco. THE 0. R. & N. CO. DISPATCH FAST STEAMERS TO PORTIL.AND From Spear-street Wharf at 11 a. m. $12 First Class includi FARE $2Londen. mandmas™ STATE OF CALIFORNIA ,-m strel G COL! Short line to W Helena and all a, n points Through tickets to all points East. E. C. WARD, General Agent, 630 Market st. GOODALL, PERKINS & CO., Superintendents. COMPAGNIE GENERALE TRANSATLANTIQUE. DIRECT LINE TO HAVRE-PARIS. S‘lll:ld‘ ";2 Thursday instead of Morton LA LORRAINE. Jume 4; LA CHAMPAGNE, June 21: L'AQUITAINE, June 28; LA TOURAINE, July 5 First class to Havre, $60 and upward; 5 per cent reduction on round trip. Second class to Havre. $45: § per cent reduction on round trip. AGENCY FOR UNITED STATES AND CAN- (Hudson building), New York. J. F. AZT Pacific Coast Agents, 5 Montgomery avenue, San Francisco. S ————————————— BAY AND RIVER STEAMERS. FOR U. S. NAVY YARD AND VALLEJD. Steamer “‘Mentcello.” a. m.; 3:15, days, 1 p. p. m._Landing and office. Mission. Pier No. 2. Telephone Main 1508. RAILROAD TRAVEL. NORTH PAGIFIC GOAST RAILROAD, | Via Sausalite Ferry. Commencing April 22, 190, et Bindtye o0 U ang R B o, i, e, b "ivon 11 e w06, 138 11:00 &. m, does not run to San Rafael Sume ipe marked () run, to San FROM SAN RAFAEL TO SAN WE] ~DAYS—5:35, *8: RE $:40, *10:15 a L 125 1:38, 2:15, *3: .‘-“ 130 Wik PRIER e Doatare Wein: and 15, 20, 25, 30, July 5. | and | San Diego, stopping only at Port Har- | e Erings, Highiand Spr ghla; n’:fllfl | Banhedrin Springs, no Cty, | gorts, Cnal, wWillies, onville, ii's Springs, Harris, - Xrains lenv. N FRANCINGO. ~a {Main Line, Foot af Slarkes Stroed) ~ From Mav 13, 1900. = Wi 30A San Jose, one, Sacrameuto, Marzsvilie, Chico, Red i ca:19p kdale, Chiness (for ¥ Porteriile srmasees. cpusee 2:00% Haywards, Niies and Way Stations. 15:00F Sacramento Itiver Steamers. ... Maryasiile, Oroviil 41807 Niles, Sn Jiowo and Stockicn o *3:009 The Owl Limited—Tracy, Fresno. Bak ota Bar- erafioll. Sangus for Hauta Levhara Angeles. g KI Paso. New Orisans and 1 Knet . aud san Joss COANT DIVISION (Nar (Foot of Sarket Steeet.) “T7d8a Banta Cruz_Eacursion for Sante Cruz and Principel Way Stations 81884 Newark. Conter siile. S3n Toms, Feiton, Howder Creek, Hania Uruz sod Way 12:13p Newark, Conterville, Foiton. ¥ sl Privelual Wag CREEK ROUTE FERRY Prom SAN FRANGISGO—7ost of Markel Street (Sl 1:00 *2:00 13:00 8:00 10:004.4, “5:00r.m VINION (Rroad Gauge). (Third and Towmend Sts.) T8:104 Ocean View, South Aan Fracieco. | V3:004 San Jose o Way Stativus (New e s, Seabusn ] “lser 1804 Sunduy Excursion fr S &-Ii Cruz, Pacific Gro m Principal Way Stal 19:339 *91004 Han Jome Tre Pacitie i « wood, Menlo Park, Ulnra, Sun Joss, Crux, Sal 1e:30. Z:3ee pai W ay Siations *9:34 13:00¢ San Jose, Los Gatos and Priucigal Way Station 19:004 #3300 Swn ). or Sa oan | Prinipal B * Dally. b Satarday only. @Saturday and Sundar Sunds nd Moodas. CALIFORNIA NORTHWESTERN RY. (& LESSER SAN FRAMCISCO AND NORTH PACIFIG RAILWAY COMPANY. Tiduren Ferry, Foot ef Market St DAYS—T:30, 9:00, 11:00 a m.; “t'fl‘ urdays—Extra trips at 1. ll:., 1:00 & m.: 1:30, S AT Thrth TR A . 150, 9: ;10 & m. ; 13 . Extra m” 40, by Baturdays— SUNDAYS—4: §:08, 6:35 . m. Ean same schedule as above. In Effect pr. 15, 1900. Leave I Ban Francisco. |Al Week Days. Sun- Sun- days. * D.ttnnan.\ days. 90 am| §:00 sm| Novato. 30 pm| 9:30 am uma. 10 pm/ §:00 pm| Santa Rosa % 10 530 prw 3:40 any 2:30 pom T v ] cuermerne] 5] $:30 pm! 7:40 am| $:00 am Sonoms §:10 pm/| §:00 pm| Olm- ‘Ellen. | 6:06 pm| 7:30 am| §:00 am| 9:15 am| and . bl .“m ™ Ckiah for : at Springs. Biue Lak Deil Springs, Upper Pome. John Day's, Riverside, Lierl 3 oy’ Helights, _Hulivills, Orr's 3 Fort - Tickets Sold June 12th and 13thgood to return 60 days. 8 AYS. .. Fare San Francistots Summit and ret NEW TAVERN OF TAMALPAIS NOW