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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1900. ADVERTISEMENTS. 30K HER “ceslively cured Uy wthese Lattle Pills, Thes 3lso relieve Distress from Dyspepels, foo Hearty Eating. A per Dizziness. Navsea, Drowsl. the Mouth, Coaieo Tongu: YORPID LIVER. They -act play, /NS GUARD. NT CAS EWIS. e W ADA 1 of Cx ST.” “FAU FERRIS HARTMAN MOROSCO’S GRAND OPERA HOUSE DAY. COM- . PANY LAST WEEK OF: O VADIS. ing in the Arena Scene QU AbCIE’S LIONS. WEEK..... ..BLUE JE e 15¢. Rows in Orchestra, 2 No i porium GATE FAIR, TRICT NO. L. DI Caforns Joskey Cub Track, Oakard, OPENING DAY, ATURDAY ... Seplemder 22 NI T DA 4 or Nore 2g Races and 2 Harness Race; Each Day- GRAND STOCK PARADES MISSION 50 Cents. RS DIRECT TO TRACI Fir MILLER %03D i L . tals—Thurs- tarday t. 2 Hall. 223 Sutter th concerts, $1 3 seneral admission, rman & Clay's Sept. FISCHER’S CONCERT HOUSe. Admission 10 & ger, Paul La Croix, Mae Tuni- rde, L. C. Bebas and ‘the New Mov- —OPEN 2 u to 11 p. m. ing from 7 a. m. t0 10 p. m. N, e CHILDREN, be. ding admission, ; children, 20c. HOWARD RESEHS AFTER TWENTY YEARS' SERVICE Gives Up Position as Man- ager of Pacific Coast | Coal Company. President Farrell Arrives From Seat- tle and Will Appoint His Suc- cessor To-Day—May Be Robert Husband. nineteen Pacific past the name s mor | declined g ctive manager, but it nose ment in the ldest a For two ¢ ng the ¢ ndli ion of the of | For Convenience of Passengers | An office has been establish | mers | thereby the being > 408 Ta transfer lower. ML i A, 1d. May F lint to Be So a M d ship May Flint ay afternoon at 1 o'cl ir Merchants’ Ex- char ADVERTISEMENTS. WONDZRFUL MEXICAN GIRL HEALER SANTA TERESA WONDERFUL CURES BEING ACCOMPLISHED IN SAN FRANCISCO. FORINFORMATION AND TES« TIMONIALS APPLY AT OFFICE. PR.VATE TREATMENTS DAILY FROM 9AMTOS5PM BALDWIN ANNEX 930 MARKET STREET, OFPOSITE EMPORIUM. SC9P0$0C0P0P0E00S0P0OP0S0OS0C VICHY s rewn! A Natura! Mineral Wate: . vith medicinal qualitlss, For Indigestion and Stomach Disordess. VICHY SIPHONS ST WEEHY Get the Genuins So-called IN ¢ 09080#08090309080¢ - 208U = a = 2080404908050 808000809060808080 2 A. VIGNIER, Distributing Agant #040€0P0I0P0PL+ — + L =0 P090S0S RUPTURE CURED. ¥ “rupture cu fact that during The Grande Duchesse Olga Loses Her Spars. The City of Papeete Is% Wrecked on a Reef | ! i | OFf Tahiti. ULL particulars of the disasters to | the American barkentine City of | Papeete and the French bark | Grande Duchesse Olga were | | brought by the brig Galilee, which .r-‘ | | rived from Tahiti yesterday. | The Galilee herself did not escape un- | scathed, but came into port with her | intopmast gone. MWhile in the dol-| drums (11.3) north, 137.30 west) a sudden | | squall struck her and had the Galllee not | been a particularly stanch vessel every- thing would have gone by the board. Captain Dinsmore of the Galilee, in re- | porting the fous disasters, says: | he Grande Duchesse Olga left San| | ancisco on April 30 with 61,642 centals of | | wheat, valued at over $60,000. Down 1n | the doldrums the winds are more erratic| than I have ever seen them. A sudden | sall caught the Grande Duchesse Oiga | took the foretopmast out of her, | while a similar squall a month later took | the maintopmast out of the Galilee. The | Grande Duchesse Olga reached Papeete | |on July 12 and she had consicerable | trouble in reaching the inuer harbor. sm-! was in port when we left, as Captain laheo was awaiting instructions l'rum‘ rance. A nmew mast and new running gear will have to be sent out and it Wm‘ | { | be months before the Grande Duchesse Olga can resume her voyage. “Lhe Uity of rapeete arrived from San Fraucisco early in June, having made the run down 1n iwenty-five Qays. Sne was cetained in quaranine because of care and none of her asnore. The cargo was | arter a great aeal ot aificulty and tnen the barkentine pre- pared to sail again. Captain Lund, who was in charge, Captain Berude havir succeeded in getting ashure, got his ve sel under way Juiy { at 2 p. . Bocause of the bubonic plague scare a pilot would not go abcard tne vessel, but une accom- panied her out in a small boat. The o ders may have been nusunderstood, but any event the City of Papeele went on | the reef. | | *“The barkentine remained on the reef | for over twenty hours, and as she was the buponic plagu; | crew was alio 8ot on the whart | | | | | DISASTER OVERTAKES TWO SHIPS IN THE DOLDRUMS THE EXPLORERS OF THE GREAT WEST L] Copyright, 1 by Seymour Eaton. ~—t —— DISCOVERERS AND EXPLORERS OF NORTH AMERICA. —_— bid John C. Fremont, whose exploits gained for him the title of the “American Path- finde: In 1842 Lieutenant Fremont was instructed by the War Department to take charge of an expedition for the ex- We acquired Louistana in 18(3. Jeffer-| ;ioration ot the Rm-]?: Mountains. Tha son was President. At that time prac-| object was to examine and report upon tically nothing was known of the vast | the rivers and country between the fron- region from the mouth of the Missouri to | tlers of Missourl and the base of the the mouth of the Columbia. The geog- :l‘uul:!ulns, u?-.nd efl-vcl‘«;-ly to lfa-";amsfi': raphy of the region was a matter of the | OF the sow pass, the great crossin [ imagination. and o few widely scattered | BASE 10 {358 ROYCIAUNG R Baan With | Indian trading posts were the only visible in fouy months, which he describes as marks of civilization. In 1803 the act for | wide and low depression of the moun- XT. (Continued.) Lewis and Clark. | estabiishing these trading houses with the | tains where the ascent is as easy as that | Indians being about to expire, Jenersun;::mlh;h?;irl: = mfifi;‘ &:{:nar;g:;;‘m‘_r}ti In a special message proposed some modi- | {7g." 1 "the Sregon through the val | | fications of the act to Congress. The mes- sage proposed the sending of an expedition | to trace the Missouri to its source, to cross | of Lew:s River, a fork of the Columbia. | With four of his men Fremont climb one of the loftiest peaks of the Rockies, | the Rocky Mountains and to follow the \;:‘hlg? hl:“d sidn(‘fi— m.mel his ndame, whence 5/ er communication to the sea. |DPe “locked down on ice and snow some o e $ thousand feet below and traced in the | Congress veled a sum of money for car-| § ance the valleys of the rivers w | rying Jefferson’s suggestions into execu- | taking their rise in the same elev | tion. Captain Meriwether Lewis solicited | ridge, flow in opposite directions & | and obtained the direction of the enter- | Pacitic Ocean and to the Mississippi prise. Jefferson in nis “Memoir of Lewis™ | “_1' ”:mlvm $ r'~x"[)(r! ?r thi. hm rul- e it « | tracted wide attention the fol- says of the explorer: e i e e o — I had had an opportunity of knowing him | termined to explore the middle region be- tween the Rockies and the Pacific, fur- ther 1o promote geographical knowledge | and discovery. Thomas H. Benton {s un- intimately. Of courage undaunted, possessing | a firmness and perseverance of purpose which | nothing but imuossibilities could divert from ite_directios ul ae a father of those com- T O “Tharge, yet steady in the main. | Willlng to attribute the expeditions of Tonance of order and discipiine; intimate with | F'Temont to the “zeal of the Government the Indian character, customs and principles; | for the promotion of science. Govern- dis- | ment may have the merit of merely hab.tuated | per- interested, liberal; of sound understanding and | mitting the first, but it was not wholly | i | | | [ lite; l. Adelity to truth so scrupulous that whatever | passive as to the second. Benton relates | | | | | | to the hunting honest, he should report would be as certain as if seen | that when young Fremont left St. Louis by ourselves—with all these qualifications as | for the frontier if selected and implanted by naturg in one | daughter) was requested to examine the body for this express purpose I could have ||etters that came after him and to “for- no hesitation in confiding the enterprise 10| ward those that he kuh(ht to have.” Mrs. him. | Fremont received countermanding orders M Fremont (Benton's BRIG GALILEE THAT BROUGHT PARTICULARS OF THE WRECK OF THE CITY OF PAPEETE AND DISMASTING OF THE GRANDE DU- CHESSE OLGA AND WAS HERSELF PARTIALLY DISMASTED IN | THE DOLDRUMS. Three octavo volumes are devoted to the | for her husband and detained them, and | story of the journey of Lewls and Clark. | Fremont “knew nothing of their exist- | From May, 1804, to September, 1306, they | ence until he had returned from one of traversed the plains and mountains to the | the most marvelous and eventful expedi- | Columbia, noting the natural features cf | tione of modern times | the region, the mouths of its rivers, its | Fremont, with thirts falls, rapids, islands, portages, the mode | traversing a reglon of fne men, after the early morning tides are given in the left hand column and the successive tides of the day In the order of occurrence as to time. Tha pounding all the time the strain on the [ 337 18 the order of bectrrenes A eond tide of hull was terrible. She was nnally 8ot Off | the day, the third time column the third tide and towed vack to Papeete by the LUE |and the last or right hand column gives ths | Eva. On fer return she was heid in quar- | last tide of the day, except when there are but antine again for twenty-four days and | three tides, as sometimes occurs. The heights | then the crew was allowed to go ashore. | given are in addition to the soundings on the n mination of the City of Papeete R“m Su’l—- fi;’;\"r k?u;‘r':v";:mr‘lg.e ':-ex‘;ehr;l showe 8 -arly o~ knees and en a minus —) precedes g showed that nearly all the knees and | ini'then the number given is subtracted from 7 g i the depth given by the charts. The plane of and reported ih whole length flu the 1 had gone the h with the garboard and ‘ ; “_ \ reference is the mean of the lower low waters at the neel bolts had started up through | #* » keelson all the way from three to six e T e Steamer Movements. to patch up the e and send her to | i Auckla New Z nd, whei he would | * * | be permanently repaired. From there - she would bring a general cargo to San | 0. ARHIVE Francisco_or else go the Newcastle, Aus- e 1 Trom: Due. traia, and load coal for here.” | ——— | - n the Galilee was in port the French | Arcata |Sep. 18 Protet was also there. She was|8t. Pau I g coaled under rush orders to go to | Nerth Fork. China, however, and was to sail the day | Bonita Newport. . after the Galilce Pomona y'g-An\no!dt | : 4 z Washtenaw ‘acom: | Which Tug Will Win? | Herodot Hamburg. 19 | _The question along the front is whether | olon . New York. 2 | Spreckel v tug. the Louis Lucken- [ Lmatilla - Rnsncis, » | bach, or the Unitea States transport tug | Sobt: Adameon Baneiny I8 | [ rancisce e ‘oquille River.|Grays Harbe 19 | Slocim will reach San Francisco first. | poit"'e, SUre™ 190N ConT 2 | The Siocum is an ocean-gomng vessel of | Crescent Cit: 2 tons burden, while the Luckenbach is | 2 128 tons net. 7The Slocum left New York | £l on July while the Luckenbach left 21 Philadelphia op August 4. From last re- 21 | ports the Luckenbach was at Rio de| Eureka . 21 Janeiro on August 31, while the Slocum | Czarina E: sailed from Pernambuco on August 2. | Columbia ... 2 | Pernamuboe is 1075 miles from Kio de | City Rio de Ja Sep. 22 | Janeiro, so from that it would appear as | Grace Dollar...|San Pedro. (Sep. 22 | though both tugs were holding their own. | Coos Bay. Newnort.. Hep. £ Still_many people on the front seem to | Coro San Diego Sep. 24 | think_that it will be a tie race or else | CIt¥ e the Luckenbach will win out. _Captain | McCoy, superintendent of the Spreckels TO SAIL. | Towboat Compan in command of the E o | Luckenbach and that means a good deal | mer. | Destination. | Sails. Pler. Pt veuvetnte ne 3 | Corona 18, 11 am(Pler 11 | Walla Walla Arrives. | Newport : . 19, “1: m gusfio | Captain Thomas and the Goesr ob (ibs | WeIRIW . |Victors . 11 am|Pier 9 | Queen brought. the steamer Walla Walla | Austratia .| Honoluly §ominter 3 | from Puget Sound. The vessel was in| poroht - I miPler 13 | quarantine at Victoria, B. C., a_case of | hrpy® -~ (C008 pa¥ 12 m Pler 13 smallpox having broken out while the |'State Cai..|Portland 11 am{Pler 24 mail beat was on her way north. All the | Bonjta s...|Newport 9 amiPlor 11 | passen, nd crew were transferred to | w. Kruger|Tillamook. . ..o.|Pler 2 another vessel by the British Columbia | laqua ...... (Humboldt.. /{Sep. 21, § pm Pier 2 authorities and then the steamer was so | North Fork/Humboldt. ep. 9amPler 2 thoroughty fumigated that it will take | N. Maru..../China &Japan|Sep. 22 1 pm|PMSS | seve thousand dollars to repair the | Santa RosalSan Diégo.....|Sep. 11 am| Pler 11 damages. Dollar..|Grays Harbor|Sep. 22, | 'When the steamer arrived here yester- | Eureka Humboldt.....|Sep. 22, 10 am Pier 13 1 day Dr. Kinyoun s not_satisfled with | Umatilla ..|Victoria. |Sep. 23, 1 am|Pler 9 | her il of health and he held her in the | Bt Arena..[Point Avena 3 mine | stream_ for several hours. gl -..|Pler & The intentior is to get the vessel away | to-night. In consequence a large force of men awaited the arrival of the vessel at the wharf and no sooner was she along- side th: he work of unloading began. | There about 3000 tans of cargo to take | out and 1100 tons to put in. All this stuff must be got out of the way by Wednes- | day, as the Umatilla is due early on that | morning. ' She brings a big cargo and the | P wharf will have to be clear to receive it. "Longeshoremen will have night and day | work at Broadway for the next week. Wisconsin Takes a Spin. The battieship Wisconsin took a short spin around the bay yesterday. Her ses were tested and the engineers i~ Branch Hydrographic Office, Time Ball. chants' Fvehance, San Francisc September 17, 1800. The time ball on the tower of the ne: at noon of the 120th meridian, clock p; m., Greenwich time. U. 8. N.. Mer- 0. w Ferry bullding was dropped at exactly noon to-day— or at § C. G. CALKINS, Lieutenant Commander, U. S. Notice to Mariners. saw to it that everything was in 00d | TRINIDAD HEAD FOG BELL—CALI- | oring order ‘Anoiher Fun around' the . FORNIA. ay W e made to-morrow and on 9 | Thursday the Wisconsin will sail for u“::":;m",,:ffl" 4 f.::";o;.h::u ot e !)»_‘; uh Sv.\‘md % On r;‘ar lgrrlv% ;here £he | inidad Head Lieht Station, California, and will be placed on the Port Orford dry- | Frinidad Head LiEnt aon e i dock and after a thorough overhauhng will have her trial trip. -After the trial | " foggy weather. ‘This notice affects the List of Lights and Fog she will come back to San Franclsco and | gignals, Pacific Ce 1500, page 15, No. 50, and go into commission, the List of Beacons and Buoys, Facific Coast. i i i 1000, page 32. | Melics Of Ancisnt. Degn: By order of the Lighthouse Board. | While the tug Sea King was laying U. SEBREE, . some buoys at Atch Rock yesterday Gap. Commander, U. . N., tain Rasmussen made a queer find. While Inepector Tweifth Lighthouse District. taking up some kedges, an anchor, hawse | pipe and thirty fathoms of chain came to | ¥~ " | the surface. ~The anchor is one of the PR . | old-fashioned type and Captain Gray of Shipping Intelligence. the “Red Stack” Company things it be- | longed to the old ship Awtocrat that was | wrecked on Arch Rock thirty vears ago. | * —* | Old-timers think the blowing up of Arch ARRIVED. | Rock will bring some more relics of old- Monday, September 17. | time wrecks to light befgre the rock iS| gemr State of California, Gage, 83 hours from blown u Porgland, via Astoria 43 hours. e Wanted a Drink. Ds:mr Corona, Glelow, 60 hours from San A man, who would not give his name, | Pi¢8%: sumped _ overboard _from" Union-gtreet | yhorecnr Titanis. Gulliksen, 8 hours from wharf yesterday. No one made any at-| stmr Aleatraz, Carlson, 47 hours from Port fempt 1o save him and he finally con- | Los Anceles. cluded to save himself. He swam to a Stmr W ila Walla, Thonias, 3 days from Vie- ICE'S MAGNET S | pile and then Wharfinger Arnerich hauled | toria and Puget Sound ports. D thousand hing els« | him to the wharf. Ship America, Harding, days from Orca. “t retainer he work ou're mean crowd anvhow.” was Bark Martha Davis, McAllman, 2% days from e - _for “‘Book- | the éomment of the would-be suicide. “If Hilo. I v 7 e er stamps. Ad- | vou'd mk,.,:’ me to medm‘u;pnfl;' they'd |, Bitn 7 L Eviston, Wirschuleit, $ days from have pumped me out and then given me - n b | P v : = Brig Galilee, Dinsmore, 45 days from Tahiti MAGNETIS ELASTIC TRUSS €0., a drink of whisky. The whisky is what GSenr Lena’ Sweasey, Johnson, § days from O R R Sl e St . = 'ek;:’?r Bertie Minor, Ravens, 4 days from Eu- - 7 ‘ PRI - = Schr Guide, Olsen, 7 days from Grays Har- . 4 y bor. MARHOOD RESTORED “"SurroEne. | Sun, Moon and Tide. gcm‘m,,u,,,.» Ll Sl b s i e G, . ot ne. Smatt, 10 anys trom Port Gamble. - nch physician, will CLEARED. quickly cure you of ail ner- Aous or dise % of the genera tive organs. such as Lost Man. hood, Inzomnia, Paina in_the Back, Nervous Debility, Pim- ples, Exhausting Drains, Vari- cocele and _onstipation. It etops all losses by day or ight. Cupidene cleanses the liver. the kidness and the urinary organs of all mpririties. Cupident strengthens and restores small weak orzans. The reason sufferers are not cured by Doctors 4a because 5 per cent are troubled with Pros- tratitia. Cupidene the only known remed; tre ‘without an operation. 5000 testimoni % "Sritten guarantce given and money re. furned if 6 boxes do not effect a vermanent $1.00 a box, & boxes for £5.00. by mail. fals. 1 Medictne Cn rant Drug C DR. CROSSMAN'S SPECIFIC MIXTUR: ‘the cure of GONORRHOEA. GLEETS, ETRICTURES and analagous compiaints ot the of tion. °fi:u.m For sale by druggists, United States Coast and Geodetic Survey— Times and Heights of High and Low —The high and low waters occur at ' v front (Mission-street wharf) about | | twenty five minutes later than at Fort Point: | the helght of tide is the same at both places. | TUESDAY, SEPTEMEER 15. BRSRRTE ) somoan Ay NOTE—In the above exposition of the tides Br U s star U S stmr Mackinaw, Littlgf Br stmr Warfleld, Pattle, Chemainns. Schr Alblon, Gudmansen, Coquille River. Schr Conflanza, Christlansen, Coquille River. Br stmr Amur, 17, Monday, Septem! Waters at Fort Point, entrance to San e Francisco E: Published by officlal au- | Propement Comzany, : thority of the Superintendent. Stmr Corona, Gielow, San Diego; Perkins & Co. ship Ancaios, Fulton, Queenstown; Kauffman. SAILED. iber 17. Stmr Mineola. David, Nanaimo: Pacific Im- Goodall, L Monday, September 17. Eureka, Goodwin, SPOKEN. isco. MISCELLANEOUS. which arrived at stmr South Portland, Stinr National City, Dettmers, Westport. Stmr Greenwood, Fagerlund, Greenwood. Str Point Arena, Hansen. Mendocino. Stmr Eureka. Jensen, Adams, Puget Sou; eld, “Seattie Aug 16 lat 11 N. lon 2 W—Br ship Alcinous, trom Liverpool, for San Francises, = oo June 2, lat 4 N, lon 125 W—Fr bark Marthe Roux, hence May 15, for Queenstown. vlflflal attle, for Nome, ashore for a time this morning n life, the Indian tribes, their lan- | the Great Salt Lake {is accou 1 their' food, thelr laws' and their | much o cogrect erioneons Lioes ot ths & | cus The unimals and minerals, the | region, and it promoted the setiement of o the physical features of the | Utah and the Pacific States. It was prob- were also sclentifica oticad . on Eldney Spit. She kedged off and proceeded, | ) 5 e 4 ably his report that gave the Mormons think unakmased 8 P | and de cribed. They passed the Mansan | their first idea of Utah as a piace of ref- near Bismarck, up the Missourl, | ,ge and residence. From Salt Lake TELEGRAPHIC. B e th across Dakota, across Montana to mont pressed on to the Col 1F LOBC Sept 17, 10 p m—Weather b of Gallatin, to the headwaters | \- o I S clear; wind NW, velocity 16 miles. !EF‘;I‘.‘ mnon River "where. they siaked | & LIS IR A Y TNG g e g DOMESTIC PORTS. |thelr thirst for the first time in the | saCLAVERTR. Hhe PEesldent o e ag the _CAPE NOME—In port Sept mr John S !5 whose waters flow to the Pacific: | 3ireetion of his rett - P Kimball, stmr Chas Neison, stmr_Alllance, stmr | thence to the Snake and the Columbia e Ghe Tt of ob e Oregon, ‘stmr Chas D Lane, U § stmr McCul- | where they saw ‘the waves mati | Foute through the heart of am unknown Tock, thE Discovers, wheling stme Phrasbor, | oot Troning oot In the sem. | region from the lower Columbia the stmr Albion, stmr Dora, schr Sequoia and barge | "\yhile this expedition was in progress | UPPer Coloradq that rows into the Gult Kk of California. The maps of the time rep- ASTORIA—Arrived Sept 1i—Stmr Columbia, | Cclonel Zebulon Montgomery Fike (born | resented a river in the middie of this hénce o y \D: | remion, flowing from cast to west from to tr e Mississippi to E He performed this service within nine months, after much exposure to peril | PORT BLAKELEY—Arrived Sept 16—Schr J A Campbell, from Port Townsend. BOWENS LANDING—Sailed Sept 17—Schr the base of the Rockies to the Bay of San Francisco—the River Buepa Ventura. MacLaughlin and Fremont both believed Ocean Spray. for San Francisco | and hardship. Pike spent the winter of i h FORT BRAGG—Sailed Sent 17—Stmr Sequota, | 1803-6_among the Indians and agents of | |1 this river. and Fremont planned to for Sun Fra > |-G A O ctern Fur Company on the | Feach its rich bottoms before winter set _CC ailed Sept 16—Stmr Arcata, for | Upper Mississippl, and in the spring of | In. He started on his perilous journey: San K | 185 ho traced bt river to its source. In | he skirted vast ridges of mountains; deep TACOMA—Saled Sept 17—Schr Marlon, for | the same year Pike engaged in geographi- | Snow impeded his progress and drove him Sen. FronHs e8] explotations of the southern part of | from the highlands into the Great Basin, NEWPORT -Arrived Sept 17—Stmr 1aqua, | th. [ouisiana purchase. He went up the | and he found—not the River Buena Ven- hence Seat 15 USAL—Arrived Sept the Indian Territory, trav- | tura,but agreatdesert—and here he found measured the hei‘h:; of the | himself, in the dead of winter, face to face with death from cold and starvation. Osage, acr ersed Kansa: R B ihe a 4 Colorado that now bears | T Brcat Deak I ed South {o the Arkansas| He learned from his astronomical obser- and after untold sufferings from cold and | vations that he was in the latitude of San &how and hunger he came out on _the | Francisco, and that that haven was but waters of the Rio Grande. Here, in Mexi- | seventy miles away. But to traverse can territory, he was captured by the | those seventy miles meant to cross snow- forces of the Spanish Governor and car-| capped mountains that, the Indians told Tied 1o Santa Fe. After his release he | him.no man could cross in winter. No re- came home by the longer but safer south- | ward could induce an Indian to become ern route through Texas. his guide on such a perilous venture. Fri lorers, Lewis and | mont determined to attempt the passs 17--Stmr Newsboy, hne HARBOR—Sailed Sept 16—Schr Lu- Honolulu; schr Oceania Vance, for San schr Lizzie Vance, for San Fran- ATTLE—Arrived Sept from Dyea. Sept 17—Stmr Cooks Inlet Sailed Sept 16—Stmr Dolphin, for Skaguay: stmr San Pedro, for Nome; stmr Czarina, for ; stmr South Portland, for Nome, Vvia 15—Stmr Excelsior, Al-K1, from These two great expl Sept 16—Schr Louisa D, from Cape v/ P 1 x e Pike. both died in the prime of early | without a guide. It was sccomplished in me. Sept 1i—Stmr Valencla, trom Cape | ;.0iho0d. Pike, at 34, was killed in.18i3| forty days, ‘“the men and surviving '* 3 Sept 16—Schr Emma and Loulss, for | by a magazine explosion while still in the | horses, a woeful procession, crawling f his country in| along, one by one, skeleton men leading the war of 1812. Lewis, at 35, after his| skeleton horses, arriving at Sutter’s appointment as Governor of Louisiana, | camp in the Sacramento Valley, where met a mvsterious death, by suicide or| the party rested and recruited.” der, in a frontier cabin in Tennessee | mse Note—This study, by Dr. J. A. Wood- in_1809. Thiriy-five years after these explora-| burn of Indiana University, will be con- are attracted to the name of | cluded on Tuesday next. tions w | infidelity, Robert Walpole from Adeline | Walpgle "for desertion, John L. Allison from Bertha Allison for desertion and | Henrietta Coors from Henry Coors for willful neglect. Cooks Inlet. active military service o PORT TOWNSEND—Passed inward Sept 17— Br stmr Breconshire, from Yokohama; stmr Valencla, from Nome, Br bark Ventura,' from Antwerp. Passed up Sept 17-Bark Levi G Burgess and schr R W Bartlett. Sailed Sept 1i—Schr Joseph Russ, for Salinas = Arrived Sept 17—Br ship Forteviot, from Ant- werp. GREENWOCD — Arrived Sept 17 — Stmr Whitesboro, hence Sept 16. WESTPORT—Sailed Sept 17—Stmr Cleone, for San Francisco. EUREKA—Arrived Sept 15—Stmr Pomona, 5: schr Eliza Miller, hence Sept ins, hence S Sept hence Sept 16; Sparrow, <) Seatt for day to Franklin J. Hicks from Rose Hicks for intemperance, Charles B. de Wolfe from Mary A. de Wolfe for desertion, Pe- | ter C. Warnke from Augusta Warnke for from Newport iled Sept 16-Stmr South Coast, for Ven- tura. Sep Stmr North Fork, for San Fran- Suits for divorce have been_flled by cisco; stmr Pomona, for San Francisco. n Nancy Glassford against John R. Glass- EASTERN PORT. | | ford for desertion, Georgia White against BALTIMORE—Sailed Sept 17—Ship John Me- William White for desertion and William Donald, for San Franeisco. 'r I-I!lenm against Helena A. Hearn for FOREIGN PORTS cruelty. (TOKOHAMA—Sailed Sept 14—Br stmr Coptic, RS A | T e or San Francisco. | voli Incorporates. LONDON-—Sailed Sept 15—Ger stmr Neko, for | . | v i use San Francisco. @Given Control of Townsend | .The Tivell Operatic and Amusement KINSALE—Passed Sept 17—Br ship Stronsa. Company was incorporated yesterday from Tacoma, for Queenstown. with a capital stock of $150,000. All the HULL—Arrived Sept 15—Br bark Inveresk, | capital stock was subscribed by the foi- Property by Judge hence Aoril 2 lowing directc Ernestine Kreling, QUEENSTOW Arrived Sept 17—Br bark | D e | $149 400 Johanna Kraus, Charles H. William Law, from Oregon; Br ship General | unune. Kraus. Ernestine Kraus and Johanna Roberts, henca May 2 | Fischer, $150 each. MAZATLAN—Sailed Sept 14—Stmr Colen, for | 5 San Francisco. ! Arrived Sept 9—Schr Czar, hence Aug SYDNEY—Arrived Sept 16—Bktn Gleaner, from South Bend. VICTORIA—Arrived Sept 16—Br stmr Condor, from Salaverry. | Arrived Sept 17-Br stmr Amur, from Ska- Burnett Will Try McGlade. Judge Carroll Cook will go to Santa Public Administrator Boland has met defeat in his effort to secure control of | the estate of the late Almira S. Townsend. | Rosa this morning and occupy the Supe Judge Dunne handed down 'an opinion | jor bench of that county, and Judge esterday. and so far as the Superlor nett will come to this city and try the Court is concerned ended the controversy | peter McGlade case, which will be called between Mrs. Ella F. Murray (decedent’s this mornin daughter) and the Public Administrator. ailed Sept 14—Br ship Clan STEAMERS. Ella F. Murray was declared a legal resi- BREMEN Sept 17—-Stmr Grosser | dent of this city and county. adjudged | Kurfusst, via Soultnmnton legally competent to administer upon the LONDON—Sailed Sept 17—Stmr Neko, for San | estate of her deceased mother and was ¥ismelgoc awarded letters in accordance with the | BREMEN—Sailed Sept 16-Stmr Friederich | praver of her petiton. ! der Grosse. for New York, via Southampton | PFIV{i %opinion Judge Dunne says: d_Cherbou s .x:‘,H‘ER'éf)l G—Sailed Sept 16—Stmr Deutsch- The evidence shows that for more lhl‘;xolh.l'i(.! land, from Hamburg and Southampton, for | years Mrs. Murray was & resident of Dorehes: | nd during part of that time, her e ‘ll€ed alone with her daughter. During the vears 1592 and 1534 she visited her | mother in San Francisco and again returned to Dorchester. * Some time in April of this ye: her daughter—an only child—died and on t 5th of July following she came direct to San | Francisco, where ehe arrived nearly two weeks before her mother's death, since which time she resided in San Francisco. On examination Mrs. Murray stated among other reasons that a letter from Thomas T. Townsend led her to belleve that after long separation he had determined to annoy his former wite, the petitioner's mother, and she concluded that Mrs. Townsend needed her assistance, “for she knew of the terrible treatment her mother had received and the several other wives that he had.’ | Mrs, Murray further said that when she | left Dorchester she was very determined to | come .to this city to live for the rest of her life. The actual condition of Mrs. Murray, after her daughter's death, would furnish a suffielent motive for a change of residence a: Eives color to the positive statements made Rer regarding her intention to take up a resi- dence in_California. ! While it is true that the deceased willfully | jand designedly separated herself from her Qaughter during most of the vears of her Iif: She was not insensible to the relationship exis ing between them nor forgetful of the duties it imposed, all of which is shown in the ex- pressions of love and sympathy contained in | the correspondence that passed between them | after the death of her grandchild, for whom | She seemed to have had a deep affection. The loss of her child had broken Mrs. Mur- | ray's home, and under these circumstances the | desire to go to her mother was a natural and | reasonable one, in spite of the fact that she | knew she might not be altogether welcome, in | truth that she might anger and offend her mother. From her testimony it would seem that th® treatment given her by the decedent | was about what she had expected. But it Would seem also that after the surprise and annoyance her appearance caused had passed, she was treated with kindness and considera- New York. Sailed Sept 15—Stmr Aller, from Bremen and Southampton, for New York. NEW YORK—Arrived Sept 17—Stmr Minne- haha, from Lendcn. SOUTHAMPTON — Sailed Sept 17 — Stmr Friederich der Grosse, from Bremen, for New York. SYDNEY, NSW—Arrived Sept 17—Stmr Aor- rangl, from Vancouver, B C, via Honolulu and Brisbane. 8T JOHNS, N F—Arrived Sept 17—Stmr Gre- clan, frcm Tdverpool, for Halifax, N 8, and Philadelphta. MONTREAL—Arrived Sept 17—Stmr Corin- thian, from Liverpool; stmr Rosarian, from London. having died, Economical soap is one that a touch of cleanses. Pears’ shaving soap is the best in all the world. All sorts of people use Pears’ soap, ail sorts of stores sell it, especially druggists. Abbott’s Victim Again in Court. Rene Adanfs, alias Polly Knight, who shot Billy Abbott, the notorious divekeep- er on Dupont street about a month ago and had the case dismissed for lack of prosecution, appeared before Judge Con- lan yesterday on a charge of vagrancy. The case was continued till to-morrow and she was allowed to go on $50 cash bail. It was reported that Abbott was again getting money from the girl and had put up the cash to bail her out. Ab- bott denies both charges. —_————————— Says She Is a Kleptomaniac. A married woman who says her name is Annie Brown was arrested in the Emporium by Special Policemen Allen and Tilton vesterday afternoon and booked at the City Prison on a charge of petty larceny. She had stolen two silk handkerchiefs. She said she could not re- sist the temptation to steal. but after the feeling left her she had quietly replaced o articles. She was released on $20 cash all. visr DR JORDAN'S aacar MUSEUM OF ANATOMY 1051 MABZIT 5T bet. 62D, 5.5.Cal. The Anatomical Museum in the Wond. Weaknessow or any conmracted discase peaitively cured by the oldest Speciaiist cn thw Coast. Est. 36 yacs. OR. JORDAN—PRIVATE DISEASES @ Coaeultation fren and trictly private Tosmens pessoraily o0 by leer. & e G every cone e fereaben. Write for Book, PHILOSOTHY oF MARBIAGE. MAILED FATE A vaiuable book: for men) IRDAN & €O, 1051 Market St 8. . HALL’S REINVIGORATOR! Five huundred reward for any | case we canmot cure. This secret emedy stops all losses in 24 bours. cures Emissions, Impotency, Vari- cocele, Gonorrhoea. Gleet, Fits, —_———————— tion. | d ail ‘Expansion. T am satisfied that Mrs. Murray has proved be-Di her residence as required by the statute. The | From St. Louis Globe-Democrat. application of the Public ' Administrator is | bottles, 35: ranteed to cure any case. Ad- The trade expansion of the United States is | hence denied and the application of Ella F. | dress HAL P8 MEDICAL INSTITUTE, 368 Murray is granted and letters of administra- tion upon the estate of Almira S. Townsend will issue as prayed. Mrs. Murray's bonds were fixed at ay, Oukiand. Cal Also for sale ot 10 Bend for tree book. . a matter of pride to all Americans without re- gard to thelr personal views on territorial ex- pansion and its political bearings. While trade in general has expanded as never before in | cured. BAJA CALIFORNIA Damiana Bitters S A GREAT RESTORATIVE, INVIGORA- tor and Nervine. The most wonderful aphrodistac and Spectal - 'mx«muxuxon?nmm the history of our country, its volume can best be understood by the practical Hlustration fur- nished by one great concern which has long led the world In its particular branch of busi- "fhe output of the different brands of beer The of the Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass'n of every part of the civi] St. Louls, Mo., going to u‘&afiyfi.mfl:fidmmmn«m $675,000. —————— Closing Out Odd Lots. Over 300 framed pictures and panels left from 25 cents up, to be closed out at one- half the regular price to make room for new goods. Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Ma ket street. July 1890, the unprecedented quan ——— e, — — remed: Diseases Kide Uty of 323,440 barrels. That is more than In the Divoree Court. e and Biodder Solls oo te SuR merttn, NABER, ALFS & BRUNE, Ageats, selves great. Decrees of divorce were granted yester- 228 Market st., 5, F.—(Send for Clrculary