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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 19v1. SUBSIDY BILL CHIEF TOPIC Measure Is Kept Steadily to the Front in the Senate. Expedite Consideration of the Subject the Senators Agree to Hold an Earlier Session. the time pposition. propos 11 with the was strong- n amendment from Costa s amendment was O CONNOR (I BROS. d TUESDAY ! per square : SUGAR. A COFFE 25e 25¢ RN HAMS, per Ib. ‘ aranteed. u-wish, per 1b. LEMON, GINGER, 3 BARS, per Ib........ 10¢ ORX, 2 cans.. 25¢ GOOD ZINF Best O1d BO' Per bo —REMEMBER THE STORE! 0'CONNOR BROS., 122 and 124 NINTH ST., And 226 SIXTH ST. STANLEY AIRSHIP, VEL CLARET, per gal.. N WHISKEY, per gal $2.50 e ke STANLEY ~AEPTAL ANY NAVIGATION FFERS A REWARD to any per- orm the president or secretary company of the party or parties who oMF e Stanley Aerial Navigation Company stock for sale at less than five doliars per ehare CHAS., STANLEY, President. CHAS. NEWMAN, Secretary. Office 702 Market st. 65¢ TTER, per sq.... 30e | per square, 25¢ $1.00 | e | wedding might be performed, VIGILANTES WILL WATCH NEW YORK’S OFFICIALS| Bishop Potter Agrees to Start the Mevement to Secure Municipal Reform. HAS AGREED TO ORGANIZE A THE MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT. BISHOP POTTER, THE EMINENT LIVINE OF NEW YORK CITY, WHO BODY OF VIGILANTES TO WATCH o+ EW YORK, Feb. 1.—New York City will be in the hands of a vigilance committee within ten | days from now. This commit- tee will consist of several hun- it was said, the movement, his advice n the matter of mapping out the city and =ction of the vigilantes having been ar as consistent with the ob- v. Every member of the fif- edged himself to secrecy. ldwin sa ere has alread ich talking and not enough ac- borough of Manhattan has 1 divided into two dis each of i LUSION BILL PASSES HOUSE Present Act Amended !in Order to Prevent Entry by Fraud ——— HI Feb. 1.—The House to- passed an omnibus bill carrying 191 ms for stores and supplies taken by e Union army during the rebellion. The ms were passed on by and aggregated $344480. -Practi- aims cally all the beneficlaries reside in the| South. « Considerable opposition to the il was displayed early. in the day un- der t! man of the Appropriation Committee, but it flattened out later and the bill finally was passed without division. The bill to amend the Chinese exclu- | sion act, with a view to preventing the | fraudulent entry of Chinese into the United States, was passed, as were other bills of minor importance. W the House convened to-day some iness was transacted by unani- had con- | the Court of | 1e leadership of Cannon, the chair- | | which will be assigned to a group of vigi- | lantes. No part of the city is to be wholly neglected. Even on Fifth avenue or in the upper west side members of the vigi- {lance commlittee will prosecute the'r | labors The vigilantes will confine themselves to | the observance of things in general. These dutles require them to see whether police- men are performing their duty, whether the streets are kept | loons are allowed to do business after the | legal closing hours and whether such sa- | loons, gambling-houses and poolrooms are | visited by policemen, either in uniform or | civiltan dress. The committee of fifteen will provide a clearing-house” to which all reports wiil | be made and through which the resalts of | the work may be made available oot FINEST CRUIS ERS N THE WORLD | Navy Department Opens Bids | | for the Construetion of ‘ Three Vessels. | —- WASHINGTON, Feb. construction of three protected cruisers have just been opened at the Navy De- partment. The successful bidders appear to be Cafie & Levy of Philadelphia, at Company, at $2,741,000, and the Bath Ship- building Compa at $2,750,000. Reserva- tlons made in each bid, however, prevent & positive statement at present. These crulsers are designed to be the | most formidable vessels in the world of | their class. They will resemble closely ana might be easily mistaken for such. The act of Congress authorizing this class of crulsers stated that the vessels should | carry “‘the most powerful ordnance for vessels of their type and have the high- est speed compatible with good cruising | qualities and great radius of actlon.” Ad- mous consent. - « ¢ Ohlo, chairman of the Com- xnir'&'l };1: hborn, chief constructor of the mi Coinage, Welghts and Meas- | NaV¥, who has been foremost in the prep- res, ‘asked amantrnpis 10 “on- | aration of plans for the building of the sider a bill to establish a (hew havy. 5ays that in an engagement ardizing bureau,” which should have ci tody of the standards and furnish infor- mation to any educational iInstitution, firm, corporation or individual in the United States. After some discussion it was agreed that the bill should be made a continuing or- | der after the disposal of the bill to pro- mote the efficiency of the revenue cutter service. The Eenate bill to appropriate $30,000 for | the purchase or construction of a reve: | nue cutter for Boston harbor was passed. | | The House later entered upon the consid- | eration of private bills. A Dbill to regulate the coming of Chinese persons into the country created some dis- cussion, Hitt, chairman of the Commit- tee on Foreign Affairs, sald the bill had been prepared by the Attorney General to prevent the fraudulent entry of Chinese laborers by glving the Government, as well as the Chinamen, the right to appeal from the decision of the United States Commissioner. Hitt sald that he him- self did not believe the Chinese exclu- slon act was a just law, because it was passed in violation of treaty rights, but the law was on the statute books and it | was the duty of every citizen to obey it. The bill was passed. being private bill day, Mahon of ylvania, chairman of the Commit- tee on War Claims, called up the unfin- ished business, which was a bill for the rellef of St._John's Lodge of Masons of Newburn, N. C. The bill appropriates $6000 for the use of the Masonic lodge by Union troops during the rebellion. After some opposition it was passed. At 5:30 p. m. the House adjourned, SOCIETY BELLE STOWS AWAY ON BATTLESHIP Went to the Orient to See Her Fiance and No Mail Boat Returning, Boarded the Indiana. ST. PAUL, Minn., Feb. 1.—Miss Marga- ret Tittemore, a soclety belle of Des Moines, Jowa, is sald to have donned men's clothes, secreted herself on board the battleship Indiana at Nagasakl, Ja- pan, and to be en route to America. Last fall the girl became betrothed to Lieutenant Dean of the army. He was ordered to the Orfent, and Miss Tittemore persuaded her prospéctive mother-in-law to chaperon her to Manila, where the v Upon ar- riving at Nagasaki they learned that the lieutenant was cn duty in China. Miss Tittemore refused to proceed into th Boxer region. although the young man's mother determined to g0 to see her son. Miss Tittemore was left at N; L She wanted to come home, but could not get a ship. The battleship Indiana was about to start for America. o, aceordl: o the story, the young woman concef the idela of relurnlln; on the man-of-war as a stowaway. It is asserted that was successful. - 1 ulsers would be aole to cope with and prove more than a match for some of the armored cruisers of foreign navies. The new vessels are to be named the St. Louls, Milwaukee and Charleston, the last to contfnue the name of the ship wrecked November 2, 189, in the Phil) pines. Their trial displacement will be about 9000 tons. They will be equipped with 21,000 horsepower twin screw engines and will bave a speed of 22 knots per hour, | The vessels will be 424 feet in length 66 feet in extreme breadth. Theie bu?.'f(d- ers will have a capacity of 1500 tons. The | main side armor will be four inches in | thickness all around, as will also_the up- per and lower casemate armor. Two and | & half inches of steel plate will encase | their protective decks. The main decks | of the cruisers will be supplanted amid- | ships with covered superstructures, within each of which will be located four 6-inch rapid-fire guns and six 14-pounders of the same type. Outside the superstructure will be two more 6-inch guns located on the center line, one forward and one aft. |On the gun decks the greater batteri will be located, of elght 6-inch, twelve | 14-pounder and four 1-pounder rapid-fire | guns. Sixteen rapid-fire guns are to be [gla(-ed on_the superstructure deck and | bridges, The remainder of the battery will be located in the fighting tops of the military masts. = e vessels each will havi smokestacks. 76 feet above the anwoity line, providing draught for the sixteen straight water tube bollers situated in four water-tight compartments. These boilers, together with the emgines, will be protected by the side armor, sloping declt armor and a twelve foot coal bunker. The inner bottom of the vessels will extend to the undersides of the protective decks, above which a cellulose cofferdam thirty nel cruisers. All the latest improvements in construc- tion are to be provided for the accommo- | dation and comfort of the officers and crew. In commission the number of offi- cers will be thirty-nine and the crew will numb«rbfizs men, for twhld:h sixteen boats ranging from a 36-foot s cutter to a 16-foot dingy, bemdestettvn; punts and two liferatts. t has been believed in some that the three crulsers could not“;’eul-)tlfa: within the limit of cost named by Con- gress. However, a calculation based on the price to be pald for the unsheathed armored cruisers would tend to disprove this theory. The average cost of the three unsheathed armored cruisers of 13,400 tons !rlaJe displacement and 22 $2.727,834, than the amount ll‘}lgmpfl $2,800,000. As about $100,000 for armor out of the sum ropriated, it has been necessary to nate certain items from the specifications, as In the case of the sheathed battleships. Cramps’ contract price for the Maine, an 18-knot battleship of 12,500 tons trial was :z,ssf,m, or $238 per ton. Sissrnt, 1 ated, “namely, be required clean, whether sa-.| 1.—Bids for the| $2740,000; thesNewport News Shipbuilding | the type of second class armored crufsers | s wide will extend the length of the | are provided | IMPERIALISM TWAIN'S THEME Humorously and in Sarcastic Vein Attacks Policy of President. G SR Former President Harrison AlsoCon- tributes Strong Article Relative Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Feb. 1.—Notable contribu- tions to anti-imperizlistic .literature are articles in the February number of the | North American Review by Mark Twain | and former Presiden: Harrison. The first, | entitled “To the Person Sitting In Dark- ness,” is a savagely ironical review of the | present policy of tihe leading Christian rations being pursued in China and of the dealings of Great Britain with the Trans- vaal and of the United States with the | Phillppines. Ringing the changes upon | | though this has been a good trade in the | past and has paid well, nevertheless in | the present day *‘the people who sit in | darkness are getting to be too scarce—too | scarce and too shy. And such darkness | as is now left is really of but an indiffer- ent quality and not dark enough for the game. Most of those people who sit in darkness have been turnished with more light than was good for them or profit- able for us. We have been injudicious.” In short the business is being ruined, be- cause Mr. McKinley and Chamberlain and the Kalser and the Czar and the Fren have been playing the game too openly right in sight of the heathen. Christen- dom “has been so eager to get every stake that appeared on toe green cloth that the people who sit in darkness have noticed it and have begun to show alarm. have become suspicious of the blessings of civilization. More—they have begun to examine them. is pot well. The T blessings of civilization aré all right and g00d commercial progerty, there could not be a better—in a dim light. “In the case of friendless and oppressed little Cuba.” continues Twain, “the Pres- ident Inveighed agalnst annexation and declared 1t would be ‘criminal aggression.’ This was but following our great tradi- tions but the shot was heard around the world. The natlons of the earth gave heed and we were so proud of our Pres dent. But presently came the Philippire | temptation. It was strong. It was too strong and he made that bad mistake, he played the Europe: game—Chamberlain | game. It was a pity, it was a great pity that error, that ons grievous error, for it was the very place and time to play the American game zgain.” Mr. Harrison's “‘musings” are far less ferocious than Mr. Clemens’ outcries. Indeed, by the side of the latter our for- mer President seems gentle and almost timid. But look closer and you will dis- cover the hand of iron under a silken its | Blove. Whatever we may think of | political aspect has not the velled { casm in the follow entence a distinct- ive polemical value: “*We are hearing now a great deal of the riches and strategieal advantages which have come to us with | the docile acceptance of divine will in the | Philippines.” Dropping sarcasm Mr. Harrison points out that on this new goctrine of “equiva- lents,” four great powers of Europe might combine in a colon'zation in this hemis- phere, as they did in Africa and possess themselves of all the Central and South | American States uniess the United States | Bave its powerful aid to the latter. He | belleves that it is of the highest conse- quence to us and to those Spanish-Amer- | ican nations that it should be known to them and to the world that the United | States will continue faithfully and un- { swervingly to respect the autonomy of | those States; that we will ‘neither our- to be dismembered | power. PROMOTIONS IN THE ARMY AND NAVY BY PRESIDENT | Captain Mortimer L. Johnson’s Name Sent to the Senate for Confirma- tion as Rear Admiral. WABHINGTON, Feb. 1.—The President to-day sent the following nominations to the Senate: . Army: Volunteers—Edward N. Bowen of Massachusetts, acting assistant -sur- geon, United States army, to be assistant | surgeon of volunteers, with rank of cap- tain. by any European jor Jr., Fourteenth Infantry, to be firs | Heutenant. - | Navy: Captain Mortimer L. Johnson to be rear admiral; Commander Franklin Hanford to be a captain; Lileutenant ! Franklin J. Schall to be a lieutenant com- | mander; leutenants_(junior grade) to be | lleutenants—George Malllson, Walter Ball and Joel R. P. Pringle. | STEAMER IS WRECKED ON HER TRIAL TRIP | German Craft Lost in the Rapids of { the Yangtse and Captain Is | Drowned. | WASHINGTON. Feb. 1.—The State De- partment has received a report from the Consul at Chungking, China, to the effect that the German steamer Sui Hsiang h been totally wrecked in the rapids of th Yangtse, sixty miles above Ichang. The and the remainder of the crew were sayed. The steamer was built especially to nav- igate the Yangtse from Shanghai to Chungking. She was on her triat trip. gRakiot s Sy ST. LOUIS TO ISSUE BONDS FOR A WORLD'S FAIR Finance Committee Executes a Guar- antee and Mayor Zeigenheim Signs the Bill. ST. LOUIS, Feb. 1L.—Mayor Zeigenheim has signed the bill providing for the is- suance of $5,000,000 of bonds for the world’s fair. This morning he notified Chairman W. H. Thompson of the world’s fair fin- ance committee that he would sign the bill on condition that he and his assoclates would agree to give a bond in the sum of $1,000,000 insuring that the surplus from the £ale of the bonds and the interest on the proceeds of the sale be given to the city., Mr. Thompson and his assoclates signed the stipulations named. - PRESIDENT DIAZ OF MEXICO IN POOR HEALTH Left the Capital to Go Hunting, but Was Kept Confined to His Pri- vate Car. AUSTIN, Tex., Feb. 1.—A disptach from Monterey, Mexico, says: “It is reported in Government official circles that the health of President Porfirio Diaz is se- riously impaired. He left the City of Mexico several days ago to spend some time hunting in the hot country in the State of Guerrero, but owing to his en- feebled condition he was unable to leave the private car in which he traveled but very little, and his condition has not been improved by the trip. —_— Bankruptcy Case Postponed. LONDON, Feb. 1—The Bankruptey rned the examinatis ke ol Manhoster s afaies o day until March 20, owing to the illness of the Duchess. It was announced that ne- otlatlons for the sale of certain’ effects find been completed and the proceeds would immediately be available for the benefit of creditors. ‘Woodsman Crushed to Death. EUREKA, Feb. 1.—Willlam J. Orr, a chopper for the Elk River Mill and Lum- ber Company, was crushed to death this afternoon. Orr and his partner had just cut a 1 redwood tree. In attempting of the way of the falling tree Orr became entangled in the underbrush $nd was caught beneath the huge mass of imber. —_—————— For a Cold in the Head. Laxative Bremo-Quinine Tablets. to the Government of the - Snowballing Affords Philippines. Amusement. - R K Al e 1 the phrase “extending the blessings ot | 1ad been preceded by rain. In the cit Iy e oadlpE e/ DisssingR 0L | ths rall only 21 of an’inch, makin darkness” the humorist warns us that, 4.03 inches for the season, as against 2.5 selves dismember them nor suffer them | | Regulars—Second Lieutenant D. K. Ma- captain was 10st, but all of her passengers | SHOW AND HAL AT THE SOUTH Unusually Cold Weather Prevails Below Mount Tehachapi. Los Angeles Is Pelted With Icy Mis- siles and in Several Towns Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN DIEGO, Feb. 1.—Rain has fallen to-day in most every portion of San Diego County, except on the Colorado desert, and to-night the air is quite chilly for San Dlego, because of the fact that the rain of the valleys and seacoast was snow in the Julian and Cuyamaca mountains. The snowfall at Juiian amounted to five inches up to 6 o'clock this evening, while higher up in the Cuyamaca Mountains the fall was fourteen inches. At both places the snow was still falling and at both it inches to the same date last year. The prospect is for gool crops of wheat as well as of fruit, both deciduous and cit- rus. Fortunately there was a good acre- age of wheat put In and the farmers are likely to get some return for their labor. | The rainfall in the foothills has been | four times what it | has been in the city. | Mountain strearps are running and the | Cuyamaca reservoir is filled to the 17-foot mark to-night. At Morena 1000 inches of water is running over the dam. The | shower was from the ocean and was not | predicted by the weather service. LOS ANGELES, Feb. 1.—The rain which been falling desultorily for the last days turned to hail at 2 o'clock this 1o a spectacle not often witnessed here. The stones were very large and so soft | that many people insisted that it was snow. The shower continued about five minutes and the ground was completely covered during the fall. It was appar- ently the last effort of the storm, for the % fe | skies cleared immediately afterward and | the sun snone brightly. | | ORANGE, Cal., Feb. 1.—One of the hardest hailstorms ever experienced in | this vicinity occurred this afternoon. In | | a few minutes the ground was white and | snowballing was indulged in. The pre- | cipitation was a quarter of an inch in less than half an hour. SANTA ANA, Feb. 1.—The heaviest hail- | storm in eight years visited this valley this afternoon. Neither oranges, lemons nor celery were serfously injured by the storm. To-night the snow is lower in the foothills than for the past ten years and a cold wind is blowing from the north. PRESCOTT, Ariz., Feb. l.—Snow com- menced falling this forenoon and contin- ued at intervals till just before dark, | when a biinding storm set in and has in- | creased in fury since. At 8 o'clock to- night the ground is covered to a depth of | six Inches, with prospects of the storm continuing all night. This is the first now this winter, and as the total rainfall prior to this storm was only two inches, | the snow is extremely welcome. | SUES TO PREVENT SALE OF HER HUSBAND'S LAND Mrs. Delphine Einstein Plaintiff in | an Action Against the Bank | of California. afternoon and Los Angelenos were treated |, PAINE’'S CELERY COMPOUND. THE ) AN 7 i e i i ‘When a brainy man like David Belasco, er of its leading actress, Mrs. Leslie Car- ter; the author of season after season's most successful plays. “The Heart of Maryland,” “Hearts of Oak,” ete.: tna hardest worked and the ablest stage direc- tor in America— When such a wideawake manager of his own and other people’s affairs deliber- ately turns to Paine’s celery compound as the one safe and sure invigorator for his overworked nervous system, only willful prejudices can hesitate to give full credit to this greatest of all remedies. “I have used Paine’s celery compound,” says Mr. Belasco, “and found it of great benefit after hard work.” SAN DIEGO, Feb. 1.—Mrs. Delphine | | Einstein of San Francisco is suing in the | Superfor Court here to prevent the sale of the valuable Red Mountain ranch near Fallbrook for the debts of her husband. | | The judgment is for $5200 and is in favor of the Bank of California. It is alleged that the indebtedness was incurred while | | Jacob Einstein, the husband, was in part- | | nership with his brother in S8an Francisco. | | At any rate, the judgment was obtained | and the execution was sent here for sat- | isfaction. The ranch. which stands in the | name of Mrs. Einstein, was seized and is advertised for sale next Monday under the execution, 1 The attorneys of the bank claim_that | the ranch was not transferred by Jacob | Einstein to his wife until after the in- debtedness was incurred, and that it was | then made for the purpose of defrauding | the creditors of the judgment debtor. The | motion to dismiss the. execution was ar- | gued to-day and will be decided in the | morning in time to prevent the sale if the decision be in favor of Mrs. Einstein. WILL CONSOLIDATE | | mGH!EEN CANNERIES Company With $2,000,000 Capital to Purchase North Coast Plants. TACOMA, Feb. 1.—R. Onffroy went East six weeks ago for the purpose of forming a new fishing company. The capital stock is subscribed and another $2,000,000 com- pany will make its headquarters at Fair- baven this season, while it operates all | along the coast from Cape Flattery to | Bering Sea. | Onffroy’s deal inciudes the buying and | operating of eightcen canneries, about | five of them beinz on Puget Sound. Among them are the two canneries of Ainsworth & Dunn, one of Anacortes and one of Fairhaven. The balance of the cannerles are in Alaskan waters and there is where most of the fishing will be done. ———— e e e e Clever Cooks Know that indigestion waits on grease and ill-humor or both, and therefore avoid the use of -greasy and impure hog fat for shortening and frying. There |is no hog fat in White Cottolene Nothing but pure refined vegetable oil and choice beef suet, the use of which means clean, light, wholesome, appe- tizing and easily digested food, Highly endorsed by eminent physicians as healthful and nutritious. Try WHITE COTTOLENE once and you will always use it. The NK.Fairbank Company, Chicago—Sole Manufacturers. flEE' Our dainty booklet, ' “A Public Secret,"" mailed free to any address. For two % stamps we will S page rerite edited our 1 ‘Home Helps, Ror Mexican Store, J. C. cu Caz Mr. Belasco has managed more actors who have become famous and taken charge of more big iheaters from Francisco to New York than any living person. He has seen time and time again members of ‘“‘the profession” who wera “run down" and on the verge of nervous exhaustion, gain in strength and vigor as %oon as they began the use of Paine's celery compound. Theatrical people, as a body, have learned that the best way to keep thelr nervous tems strong and capable of doing the hard work demanded of them is to use Paine’s celery compoun: whenever they feel tired out,- languld dull, or are a or Sor the brilliant adapter o? “Zaza,” the teach- | billous or nervous attacks. Paine’s celery compound has saved thon- sands of people from nervous prostration. It has made thousands well. It has cured where everything else has falled. In cases of severs neuralgia, rheuma- tism, heart palpitation, dyspepsia, and nervous feeblgness, Paine's celery com pound is the only remedy that goes to t root of the trouble. It fortifles the weak- ened system against these disorders and builds up a strong, healthy body. There is no community in America with- out some perfectly attested cure of liver or kidney disease, chronic constipation | salt rheum, plaguing eczema, or general poor health by the use of Paine's celer | compound. Impalred strength and un strung nerves, made known by numbness | of the Itmbs, nervousness, and, worse thaa all, by a melancholy state of mind—al these weaknesses become things of the | past after taking Paine’s celery com- pound. Wherever men and women work and strive Palne’s celery compound Is regarded | as a godsend. In shop, office, factory, an1 | among the weary wives and mothers who bear the burden of domestic work, Paine’s celery compound is prolonging by | strengthening every bodily furetior 1 driving out disease. life It is a peerless remedy in all cases of | enteeblea AQQOW’ B’PA'ND KATONAH 1CRESWELL 25¢'each 2 for25¢ CLUETT. PEABODY. &CO : P UMAKERS Lafiiln & Rand Waterproof Smokeless Powder, in bulk and loaded in shel fyr catalogue of sporting goods. GEO. W. SHREVE, 39 Market street. Weak Men and Women SHOL’LD USE DAMIANA BITTERS, THE great Mexican remedy: gives health and strength to sexual organms. Depot. 323 Market. e e e e OCEAN TRAVEL. HAWAIL, SAMOA, NEW ZEALAND w0 SYDNEY, oceanic8.5.00. it — SS. MARIPOSA_(Honolulu only). ....Saturday, Februa: ‘RALIA, for Tahitl. riday, Febru SS. VED . for Honolulu, Samo: Zealand_and Australia. 3 .. Wednesd: February 13, at § p. m. SPRECKELS & BROS. flfiiml Agents, 327 Market St Bou'| Passanger Offca, 843 Market SL., Fr ko, 7, Pacific St KOSMOS LINE Monthly safling for Valparalso and Hamburg via Mexican ports. Central. South America, et ss HATHOR.5300 Tons OCTAVIA.7000 Tons LUXOR...6500 Tons SERAPIS. 4000 Tons SESOSTRIS SAILS ABOUT February 5, 1991. J. 0. SPRECRELS & BROS. C8., Bansral 327 Market St h'”!wml!."!w“-. 1, Pacifie St STEANSHIP PANAMA R. R, e To KEW YORK via PANAMA Direct Cabin, $105; Steerage, $40. S. S. ARGYLL sails Februnary 5. S$. S. ROANOKE sails February 19. 8. S. ST. PAUL sails March 5. From wharf, foot of Frfl;‘ml ;;‘..ll!kl'?hll. Freight and senges office, arket st. . T CONNOR. Pacific Const Agent. PACIFIC STEAM NAVIGATION C0. AND £ COMPANIA SUD AMERICANA DE VAPORES “alparaiso, stopping at Mexican, Central From section No. February 7, 1901 To and sSouth American ports. 1. Seawall. _Sailing: §. S. GUATEMALA. 8. 8. PALENé\. RIOS— B3isw. 5 Kearny st. rved Leather Goods, Linen -drawn Work, Fire Opals, Jewelry and Curios, Indian Baskets, Mexican Figures. Fine goods at less than wholesale cost. Fine Carved Leather Belts, cheap at §150; last chance price, Toc. =~ - TO HAVRE-PARIS. DIRECT LINE -] Sailing every Thursday. Instead of , at a. m.. from orin Biver. foot of Morton street. First class to Havre, o lnfl":‘:‘“ld class to Sowara: %;{LU:‘Y;ED Efl‘.\m AND CANADA, 32 Broadway (Hudson building), New York. J. F. FUGAZI & CO., Pacific Ca § ‘oast Montgomery avenue. San Francisco. 2ol by all Railroad Ticket Agents. Pacific Coast Steamship Co. | Steamers leave Broadway wharf, San Franeisco. Feb. 5, 10, 15, 20, Change to company’s at_Seattle. Victorta, Vancouver (B. o. mers Everett, and New Whatcom (Wash.)— 1% a. m., Feb. 5, Mareh 2, and every fifth thi: 10, 15, 2, 2, company’s steame v.; at Seattle or Tacoma at Seattle fo: | Alaska anda G. to N.-P. Ry.: at Vancouver to Ry. For Eureka, Humboldt Bay—2 p. m., Feb. 2 |7 12 17, 22, 21, March 4, and every fifth day thereafter. 4 For San Diego. stopoing only at Santa Bar- .Mn. Port Los Angeles and Redondo (Leos An- grles)—Steamer Queea. Wednesdays, 9 a. m.; | steamer Santa Rosa. Sundays. 9 a. m. | For Santa Cruz. Mont n ucos. Port Harford (San Lu ota. Santa Barbara, Ventura Pedro, East San Pedro (L« Newport—Steamer Corcna. steamer Bonita, Tuesda For Ensenada, Mag: Cabo, Mazatlan. Altata | and Guaymas (Mex.)—10 a. m.. Tth sach month | For further information obtain company's | tolders. | The company steamers, sailing dates and hours of | *ithout previevs natics. | 'TICKET OFFICE—4 New Montgomery street (Palace Hotel). GOODALL, PERKINS & CO.. Gen. Agts., 10 Market st., San Francisco. THE 0. R. & N, CO. DISPATCH FAST STEAMERS TO PORTLAND From Spear-street Wharf at Il & m, i H $I2 First Class Including Berth A $8 Second Class and Meals. COLUMBIA Sails. - GEO. W. ELDER ar Short Line to Walla Walla, Spokane, Butte, Helena and all points in' the Northwest. 1 kets to all points E. A E. C. WARD, General Agent, 630 Market st. AMERICAN LINE. NEW YORK. SOUTHAMPTON, LONDON, PARIA Stopping at Cherbourg, westbound. From New York Every Wednesday, 10 a. m. San Jowe del anta Rosaila reserves the sight to changs saWtng. Kensington .....Feb. 13] Vaderland ... March § St. Louls. Feb. 20/ S¢. uf .. March 13 New York .Feb. 27| New Y March 20 RED STAR LINE. ew York and Antwaerp. From New York Every Wednesday, 12 noon. Kensington .Feb. 18| Southwark ...March & Noordland . Feb. Westernland .. March 13 Fricstand Aok INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION COMPANY, CHAS. D. TAYLOR, General Agent Pacific Coast, 230 Montgon street. TOYO KISEN KAISHA, TEAMERS WILL LEAVE WHARF. COR- ner First and Braonan streets. at 1 p. m., for YOKOHAMA and HONGKONG, calling at Kobe (Hiogo), Nagasaki and Shanghal, and connecting at Hongkong Wwith steamers for India, etc. No cargo received on board om day of sailing. §S. NIPPON MARU... 2 Tuesday. February 19, 1901 §S. AMERICA )Eu;““i?rmu, March 15, 191 ” ,Anom“‘o ..Tuesday. April 9, 1901 Round-trip tickets at reduced rat v freight and passage apply at company's office, @ &Iflet street, corner First. W. H. AVERY, General Agent. BAY AND RIVEF STEAMERS. —~ e FOR U. S. NAVY YARD AND VALLEJD. Stea—-= Mo ticeln, "t MON., Tues., Wed., Thurs. and Sat. at 9: a-"ll-l.-.‘l s “5 ‘l.;)_wm 'l'h\ln.mlgl'lht); Fri g, m. Landing "x and office. Miseion-sireet Boci d ™ BRILLIANT BELASCO. The Playwright Saved From Breakdown by Paine’s Celery Compound. ’