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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1901 RUFFIAN'S ACT WRECKS A LIFE Sad Siory Told in a Dam- age Suit Against South- | 'MUCH UNEASINESS CAUSED | BY VESSELS BEING OVERDUE ‘One Firm of Shipowners Loses Three of Its Fleet on ‘ Pacific Coast in Three Years. POLYGHMY LAY ARDUSES UThH Bill Regarding Prosecution for Infidelity Passes Legislature. Author of the Measure Declares It Was Framed to Prevent the Pe- riodical Furor Against Mormons. g (LA e SALT LAKE, Utah, March 11.—To-da: three days before the Legislature come: to a close, the House, by a vote of 25 to 17, and after an exciting debate, in which more than a dozen members participated, passed the Evans Senate bill amending that portion of the revised statutes of Utah ‘relating to prosecutions for infidel- ity. Having passed the Senate last week by a vote of 11 to 7, the document now goes to the Governor for signature. This bill, which was introduced by Sen- ator A. J. Evans of Juab county, has caused more discussion and more feeling than any measure introduced at the pres- | ent session of the Legislature. Its text is as follows: Every person Who has reason to belleve that | a crime or public offense has been committed by another person may make complaint against h person before some magistrate having au- thority to make inquiry of same; provided that no prosecution shall be commenced except on complaint of the husband or wife or relative of the accused within the first degree of con- sanguinity or of a person with whom the un- lawful act is alleged to have been committed, | or of the father or mother of said person, and no prosecution shall be commenced except on ccmplaint of the wife or alleged plural wite of the accused; but this proviso shall not ap- ply to prosecutions under section 4208 of the rovised statutes of Utah, 159, defining and | punishing polygamous marriages. In answer to a request for a statement as to the object of the bill, Senator Evans, | its author, furnished the following: My object in presenting the bill was two- 2 ! Pl - 3 ern Pacific ST Rock Hurled Through a Car Window by a Rough Permanently In- jures Miss Lillian M. | Steffani. | ared through being . K wn by a hoodlum | s it was passing a was riding. The in- May 7, 1899, at the Mis: efflan] from San ¥ The rock h P ¥ s N S nd Mrs SETS FIRE TO HIS CELL. risoner Attempts to De- stroy the Town Jail | s S. Mar ? s BRITISH SHIP CAPE WRATH IN A GALE OFF THE COAST OF OREGON. SHE WAS LAST SPOKEN OFF THE e COLUMBIA RIVER BAR, BUT THE VESSEL HAS NOT BEEN HEARD FROM SINCE AND IS GIVEN UP FOR | s | LOST. . + Y_ % HE opening months of the new | C u\&mhlu]'fl}\’ur 1\;\1 Cn;np:\ny with the An- 'nami" x pkgs mach"léwr)'. 35 cs mineral water, | century have been the most disas- | drada and Cape Wrath, 23 kegs 16 cs na crs onfons, s oats, to Pacific Coast shipping | The Cape Wrath was from Callao, and | 10 oakum, 73 cs 10 bbls ofl, §7 cs paint, . . « . 't | on January 15 I she was spoken off the |31 3 8 paper. 350 crs potatoes, 639 pkgs er known. Quite a number of | Columbta River. A gale sprang up and | hiPe; 59 pkgs paste, 200 flasks quickstlver. 4500 coasters have been wrecked, half | she also had to stand off shore. Rein- | {5 ¥ife 15 Bi® Falsine, 25 bls spices, 53 n deep water ships have been either 1ce on her grew from 10 to 85 Per Cent | 1iun' 1ha xago, 4050 1o scdn o6 oo snjerionerY: - =< hosted as mi g or are not reinsurable, few weeks and now no one can be tea, S0 pkgs tank material, 20 bdls shingles. o e Sive Fapie Sninsie Aoub it o d to take a chance on her. 19 pigs tn. 231 crs vegetables, 20 pkgs wag DIVORCE FOR MRS. CORCORAN. th = D | f the Cape Wrath have | material, 14 cs 159 gais wine, 303 cq 151 mais | the John McDonald, now Oout |peen very unfortunate with vessels sent | wine. from Baltimore for San Fran- d Does Not Appear in Court to Make a Contest. TON e divorce suit harge of Captain Watts, er sailed on August 2 in of the bark Pactolus on a similar | The brothers had not met for Y ige and were in hopes of having a chat Eivine at Baltimore. They were disappointed, however. On December 6 last the Pacto- ~- s lus was in latitude 56 degrees 5 minutes et south, longitude 67 degrees 5 minutes west Bto imsens (about ten miles south of Cape Horn). = Strange to say, there w: no wind to peak of and a calm sea. When the mists | sl cleared away a ship was sighted about g mile aw and it did not take long to THE DENTIST” AT WORK. make her out as the John McDonald | e . ine | Captain Watts of the Pactolus soon h Burglar Again Operating | ;°cat'in the water and inside of half an | hour he was shaking his brother's hand. the Garden City. s s A They had a long chat, and then the cap- tal e Pactolus returned to his ves- sel and soon both ship and bark were | The headed again or San_Francisco. Pactolus arrived re February 3 and now on her way to New Whatcom to loac s | - lu er for Cape Town, but there is nc word from the John McDonald. The voy- | = age is not long enough to warrant 4 per | 0 worth of | cent reinsurance, but then the underwrit- ers are afraid of spontaneous combustion in the coal cargo. Other vessels that are being reinsured are the Ardnamurcnan, % days out from Frazer River for Liverpool, on_which 50 per cent is being paid: Henry Hackfield, ber of denti same m, h of gold a throughoyt by this m; 211 davs from Philadelphia for Nagasaki, 8 B 30 per cent; Khorasan, 321 days from Tam- Recklessness Costs His Life. pa for Yokohama, 5 per cent, and Eliza S AN —1t developed | Nicholson, 106 days from New Westmin- ster, B. C., for Shanghal, 3 per cent. The Arnamurchan will not be due in Eng- d for another month. The reason why einsurance is being pald on her is that salmon that is said to have been stoweld in her lower hold when she went to sea Fas washed ashore on the Oregon coast. | sy | CANNOT BE REINSURED. | Vessels on Which Gamblers Cannot Be Tempted to Take Chances . | During the last few days the British ghips Andrada and Cape Wrath and the German shyp Bertha ve ‘been given up Strange to all three were Fra sverlar nk Bar- nction, The acci- e vietim’s own d to board the to show a missed his fell beneath the - empte merely cide in Napa A; sylum. George aged 41 year: a :i";mxal. nd for Portland, Or., and two of them ¥ \hang- | were spoken off the Columbla River. The min | 4 ndrada was from Santa Rosalia in bal- | last and on December 11 last she was off the mbia River. Pllot George Cord- 5 ner buarded her, but a gald sprang up 1 Wilhelm | and he had to take the ship off shore, 2 . ted suicide | From that day to this the Andrada has h me, four rever been seen. The Bertha was from Welhaiwel, also last, and she must have been off the | | | old Dust Washing Powder Read the directions on the package and see if you are getfing all the help from GOLD DUST that you can have. It is better than ammonia and soda and much easier to use. House work is hard work without GOLD DUST. 2 . Made only by i THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY New York Philadelphia. St. Louls Boston Montreal Also manufacturers of FAIRY SOAP \ Chicago | sure to do some cursing when th | Whitney & Co., that were cut adrift by | all went adrift. | took a load of coal from Philadelphia to R Wheat Shipment. The British ship Auldgirth cleared vesterday for Falmouth for orders with 56,420 ctls wheat valued at §5,200 and 17,000 ft lumber as dun- page valued at $250. to the Pacific Coast. In 1899 they sent the steel four-masted bark Dominion from ardiff to Honolulu with a cargo of coal. aptain Merideth, who had commanded her from the day she went into commlis- | sion, was glven a new ship—the Ann as—and a new man took the Domin- From Honolulu the Dominion and from that day to this nothing has ever been heard of her, In 1800 Captain Merideth sailed from : t for Acapulco in the Annie Thom- either master nor vessel have ever heard from since. The Wrath is a out started for Victoria, B. C. Notice to Mariners. SAN FRAN( "0 BAY, CALIFORNIA. Notice is hereby given beacon, a single pile painted red and black ! disappeared February that Berkeley Reef crossed with boards, rizontal stripes, which 11, new ship and she took a cargo of coal | practically the old position. from Cardiff to Callao. After discharg-| T ce affects the “List of Beacons and ing her carge she started for Portland in | Buoys. Pacific Coast, 1901’ page 24. | ballast. Seafaring men are of the opin- | BY order of the Lighthouse Board U. SEBREE, of the Andrada, Ber- N e T Cape W h will be found on scky coast of Vancouver Island. A sister ship to the Andrada—the Ande- lan; psized in a squall while anchored in Tacoma harbor and every soul on board was drowned. Many attempts were ion that the rema and Commander, U. house Distric Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. Monday, March 11. made to raise the ship, but she still 1es | Stmr Aberdeen, J e at the bottom of the Sound. Diego, Vin San Pedro 31 hours o San - 'ln r 'l‘nlu'\xnhm. Doran, 633 hours from Port- 7 3 and, via Astoria 48 hours. ITiVes. Bark Cap Horn A mr Alcazar, Martin, 42 hours from San The French four-masted steel bark Cap | Horn arrived from Iquique vesterday Samoa, Higgins, 44 hours from San | after a good run of fifty-one days. She | PSTN 1i.a Madsen, 43 hou St . dsen, rs 1 Sa is @ water ballast vessel, but neverthe- | Pedro. it en less brought along with her 1241 tons of | Ship McLaurin, Oakes, 61 days from Mantla. the coal g0 she took aboard at New- [ pEr ship Can Horn, Hamon, 51 days from cas A W., in November last. Thel 'Schr 1da Schnauer, Sorenson, 8 days from Cap Horn is 2372 tons net burden, 305 feet | Port Gamble. > h;*t‘hr Mary C, Campbell, 9 hours from San o0 7 Inches long, 44 feet 6 inches beam and 24 feet 2 inches deep. She salled from 2 Newcastle, N. 8. W on November 6 5 days from | with about 500 tons of coal. The con- it s e | signees in Iquique did not want that R s e CLEARED, Monday, March 11. Stmr Bonita, Nopander, San Pedro: Goodall, much coal, so 1241 tons of it had to be brought here, and the Cap Horn had no for water ballast. This is her first age to San Francisco e Schooner Albion Makes Trouble. The schooner Albion discharged her car- 20 of lumber in the chanmel above the Fourth-street bridge Sunday. Yesterday she was ready for sea and the drawbridge Perkins & Co. Stmr- State of California, and Port Townsend; Goodall, Perkins & Co. Whalicg stmr Willlam Baylies, Cottle, whal- Jepsen, ing cruise Br ship L Kauffma Willlam Lewis. Auldgirth, McConnell, SAILED. Monday, March 11. Queenstown; was opened to let her through. By some :{m: ;_fl:’or;i.e;n. Jfinavn, F.l;rvknk | unknown means she was swung broad- S edro, Jahnsen. Fureks. side on and her ~bowsprit went clear| Rimt Noyor Jompins Fureka. through the small house used as an office | Stmr Luella, Madseh, —. by State Wharfinger Francoeur. The lat- ter gentleman had a narrow escape, as he jumped just in time to get out of the TELEGRAPHIC. POINT LOBO! arch 11, 10 p m—Weather Vi ow miles per hour. way. The house was pierced through Y 2 both walls and moved about twenty feet | poRT HADLOG Vs . alcng the whart. The Albion was finally | Robert Dollar. for San Francirch 10-Stmr r and anchored off Mission Rock. MARSHFIE g0, hence Ma: ASTORIA eot o Arrived March 11—Stmr Ar- Lightship Coming In. Arrived March J1—Br stmr Good- win, from China; stmr Gel§W Elde During the month of April the captains | March §; stmr Fulton, he March fi,r' e of vessels coming from foreign ports are | SA March 11—Stmr Nome reach the San Francisco bar. Of course, the first object they will look for will be the lightship, but that craft with its warn- ing whistle will not be there. The Gov- ernment has issued a notice to mariners which states that about April 1 light ves- :wld 0. 70 wllA be v;'!\hdmwn for repairs and that a red gas buoy with “light ves- sel moorings” painted on it in black let- 1 Rl Mo Neck, hancd Masclvis. ters will take its place. The question is| phalled March 1—Stmr Pomona, being_asked, “Is it not about time that " FOREIGN PORTS San Francisco had a second lightship?”’ ANTWERP—Arrived March 9—-B Surely ;herehwflroh erlmugh accl‘dentu 3086 vorton: Mence OStds v ship Mil year when the lightship came in to war- 4 ) —Br rant the expenditure. goolled March §—Br ship Harlech Castle, for rch 9—Br ship Aca- FAl;'MOL'T!;l—A{n\'ed Ma: Water Front Notes. b e AR h HULL—Arrived March 0—B; The bar was breaking yesterday and | hence Oct 10, v ship Glencaird, all incoming and outgoing vessels had to | ,QUEENSTOWN—Satled March $—Br S04 $his BNt ORADTIEL: Penthesilea, for San Francisco. | SWANSEA—Sailed March 9—-B; . Half a dozen dories, owned by C. E.|down, for San Francisco. ELoi MEny CALETA BUENA—£ailed March 7—) - wriser, dor Port Bagiiok? [0 TR e N E! ‘aile larch 10—S; 1 3 —Arrivec arch 11—Ja it Nirmon Maru, hence Feb 19, P NANAIMO-—Sailed March 10—Nor stmr Tita- nia, for San Francisco. OCEAN STEAMERS. GLASGOW-—Arrived March 11—Stmr matian, from Boston. NEW YORK-—Arrived March 11-Stmr Stat- endam, from Rotterdam and Boulogne. SOUTHAMPTON — Arrived March 11—Stmr Kalser Wilhelm der Grosse, from New York, and proceeded for Bremen. f e Sun, Moon and Tide. PORT TOWNSEND— b c] -Scl > K Wood, for Halphong. D sanh et SEATTLE—Sailed March 10~Stmr City of Seattle, for Alaska; stmr Leelanaw, for San Franclsco; schr Martha W Tuft, for Yakutat. JATved March T1-Stme Santa Ana. hence GRAYS HARBOR—Arrived March 11—Stm: Sequoia, hence March 7. v EUREKA—Arrived March 11—Stmrs Alllance for ship a bay schooner about a week ago, were recovered at Goat Island training station yesterday. The boats are to be used in codfishing this season and had been taken to Hunters Point to be overhauled. | They were all moored on a long line and | when the schooner broke the cable they Charles Nelson has purchased the steamer Santa Ana from A. W. Beadle & Co. The vessel Is now on the Sound load- ing for Honolulu. The American ship McLaurin, which Sar- Manila for the American navy, arrived ! from the Philippines vesterday. It is said | that she has been purchased by the Alas- | United States Const and Geodat vey— ka Packers' Association and will #0 to| — Times and Heights ot Mign and. Tow Bristol Bay this season. | Waters at Fort Point, entrance to San Francisco Bay. Published by official thority of the Superintendent. NOTE—The high and low waters ccur at the city front (Mission-street wharf) about twenty-five minutes later than at Fort Point; tho height of tide is the same at both places. —— e NEWS OF THE OCEAN. Matters of Interest to Mariners and hipping Merchants. The Diamond Head will load merchandise for Honolulu: the Mohican, same voyage; the Repeat, merchandise for Santa Rosalia. The British ship Cape Horn was chartered | prior to arrival for wheat to Europe, 37s 6d. | -— Large Cargo on the Curacao. The steamer Curacao sailed Saturday for Mexican ports with a general cargo valued at 5 Including the following: 63 bxs apples, cid, 50 cs apoilinaris, 4121 Ibs bird seed, 2257 hs bread, 502 ctls barley, 1322 s butte 20,570 Tbe bluestone, 356§ Ihs beans, 10 cs brand; 2002 Ths bran, 2§ cs baking powder, 22 cs canned 832 The copper. 40 bbls cement, 9 pkgs | aterial, 716 Ths dried fruft, 20 dry |18 cs electrical goods, 10 cs eggs, 10 | crs furniture, 1314 pkgs groceries, 9 bbls ginger ale, 30 bales hay, 67 pkgs hardware, 61, u- | TUESDAY, MARCH 12. | Sun rises . Sun sets Moon rises N E—In the above exposition of the t Ides | the early morning tides are given in the left ft lumber, 19 pigs lead, 70 cs liquors, 14§ Tts | band colump and the successive tides of the | North Fork. has been rebuflt in | Victoria | Sam | fold. In the first place it was intended to keep | down public agitation by taking away from | certain agitators the opportunity to arouse | periodic furores against the Mormons, directly | ana indirectly against the State of Utah, and for that reason its primary purpose was for the general good of the State. I belleve that & general law upon our statute books, in con- formity with the laws of Michigan, Minneso Icwa, Oregon and North Dakota, and even more’ liberal laws, would create much less agitation throughout the country than the practice which has heretofore ben resorted th of arresting every few weeks some Mormon on a charge of unlawful acts and having the | orrest announced in glowing headlines by all those newspapers throughout the country whi can bé induced to take up an anti-Mormon | erusade. erybody knows that these arrests have | been made for political and religious purposes, d not with any patriotic desire to enforce | the law. Within the last ten years much more | than half of those involved in polygamous re- | lations have passed away by death or those re- lations have been otherwise dissolved. Most of those remaining are advanced in years, and | no good cr honorable purpose can be subserved by prosecuting the few remaining polygamists. | Every onz of these prosecutions is a source of regret to fully % per cent of the people of | Utah, for the reason that such proceedings | | create an agitation harmful to the State. It | may be that an agitation more harmful can | | b inaugurated by reason of the passage of this law, but I do not belleve it. To use the old | metaphor, we are between the devil and tne | deep sea, and the bill is intended to relleve | the State of a condition of affalrs more harm- ful, in my opinion, than this bill could pos sibiy be. Surely the United States will p it Utah to act in her domestic concerns with | much freedom as is allowed such States | as those 1 have named, especially when the | terms of the enabling act and our State con- stitution have been strictly complied with. { have in this marter acted with the best m tive and according to what, in my judgment, | is for the best interests of the commonwealth. Representative W.¢G. Van Horn of Salt | Lake, who made an impassioned speech | against the passage of the bill in the House to-day, gave the following state- | ment: | The first object of the bill is indubitably to prevent the prosscution of those maintaining Polygamous relations long since contracted: | The effect, however, will probably be to have adopted a_ constitutional amendment giving rower to Congress to legislate against pol mous and unlawful cohabitation. Laws p | under ‘such an amendment will be prosecuted by United States District Attorneys swcrn to | enforce the law and violations will be care- fully looked up by United States Marshals and | | their assistants. There will thus be a return tc conditions prevalent during the agsressive | prosecutions under the Edmunds-Tucker law, | when hundreds of prominent Mormons were | | tmprisoned for their polygamous practices and | | numbers of others were in hiding or out of Ttah to avold arrest | There will, however, In case of prosecution. be additional hardships over those suffered in | former times. Those men convicted were Im- | prisoned here, near thelr homes, and were | deemed by thelr neighbors as martyrs rather than criminals. Convicted under United States | 1aw they 1d be confined in United States | prisons outside of Utah and “away from the | support and consolation of their friends. I | { opposed the bill in all friendship for the law- ohiding people of Utah and with pity for the | those not strictly themselves. can law-ablding It is a distinct | bring naught but suffering that Will bring upon | step backward and | misery. ‘.4—!—%—}—!—(—{—{‘?%’1—!—!— ® day in the order of occurrence as to time of day; the third time column gives the last tide of the day, except when there are but three tides, as sometimes occurs. The heights given are In addition to the soundings on the United States Coast Survey charts, except when a minus (—) sign precedes the height, and then the number given is subtracted from the depth given by the charts. The plane of reference is the mean of the lower low waters. Steamer Movements. | Steamer. ] Due. | | Mar. 12 | Coquille River.|Grays Harbor Australla Tahiti ar. 12 | | Progreso. Tacoma |Mar. 12 | Chico. Tillamook Bay. Mar. 12 Crescent City..|Crescent City ‘Mnr. 12 | ! Pomona Humboldt {Mar. 12 | Newport. .|Panama & Way Ports. Mar. 12 Argo. .|Coquille River..... <12 | Walla Walla. Puget Sound Ports. . 13 4 | Mariposa.......| Honoluiu 3 Corona. Newport . | Rainier. Impire. Hyades. H. K |Coos Bay |Seattle . | Tillamool Mandalay. Coaquille River. Leelanaw Seattle ... | Foint Arena... |Point Arena Santa Rosa.... |San Diego Arcata |Coos Bay Titan: |Nanaimo Rurek: Humboldt | w York | of Peking. China and Japan North Fork..... Humboldt Santa Ba San Pedro Kvarven . i | G. w. Eid b ‘\ San Pedro . Oyster Harbor | Coronado. Willamette. Emplire... am|Pier 13 arel | Pomona.. Humboldt 2 pm|Pler 9 Astoria & Por 11 am|Pier 24 {Coquille River. 4 pm|Pier 2 {Humboldt |10 am|Pier 2 | Mareh | | Seattle & N. What.[10 am|Pler 2 {China and Japan. pm. PMSS . | Newport am|Pler 11 Marc] { [Coos Bay .. mi{Pler 13 v | Tillamook Bay pm|Pier 13 Mariposa. ... Honolulu ..... pm|Pler 7 Coronad Grays Harbor . Pler 2 Mandala. Coquille River ... |Pler 2 oint Arena. pm|Pler 2 Santa Barbar| Seattle dircet am{Pler 2 ¥ | Mareh 17. | Walla Walla.| Puget Sound Dts...[11 am|Pler 9 Santa Rosa.. |San_Diego .. 9 am/Pler 11 " Mareh 18. { Newport..... |Panama & Way Pth2 m|PMSS Humboldt | 9 am|Pier 2 | faire distinetly peculiar. | and young Edmonstone was placed undcr | | break the marital borids. ADVERTISEMENTS. “Iam so Glad you are _well; Dear Sister. iV 5y o I il b i This picture tells its own story of sisterly affection. The older girl, just budding into womanhood, has suffered great- 1y with those irregularities and menstrual difficulties which sap the life of so many young women. ] Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound can always be relied upon to restore health to women who thus suffer, It is a sovereign cure for the worst forms of female complaints,—that bearing-down feeling, weak back, falling and displacement of the womb, inflammation of the ovaries, and all troubles of the uterus or womb. It dissolves and expels tumors from the uterus in the early stage of develop- ment and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. It subdues excitability, nervous prostration, and tones up the entire female system. Could anything prove more clearly tho of- ficiency of Rfrs. Pinkham’s Medicine than the following strong statement of Grace Stansbury? ¢ DEAR Mgs. PINgkHAM :—I was a sufferer from female weakness for about a year and a half. I have tried doctors and patent medicines, but nothing helped me. I underwent the horrers of local treatment, but re- ceived no benefit. My ailment was pronounced nleeration of the womb. € I suffered from intense pains in the womb and ovaries, and the backache was dreadful. I had leucorrheea in its worst form. Finaliy, [ grew so weak I had to keep my b The pains were so hard as to almost cause spasms. When I could endure the pains no longer, I was given morphine. My memory grew short and I gave up all hope of getting well. Thus I dragged along. - To please my sister I wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for advice. Her answer came, but meantime I was taken worse and was under the doctor’s eare for a while. ‘* After reading Mrs, Pinkham's letter, I con- cluded to try her medicine. After taking two bottles I felt much better; but after using six ttles I was cured. All of my fricnds think m; cure almost miraculous. I th CRACE B8.STANSBURY || for your timely advice and wish in your noble work, for surely it is a blessing to broken-down womcn. I have full and complete faith in the Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound.”—Grace B. STANSBURY, Herington, Kansas. which will be paid to CLAINS HE WS FORCED 10 WED Young Husband Sues to| Annul Marriage to His Child-Wife. ; Speclal Dispatch to The Call Owing to the fact that some skeptical people hav- time to time questioned the genuineners of the testimonial letters we are constantly publishing, we have ional City Dank, of Lynn, ¥ person who will lished ‘befare obtain NwaTCR A D RIVERSIDE, March 11L—The prelim- fnary skirmish in what fromises to be onn of the most remarkable cases ever tried | In the State took place before Judg: Noyes of the Riverside County Superior | Court to-day. The suit is brought to an- | nul a marriage which took place in God- erick, Canada, on June 24, 1898. Archibald Sdmonstone is the plaintiff and his wi Winnie Edmonstone, the defendant. Mr Sdmonstone is now only 16 vears of age IT’S FOLLY To put your dress shirts to the test of standing the wear and tear of ordinary laundries—expensive, too. Better put us to the test of doing them right. We'll prove to your satisfactio t we can please you, add to the wear aving been married at the age of 13| of your linen and afford you peace of years and 6 months. The plaintiff is 12 | mind in wearing it with our domestic years her senfor. finish Edmonstone seeks to have his marital Collars and cuffs—as well as drees shirts—prove the rightness of our work. No saw edges. UNITED STATES LAUNDRY Office 1004 Market Str Telephone—South 420, Oakland Offic—54 San Pablo Ava, onds severed on the ground that they were forced upon him by threats anl duregs, and he names the girl's father as a party to the suit. The complaint and its answer, whick were in evidence in to-day's hearing, a?reed on some of the more salient points of the case, and reveal a condition of af- Archibald and ‘Winnie were neighbors in a little Canu- | dian town. They loved not too wisely | wvisir OR. JORDAN’S amzar arrest for a crime which inCanada is pun- shable by both whipping and a long term i l SE"I oE l.‘To. in the penitentiary. The Queen's counsel | 1061 XARZET 9P det. S2AMY, 5.0 Gl and the young man’s attorneys, the most | noted criminal lawyers in the province. The Anatomical Museum i the. held a conference and it was agreed that p st F::.-;;; I Sy ew—n" if Edmonstone would marry the girl the | Speciler e the _""‘B“";_g"“". prosecution would be dropp-d. The al- nm‘““'!m ternative was eagerly accepted, and the marriage took place without further a-to. | i S0 ok db-ty prbeasn Edmonstone could not stand the dis- | e grace of his arrest and its denouement e T SR and soon after his mairiage came to Ca: WABRIAGE, WAILID SRER A ifornia. Here he declded to bring suit to valuadie beo: for men) Edmonstone as- BEDAN & CO., 105! Markot #t_8. F. Steamer. | Destination. [Salls.| Pier. | gerts that he married ihe girl because of | Q Heub ’ March | her father's threats. | il A il B Newburg.....|Grays Harbor . 5pm|Pler 2| y B | B Eurekn ;- |[Humboldt ... olv/| v am|Pler 13 | SANTA ROSA, March 1L_The Petalumia DR, HALL’S REINVIGORATOR; ELA Sthtea {Ruget Sound Portsill amiPler 9 | Theater property was soid to-day in the | Five hundred reward for any (A3 Gaarinke . [acathe & Eihbiisd _“’“;*;ll" 1 | Superfor Court here (o A. J. Bloom, a | case we cannot cure. This secret Alex. Duncan| g, o 3 pm[Pler 8| rancher of Chileno Valley. The price was | remedy stops ail losses in 24 hours, anta Cruz 2 pm Pier 11 | g4409. | cures Emissions, Impotency, Vari< | 7 | cocele. " Gonorrhcea. ) 4 pmPler 7 Strictures, Lost Manhcod ana aii G0 MY 9 am|Pier 11 | wasting offects of 3 3 pm|Pier 2 | excesses. 'Sent sealed. % 5 , $5; guaranteed to cure any case. Ad- INSTITUTE. %5 Tor sale at 10734 e diseases quick!y Market st cured. 1 s Sem - et | Weak Men and Women | great Mexican remedy; strength to sexual organs. for catalogue of sporting goods. GEO. W. SHREVE, GUNS Weekly Call, $1 per Year ANl priv book. gives health and 323 Market. Depot Laflin & Rand Waterproot Smokeless Powder. in bulic and loaded In sheils, Send