The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 24, 1901, Page 9

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, " FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1901, STAR OF BENGAL PUTS BACK BECAUSE OF MASTER’S ILLNESS Pilot Boat America Brings Sick Man Ashore and Takes a New Captain Out to the Bark. BARK STAR OF BE! LOT BOAT AMERICA. | THE MASTER. VESSEL HAD TO PUT BACK HERE ON YOKOHAMA—Arrived May 18—Br stmr Bel- glan King, from San Diego. HIOGO—Arrived April 21—Jap stmr Kinshiu Enml; April 28—Jap stmr Idsumi Mary, from eattle, HONGKONG—Arrived April 11—Nor stmr trom V. ulglrulm DUNKIRK—Arrived M-v 12—Br ship Glau- cus, from Antwerp. VALPARAISO-In port April 26—Br ship East Indian, for Oregon. QUEENETOWN—Salled May 22—Br ship Al- Chil stmr Limarl was Guayaquil; had one quarantined 9 days at death from yellow fever. VALPARAISO-Salled May 23—Ger stmr Am- mon, for San Francisco. VICTORIA—Arrived May 22—Ger bark Kho- rasan, from Yokohama. CALLAO—Sailed May 21—Schr Winslow, for Puget Sound OCEAN STEAMBRS, LIVERPOOL—Arrived May 25—Stmr Nord- land, from Philadelphia. Salled May 22—Stmr Waesland, for Philadelphia. AL HOVE TO WHILE CAPTAIN HENDERSON WAS BEING TRANSFERRED TO THE PI- ACCOUNT OF THE SERIOUS ILLNESS OF HE bark Star of e, h a load of the hore e Heads y A flag was set for a America sent a boat side the mate reported that the cap- | - 1l with tonsilitis and | Pilot-boat Captain Henderson could only | The sick man transferred to the pilot- He was at once sent | Bengal, from for Adelaide, lumber, esterday | ADVERTISEMENTS. tion. purity, and you will fin Schlitz beer is the recognized pure beer. For fifty years the Schlitz agencies have followed white -men’s conquests. They are twenty years old in South Africa. Schlitz beer was famous in Siberia before a railroad was woh ugh it of. thot When Japan and China first began to awake, Schlitz beer was advertised in their newspapers. Almost as soon as Dewey captured Manila 216 car- loads of Schlitz were sent there. Today Schlitz agencies so dot the globe that when it is midnight at one it is noon- day at another. The quality by which Schlitz beer has won distinc- tion has been its absolute purity. Every physician the world over will recommend Schlitz, the beer that made Milwaukee famous. *Phone Main 447, Sherwood & Sher- wood, 212 Market St., San Francisco beer is the beer of civiliza- Go to any part of the earth where mankind values The Beer of Civilization d Mormon Church and Power, Night ryous Debility vy, Loss of Semen, stipation. Stops Ne rvous Twitching of Eyelids. Effects re immediate. i ‘:‘l‘),;n ':cnatlzinro ncy fonction et despondent: hond. Restore smail, undeveloped X Etimulate the brain L . a - box: € for §2 50 by mail. A written tee %o cure or money refunded 'l!h € boxes. Cir- culars free. Address BIEH P REMEDY Co. “ Eiis st San Cal. DRUG GO, 3 ana 4 Third st. W, T. HESS, NOTARY PUBLIO AND ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Tenth Fioor, Room 1015 Claus Bldg. Powell, Residence, 821 California st., Ean Francisco v res. Lame Bu-x, . Fuing in Back Buil Desires, 4 'Vericocele or Con- VIM, VIGOR, VITALITY for MEN MORMON BISHOP'S PILLS ow Positively o the Soret cases in gl and youns rising _from seif- abuse, alssipation, € ‘Cxocsnce or cigarette-smoking. Lost Manhood. Im) ey, Lon " |. Br stmr Adato, The Star of Bengal left Chemainus on the 13th inst. end ran into some heavy | weather off Flattery. Captain Henderson was suffering-from a sore throat when the vessel left the Sound, but thought the sea air would cure him. The storm off the | coast made him worse, however, and he decided to run for San Francisco. On the speak in a whisper and he seemed to suf- fer a great deal. It will be some time be- | fore he can leave the hospital. As soon as the owners of the Star of | | Bengal were notified of Captain Hender- son’s {llness they at once secured the services of Captain Uhlberg, who went 1 was at once put on her course and before sundown was well on her way to | Australia.. Captain Uhlberg, who took command of the Star of Bengal, was for- merly in the Abby Palmer and is well known on the coast. Should Captain Hen- | derson recover in time he may sail on the | Mariposa for Australia to resume com- mand of his vessel. ursent SO | NEWS OF THE OCEAN. | The Encore will load lumber at Grays Harbor | for Sydney, 52s &d. prior to arrival; the Manlla, | lumber at Ludlow for Iquique, 50s. | —— | A Cargo for New York. The ship Iroquols sailed yesterday for New | Fork with the followluz cargo: wine, 25 cs book: 94 cs drugs, 26 100 ceder logs, 478 bales rags, ber. of the cargo is not xiven. cs machinery, rolls wire cable, 11 bales old rub- Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. | Thursday, May 23. Stmr Luella, Madsen, 5 hours from San Pedro. | _Btmr Alcazar, Martin, 55 hours from San | Pedro. | _Stmr Point Arena, Hansen, 14 hours from Mendoctno. | 8Btmr Corol Glelow, 59 hours from Newport. | Stmr Navarro, Jacobs, 10 hours from Bow- | ens Landinz. Stmr National City, Fort Bragg. Stmr Gipsy, Leland, 26 hours from Monterey. Stmr Aloha, Wehman, 17 hours from Usal. Stmr Santa Rosa, Alexander, 45 hours from | San Diezo, ete. Bktn Benicia, Bowes, Dettmers, 14 hours from 19% days from Hono- Zampa, Pettersen, 10 days from San Del Norte, Jacobson, 66 hours from River. Mary Etta, Nyman, 16 hours from Bih- lers Point { _Schr Ruth E Godfrey, Johnson, 12 days from Port Gamble. Schr Jennie Griffin, Campbell, Point Reyes. RETURNED. Thursday, May 23. Schr Barbara Hernster, Cook, hence May 23, for Cape Nome, on account of breaking a casting in machinery, 10 miles NW of light- ship. CLEARED. | Thursday, May 23. Mcintyre, Guayaquil; W Seattle; 5 hours from |"Grace Co. Stmr Centennial, | Kruse Stmr Pomona, Shea, Burcka; Goodall, kins & Co. Anderson, ET Per- | | SAILED. | Thursday, May 23. Stmr Pomona, Shea, Bureka. | Stmr Luella, Madsen, Caspar. | Stmr Greenwood, Fagerlund, —. | Stmr Centennial, Andersen, Seattle. Stmr Whitesboro, Olsen, ——. | Stmr Columbia, Doran, Astoria. Ship Iroguols, Thompson, New York. Br ship Port Crawford, Swan, Queenstown. Schr Wing and Wing, Hansen, —— Schr Nettie Sundborg, Larsen, —. | Schr Rio Rey, Miller, Mendocino. | Schr Barbara Hernster, Cook, Nome. TELEGRAPHIC. POINT LOBOS, 2310 p. m.—Weather hazy, winth northwest; velocity 16 miles per | hocr DOMESTIC PORTS. | VENTURA—Arrived May 22—Stmr Geo Loo- | mis, hence May 21; May 23—Barge Santa Paula, In tow tug Rescue, hence May 20. PORT TOWNSEND—Sailed May - 28—Schr Bangor, for Vancouver; Chil bark Royal Sov- | ereign, for Port Blakele: | CTILLAMOOK—Arrived May 2%—Stmr Acme, | Bence May 15. EEATTLflvArrlved May 23—Stmr Czarnia, hence May 15. TACOMA—Arrived May 23—Chil bark Yo- semite, from Vancouver. Safled May 23—Stmr Washtenaw, for San Francisco. GRAYS HARBOR—Arrived May 22—Stmr Sen Pedro, hence May 15. SEATTLE—Arrived May 23—Stmr Chas Nel- son, from Skeguay. Salled May 23—Stmr City of Topeka. for Ekaguay. EUREK. rrived May 23—Stmr Pasadena, trom Ban Pedro; smr Aleatraz, hence May stmrs Aberdeen and Eureka, hence May Salled May 28—Schr Ida McKay, for San Fra Safled May 23—Bark Tidal Wave, Angeles. Arrived May 2:—Chil bark Royal from Port Townsend. BAY—Passed out May 23—Chil bark ; stmr “Washtenaw, from cisco. TACOM. TACO)(A-s-uedau-y Ti-Bark Tidal Wave, Los Angeles. F e May 23—Barge Eanta URA—Bailed P:’u?l’:‘rln tow of tug Rescue, for San Fran- NEAH BAY—Passed* in May 23—Stmr San , from Port Los les, for Nanaimo, u:B;OIHA—BIII-d 23 Stmr _ Geo Eider, for San Fran ncinco; stmr Signal, for San FOREIGN PORTS. to the bark and took command. The | As this is a coastwise manifest the value | = | % HAMBURG—Arrived May 23—Stmr Deutsch- land, from New York. SOUTHAMPTON — Arrived May 23 — Stmr )\al!erln Maria Theresa, from New York, via for Bremen. E\ETU\\\ Sailed May 23—Stmr Ger- . from Liverpool, for New York. NEW YORK—Sailed May 23—Stmr Anguste YVictoria, for Hamburg; stmr I'Aquitaine, for | Havre: stmr Neckar, for Bremen GREENOCK—. -Arrived ]\(a) 23—Stmr. Sl.rdlll— | tan, from Philadelphia, via St. John, N. F. LONDON—Sailed May 23—Stmr Menomlne!. for New York. ROTTERDAM—Sailed dam, for New York, via Boulogne PRAWLE POINT—Passed May 23—Stmr Robert Adamson, from Portland, Or., via Cal- | 120, etc. May 23—Stmr Pots- 3 Sun, Moon and Tide, " | United States Coast and Geodetic Survey— Times and Heights of High and Low Waters at Fort Point, éntrance to San Francisco Bay. Published by official au- thority of the Superintendent. NOTE—The high and low waters occur at the city front (Mission-street wharf) about | twenty-five minutes later than at Fort Point; the height of tide is the same at both places. FRIDAY, MAY 24, i‘ | NOTE—In the above exposition of | 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 of | day; the third time column gives the last tide of “the day, except when there are but three tides, as sometimes occurs. The helghts given ey in addition to the soundings on the United States Coast Survey charts, except when a minus (—) slgn precedes the height, and then the number given is subtracted from the depth glven by the charts. The plane of reference is the mean of the lower low waters, FAN S St:nmer Movementu. | TO SAIL, Steamer. | Dcsllnullon |Sails.| Pler. S. Barbara. 2 pm|(Pler 2 | Empire... 12 m|Pler 13 Ruth.... Golofnin & .5 W2 | Valencia. Nome via~ Seattle ‘z,&’:’:’h‘gu“'.'vi Corona... Newport .. 9 am|Pler 11 Point Are; Point Arena 2 pm|Pler 2 Connemaugh. |Nome via_Seattle. (i) am|Pler § Portland Nome via St. Michi| 2 pm|Pier 34 North Fork...|Humboldt {Pler 2 May Eureka........| Humboldt Pler 13 City Puebla... Puget_Soun Pler § Santa Rosa...|San Diego Pler 11 Mandalay.....|Coquille Ry Pler 2 | ay 27. 8. Portland... |Seattle & Tacoma. .. Pler 13 May 28. | Kambyses. . mehg & Way Pts|12 m|Pler 27 1. 8. Kimball. Nome 'via Seattle.|.......|Pler 3 San Blas......|Panama & Way. EMss G. W. Elder..| Astorla_ & Portiand Pler 24 Alliance |Ptind & Coos Bay| Pier 1§ | Bonita. | Newport .. Pler 11 Pomona. mumbam Pler 9 May 29, Amer. Maru..|China_& Japan....| 1 pm|[PMSS > Pler 13 IPler 1 |Pler 7 FROM SEATTL Steamer. Destination, Salls. Cottage City... |Skeguay & Way Po Excelsior. - |yaldez & way Pnr’t:“ Sl:lhy H | Santa Ana ¢ Humboldt 4 Dolphin May 27 Centennial ome & Port Clare Gity of Sealiic. e Skaguay & Way Ports.[May 29 dir May 30 May 30 May 30 June 1 - |June 1 TO ARRIVE. From. Steamer. | Due. Mandalay. Coquille Rive South Coast.... |Ventura o i Santa Barbara.|San Pedro. May 24 Bureka. JH un"hnldl Portland and Astoria. Seattle ... M Panama and Way Ports Tacoma J/Portland & Coos Bay. | Beattlo Puget Soun Mexican Ports |Grays Harbor 'N. Y. via Pan {Oyster Harbor. Valparaiso Via Panamal ydney & Way Ports. h{ ot Sydney. vP-n-m. & Way Ports, Rainer Seattle & N. Whatcom. rona.. Santa Rosa. | | | | | than carload quantities to San Joaquin | giscontinue the daily service of the RAPID TRANGIT FOR FRUIT GARS Southern Pa.mflc Short- ens Time From Here to Ogden. Fitzhugh Inspects Roads of Southern California System. The Southern Pacific Company has made extensive preparations for the hand- ling of deciduous fruit this fall. Willlam Sproule, freight traffic manager of the company, gave out yesterday a brief schedule of the rapid manner in which the truit will be hauled East. Fruit loaded on the trains before mid- night at Sacramento will arrive at Og- den sixty hours later. The company holds assurances from the other roads that this same frult will be landed in Chicago eighty-four hours later. Of this time twenty-four hours are consumed between the Missourl River and Chicago. Sproule saild yesterday that it will be impossible to run on the time that the fruit growers demand unless the fruit is consigned in trainload lots to one given point. Under this new time table fruit shipped from Sacramento on a Monday before midnight will arrive in Chicago the tollowing Monday morning. In that time a deduction has to be made for the inspection of the fruit at Ogden, which consumes two hours, and two hours more are lost in the change from Pacific to Central time. Beginning Saturday, June 1, the Santa Fe will operate its new freight station at Francisco street, on the Harbor Com- missioners’ Belt line tracks, just opposite the south end of section 2 of the seawall, Thereafter all outbound less than carioad shipments of freight will be handled there instead of at Spear-street terminal, | as at present. Freight in carload lots, both inbound and outbound, will be handled as at present, to wit, at either Spear-street terminal or on the Belt line tracks, as may at the time be most con- venient. All inbound merchandise in less than carload lots will continue to be han- dled at Spear-street terminal, as hereto- fore, and at this place the principal local office will be maintained. This will prove a great convenience to the commission merchants and others shipping in less Valley points. On and after June 3 the Santa Fe will Cali- fornia limited. The train will be dis- patched semi-weekly, leaving this city on Mnnday: and Thursdays. The overland time schedule will be faster through the San Joaquin Valley, and the train that leaves here every day at 4:20 will in the future run to Fresno, while in the past the trip terminated at Stockton. E. Fitzhugh, formerly. of the Ver- mont road, is still in San Francisco. He stated yesterday that there had been no change in the situation as far as he is concerned since his arrival here. He has been away several weeks, and during that time has been traveling over the entire Southern Pacific system in the southern art of this State and has even gone as Par as the Mojave Desert. By old railroad men this is looked upon as an-effort on Fitzhugh's part to get thoroughly conver- sent with the workings of the road-before he accepts any position that President Hays may offer him. Sudden Death of Fritz Schrader. Fritz Schrader, a lithographer em- ployed by W. C. Samuels Jr., was found dead in bed in the Webb HouSe yesteraay morning. - He had been in bad health for some time. | oli, TTANY ARTISTS VOLUNTEER " FOR THE ELKS’ BENEFIT Mr. and Trs. Fitzroy Tobin to Assist Before Starting on Australian Tour. -+ n alRL i R. AND MRS. FITZROY K. TO- BIN, former San Franciscans and now distinguished in the vaudeville world, will be two of the one hundred volunteers to appear Elks' night, next Tuesday, at the Alhambra. Ten years ago every one muslca.lly in- clined in San Francisco knew “Fitz.” He Was the best trombone soloist in town and was posse: of a splendid barytone voice, which was often heard in amateur operas. He gave vocal and instrumental lossons and flnally fell head over heels in love with his most talented pupil, now his wife. With a view to going on the stage they prepared a refined musical act, utterly different from any ever resented before- were accepted at the Orpheum and scored an immediate and pronounced hit. That was three years ago,-and since then they have played in the principal vaudeville houses of America. Eiks' night will be one of the notable events_in the amusement history of this city. It is_under the auspices of San Francisco Lodge No. 3 and will be the first public entertainment given by the organization. The programme will in- clude a nautical first part by the Corinth- fan Minstrels, with ten vocal numbers. In the olio such artists as Camille d’Aryille, the great operatic artist; Josephine Gass- man and her pickaninnies; George Matthews, the Golden Gate barytone, and the Corinthian quartet will appear. The * performance will be brought to a close w(th an Amazon march by a beauteous bevy of bright young ladies from the Tiv- followed by another march particl- k3 FAVORITE MUSICIANS WHO HAVE VOLUNTEERED FOR THE ELKS' BENEFIT. PROTOS 8Y MARCEAV o Lodge pated in by sixteen members of Oakland No. 171, with Peter Sloan, Charles Heeseman and Dave McLaughlin as pre- miers. | D.; music, | collection; address, GHURCH RALLY WILL BE HELD Epworth Leaguers to Meet With Other Bodies To-Night. Quarterly Meeting of the Organization to Be a Big One. —_— The quarterly rally of the Epworth League Alllance of San Francisco will be held In the California-street Methodist Episcopal Church this evening. All the Christian Endeuvor socleties and the so- cletles of the Young People’'s Baptist Unlon have been Invited to unite with the leaguers, and the rally promises to be one of the most Important held by the organ- ization In many months. The audience has been requested to give “the Chautauqua salute” as each speaker is Introduced. Among the prominent speakers at the rally will be Bishop Hamilton, Rev. WH- llam Rader and Rev. S. D. Hutsinpiller. (l]-‘oll(;lwmg is the programme to be ren- ered: Organ, Mr. J. ‘““Concert Overture’ (Wolstenholme), B. Warburton; hymn, “‘Coronation 0. 248; recitation of the ‘‘Shepherd Psaim' and prayer, led by Rev. S. D. Hutsinpliler, D. “Grand Fantasia on Gospel Hymns'* R. Dumas), California-street M. E. Band; © “How the Christian En- deavor Convention of 1597 Was Made Success- ful,” Rev. Willam Rader, D. D.; anthem, ‘Great Is Jehovah!” (Schubert); addrees, “What the Great Epworth League Convention Will mean _to California,” Bishop John W Hamlilton, D. D., LL. D.; duet, ‘I Sought the Lord” (Costa), Mr. B. Georges and Miss BE. V. MeClosky; address, ““The On-Coming Hosts,'" Rev. Thomas Filben, D. D., chairman of the general committee; music, selected, California- street M. E. Band; doxology, “Old Hundred'; benediction, Rev. M. D. Buck. The choir will be assisted by B. Georges, G. Brangen, Miss E. V. McClosky and Miss Mabel Gross. Tire of Wedded Life. Suits for divorce were commenced yes- | terday. by Mary Gilmore against Louis Gilmore, Josie Jones against Frank El- | more Jomes, and omas A. Davis against Emily Davis, on the ground of | desertion. Edith L. Applewhite accuses her husbana, John C. Applewhite, of de- | sertion and wants 350 a month alimony |and a division of the community prop- | erty, estimated -at $20,000. Emma M. | White seeks a divorce from Daniel J. i\\'hlte, alleging desertion, and Dottie | Humberg Dana wants a judicial release | of matrimonial bonds from Persor R. Dana, commonly known as Percy F. | Dana, on the ground of habitual intem- | perance. Meta Sophia Maria Jancovich alleges a similar cause against Marco L., Jancovich. Judge Graham has granted Iva Mae Wakefleld, a former resident of Los An- geles, a divorce from Hiram A. Wakefield on the ground of extreme cruelty. There was no contest. - ————— LAUNCHING OF THE OHIO in the ‘Wasp's Presidential souvenir. Sixty pages of reception pictures. On sale at all news | stands. 25 cents. —_——— Bids for Dredging Oakland Canal. Bids were opened yesterday by Colonel | Willam H. Heuer, United States en- | gineer, for the dredging of the Oakland tidal canal. The bids were as follows: West Coast Dredging_Company, 3236, 193; Atlantic, Gulf and Pacific Company, $270,438; H. Burrell, $465,300; Golden Gate Dredging and Reclamation Com- pany, The blds will be forwarded to Wash- ington. To Keep H ot o R 3, o b e g o WES thousand B Tablets after each meal. neollant le x uwn after dinner will digest nevenl grains of , eggs or other animal food in thre gF four diirs, while the malt dias iick Lunch Habit and the indigestion and lack of assimilation which result adds yearly to the great army of dys- peptics. diastase, which fl’vde the lhuud Two of these also eflntllmd \n ellhyanlc medleims m Food is bolted and ‘?fia the Stomach,” is robbed of the blood needed for its wortk to pay “Paul the Brain,” which must be up-and-at-it again. | In all such cases Natare needs the help which is given by TUART’'S DYSPEPSIA TABLETS WHAT SHALL WE EAT porform the work of d} l chance to rest and to uend Itly and Strong? m-n ts um the perfect of starch yspepsl- cures are nseleu for reliet or cure of mdlnmou A health tite and common sense are excellent Ilke , etc., and no matter how wn{ because they have absolutely no effect upon the actual di- - guides to foll ow P‘ m:ttfru o.; M:‘téfl ndhn bflfid dle't‘ g{l the |€o mn&'u ‘I:s, 20“ trg:llgg: gcl\{ln!l" e{)pemncedh Tl: t: gestlon of food. meats is undoul h fl'&’,’,m“,fi,‘,‘a’; by vegetarians and tood’ i o anks ge) gon bewue thexflm ly tha Fepsin and dias Sos0 neocs. smm’cs wps“‘&t‘“ot‘)? -‘35" 3 "'-:'mgm » ""“':,.‘:'. 53: As compared with grains and vaunmul. mafl fur- sary to n, lll y form of indigestion and | riddie and cure the indigestion Is to make nishes the most nutriment In a highly concen nwl form | stomach lwuh\a no« the stomach will be over- | time of a safe paration which Is endorsed by nw ww and 1s digested and assimilated more quickly than vege- | come by % Lo Ky " eople who come under the head of | Profession ‘and kniown to contain native digostive prineiples, 'r. Jiiius Remusson on this subject tics should eat ple~ty of meat and insure its o ‘“ this can truly be sald of Stuart’s Dyspeps persanis people Fu Gown In heaith ana J' low '"'“3 oompleu m&lon . o, harm throughout the United States, Canada and should eal qunn“;_ If the d D“ lnh‘hbleueunr GMBH sell them at the uniform price of 416y cents first 1t may rengthened m'u!u mmml dlnmvou ipl and | for full treatment. b A STUART COMPANY » MARSHALL, MICH.

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