The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 15, 1901, Page 8

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8 KENNEDY JURY OUT FOR NIGHT Prisoner Is Evidently Hopeful of an Ac- quittal. Appears Unconcerned When Prosecutor Asks for Conviction. KANSAS CITY, June 14—The argu- ments in the case of Mrs. Lulu Prince- Kennedy, on trial for the murder of her husband, were concluded to-night and the jury retired to deliberate upon a verdict. The jurors had not been able &0 agree up to 11 o'clock, and the court ordered them locked up for the night. When asked how she felt Mrs. Kennedy said: “They gave me some kind of a pow- der a little while ago. I am going to be brave as possible.” On the opposite side of the aisle from the Prince family were grouped Captain Thomas Kennedy, a pioneer Kansas City, his young daughter, Thom- &s Kennedy Jr., brother of the dead man, | and his wife. first With the exception of the ¢ of the trial, when the mother citizen of | and brother of Philip Kennedy appeared | &s witnesses, none of Kennedy's imme- re to-day. The dead man's as been too ill to be present. slon was opened by Prose- reading the instructions to ic effect and the jury pald 1 attention . Mrs. Kennedy entered the court- on any day L nd he displayed vesterday bad spirits ths since the case opened. She the occasion down pectators. Mrs. Kennedy i tention to the many eves di- cted toward her, but watched the jury intently, scrutinizing closely the face of each of the twelve men. Mrs. Kennedy lookea ly at the prosecutor when he rt of the instructions re- der in the first degree and int punishment of death, but 1 not change expression. When me to the instruction for man- laughter she dropped her head, but only r a moment ank G. Johnson, former City Police then ned the argument for the Johnson traced the killing of Ken- by his -wife of a_month, telling how 1 led him from his office’ and own without a moment’s warn- ly submitting to arrest ared emphatic: and brothers of the de- lped her plan Kennedy's had stationed e before it occurred. conclud- vidence ent to find guilty of murder in nd These last words, given in thundering ones 1 no effect upon Mrs. Kennedy t 1 when the court took »ck. she went to her atting with the dep- uty nt! 1 o'c laughing and ch who led her, Defense Asks for Aequittal. At the afternoon sion Attorney Near- anded ed that the State had prove their charge family had conspired to he defendant, he said, had during a condition of hysteria on insanity, after he had ruined and after she n to_ live wit audibly du: Mrs. g Attorney Nearing’ arles E. Burnham, assistant prosecut- ey, followed for the State, de- of insanity. He declared Princes had, at the point tried to force money from hatched and helped Mrs, y out the murder that she committed, H. B. Kimbrell, also for the State, spoke next. He Cennedy having been {”r“n tc the girl and then having ause he dared ask the rpetrated would be ney did not propose to let go into court and tell his Kennedy, who had table, On mer prisoner upon her father’, contracted in pain. Knights of Honor Elect Officers. M T June 14.—The Supreme to-day elected dictator, D. S. ice di napolis: supreme lier of Memphis, Tenn. ADVERTISEMENTS. WEVE# WON FZIR LADY Or poor 1 work a satisfied cus tomer. T v all our work is tip- top in qua —because we want to hold a customer once gained, and the only way for us to do it is to pleasé® him. u're no further away from satisfac- work than the nearest post d we'll call promptly. UNITED STATES LAUNDRY Office 1004 Market Street Telephone—South 420, Oakland Office—54 San Pablo Ava. ANT4 CAPSULES Standard remedy for Gleet, Gonorrhoea and 4 Rurnings. In hours. Cures Kidney and Biedder Troubles. tives have been in the court-| The prosecutor read with al- | peared in better health and | d dressed carefully for | v traces of a break- l of space in the courtroom | R - | passengers. themselves | | d pleaded with him | | January a partially dismantled American s shoul- | goubling St. John a succession of terrific o | were split | ing. | Miss Daisy Ainsworth of Portland chris- THE SAN FRANCISCO. CALL, MANY NOTABLES SAIL ON THE MAIL STEAMSHIP GAELIC FOR THE ORIENT Mme. Wu Ting Fang, Wife of Chinese Minister at Wash- ington, Among the Passengers---She Will Visit in China EX for About Six - Months---Overdue Ship H. B. Hyde Here EVERYTHING MOVABLE. HE Occidental and Oriental Steam- ship Company’'s Gaelic sailed for the Orient promptly at 1 p. m. | yesterday. She took away a valu- | able cargo and quite a number of | There was the usual crowd | down to see the liner away, among them | being Chinatown's “‘upper ten,” who were | down to wish Mme. Wu, wife of Wu Ting Fang, the Chinese Minister at Washing- | ton, and sister of Consul General Ho Yow, a pleasant voy The lady is go- | Ing to Visit her rel a and will be gone about six months. The Gaelic's cabin passengers were: For Yokohama — 1, Miss A. | Cavill, Theodore Eckhardt, Mrs. A Fried. Miss d, 8. Holdsworth, Lewis Jordan and wife, Miss N. Jordan, Victor Marsh, S. Ohki, F. P. Purvis, M F. anklin Rogers and daugh. urm, John Symonds and MeCe oseph B. Bowers, F. T. Clark, Wu Ting Fang, Paul Floer, Arthur E. Magill, Dr. D. .. Miss J. Morse, Fung Wau Ping, Whitman Symmes. To join at Honolulu—R. K. Bonine, Mrs. H. W. Connor, E. Cushin, s M. ock, G. M H. Miliard_and Miss E. Millard, M iles, F. M. Steele and wife and Miss Elizf- beth Steele. £ . Another Overdue Ship Arrives. The American ship Hehry B. Hyde ar- rived from Baltimore Thursday night after a long run, for her, of 153 days. Soon after she passed Cape Henry last ship was passed by a steamer bound for New York, and when the Hyde did not show up on hec usual time her owners thought she might have lost some of her spars and was coming along under a ju rig. The Hyde was in some very heav weather and lost nearly suit of sails. Besides she got no southeast trades, and that fact was in a measure the cause of the delay. Captain McLeod reports strong south- erly gales after passing Cape Henry and poor northeast trades, and _very poor southeast trades to Cape St. John. After gales were run into, during which sails Were torn from the bolt ropes and others into tatters. The deck was swept of everything movable, and several | of the crew were slightly hurt. After| rounding the Horn some more heavy | weather was met with, and then when the southeast trade winds should have been picked up nothin, but southwest and north breezes blew. The equator was crossed on May 10 in longitude 119 degrees | 37 minutes west. From that on there was | the usual weather. A good north- | ! breeze carried the Hyde to latitude 35 degrees 37 minutes north, longitude 140 degrees 10 minutes west, and then there | were four days of calms, succeeded by seven days of strong east and east-south- east winds; thence to port strong north and west winds. The Hyde brings 3655 tons of coal for John Rosenfeld's Sons. ‘Wisconsin’s Final Speed Contest. The battleship Wisconsin went outside to have a five hours’ continuous test yes- terday. It is now six months since the Government accepted her, and this is the final test called for by the contract. Picked coal was put aboard yesterday. | During the run from Puget Sound the | warship got a splendid limbering up. | After passing out yesterday she was | headed up the coast and at once plunged into the northwester that has been blow- ing at the rate of from forty to sixty miies an hour for the past ten days. Just when the Wisconsin will have her five hours’ trial is not known, but it will probably be some time to-day, as she is expected back in port to-morrow morn- The Oregon, Towa and Philadelphia will be open to the public this afternoon and also to-morrow afternoon. Boats will run from the landing at the foot of Folsom street every ten minutes, commencing at 1 p. m., each day. Captain Thomas of the Oregon received a very handsome loving cup on behalf of the ship last Thursday. It was sent by Mrs. Percy T. Morgan, who when she was tened the great fighting machine. There was no_ceremony connected with the af- fair. The loving cup, accompanied by a note, was delivered at the ship's side by a messenger boy, and that was all there was to it. Seiv A Salvors for Pyrenees Wanted. The owners of the British four-masted steel bark Pyrenees want another attempt made to get the vessel out of the lagoon at Manga Reva Island. It will be remem- bered that she left the coast with a cargo of grain and was next heard of at Pit- cairn with the cargo on fire. No means of fighting the flames could be procured from the islanders, so the captain ran for Manga Reva. On arriving off the reef the vessel was headed inshore, and after striking hard once or twice brought up in the lagoon, where she went ashore. The fire burned itself out and the crew aban- doned the wreck and went to Tahiti, where they took ship for San Francisco. Soon after the arrival of Captain Bryce the remains of the vessel were offered at auction and were purchased by Eschen & Minor of this city. The owners would not confirm the sale and now want some one 10 try and get the vessel off and bring her to San Francisco. They want it done on the “no cure, no pay” principle, however, end are not likely to get many offers in | thig city. The Pyrenees has to be landed in San ancisco and then the salvor will get & “good percentage” of the value of | the wreck. Should the attemg_lt prove a failure the salvor will have all his trouble and expense for nothing. | customs officials. st iz Anchors Lost Off Alcatraz. Incoming vessels are beginning to fight shy of the Alcatraz anchorage. Four of them have lost anchors and chain there during the last ten days, and perhaps there will be as many more during the re- mainder of the month. On June 4 the British ship Cardiganshire nearly went on Alcatraz because her chaln parted. On June 7 the barkentine c}\'o veboy lost her anchor and chain in the same place and then drifted down on the bark Martha Davis. Thursday night the schooner Rosamond came in and tried to anchor in the same place., Soon after the chain part- ed and sixty fathoms of it went down to join the anchor. Some day next week there will be a fleet of tugs off Alcatraz grappling for lost anchors. Captain Ward of the Rosamond reports passing the barkentine Addenda on June 12. The Addenda is from the Columbia River for Callao, Her crew asked to be reperted “‘all well,” LR The Joke Is on Captain Polite. When the American ship Spartan came in from Newecastle, 8. W, last week Captain Polite had to pay pllotage. When she was ready to sail for the Sound Thursday a pilot was ready to take him out, but the captain got the better of him by changing the ship's record at the Cus- tom-house. When the work was done Polite remarked to the customs clerk that he had no cigars with _him, but he would come down to the Spartan he would give him a few good Manilas. While un- der his British papers Captain Polite's clgars—there were 2000 of them—were not subject to duty, they being intended for his own use. Directly he changed the rec- ord to escape pilotage, however, the Ma- nilas became subject to 60 per cent ad valorem. The clerk who made the change remarked to somebody in the Surveyor's office that he was going to get some good cigars off the Spartan. The good news was told to others, and finally Deputy Surveyor St. John heard of it. A’ few min- utes later a customs inspector was on his way 1 to the Spartan, and when Captain olite got there his cigars were on their y to the Appraiser’'s store. For a few minutes the joke was on the pilot, but now that the cigars are gone Captain Poiite cannot see where the laugh comes in. Five hundred and fifty smuggled cigars were seized yesterday in the carpenter shop on board the steamer Columbia by Four hundred and ffty were obtained in the Spartan seiz- dumegigo s Lo Water Front Notes. The northwester brought in quite a fleet of Sound vessels yesterday. The Glory of the Seas made the run from Oyster Har- bor, B. C., in 7 days; the Levi G. Burgess from Tacoma in 7% days, the barkentine Portland from Seattle In 7 days and the barkentine Northwest from Tacoma in 12 ays, but her time from Flattery was only 6 davs. The steamer Coos Bay will go out on the Corona's run to-day, while the Corona will take the Queen's place on June The Queen will sail for Alaska via ttle on June 24. schooner Ariel, at Honolulu June 1, Newcastle, Australia, reports pass- fro; ing In latitude 28 degrees south, longitude 153 degrees 52 minutes west, a wooden ship with her main, lower and upper yards gone. She carried a main skysafl and was steering east by north. The British ship Lancing arrived from Sydne; 8. W., yesterday, after a good run o e was 30 days to the equator and 2 ays to port. Launches to thé Oregon will run from the foot of Vallejo, Clay, Mission and Folsom streets to-day. No large steam- Em will be allowed alongside the battle- ship. g NEWS OF THE OCEAN. Departure of the Gaelic. The steamer Gaelic salled yesterday for China and Japan with a general cargo valued at $246,152, manifested as follows: For China, $85,900; Japan, $120,22; Manila, $32,4%; East Indles, $4563; Korea, 742; Vladivostok, $11,245. The cargo included the following: For China—2688 Ibs chocolate, 10 cs cham- pagne, 2200 Ibs butter, 843 cs canned goods, 633 bales dry goods, 13,200 bbls flour, 48 pkgs truit, 1552 pkgs groceries and provisions, 16 pkgs machinery, 21 pkgs lamp goods, 5000 1bs pearl barley, 14 cs shoes, 30 cs salmon, 1% cs, 5 bbls whisky, 10 cs, 563 gals wine, 778 bbis wire shorts. For Japan—20 cs alcohol, 169 crs bicycles, 2000 Ibs butter, 1200 cs canned goods, 1300 bales compressed cotton, 9 bales dry goods, 21 cs drugs, 16 pkgs electrical supplies, 616 pkgs groceries and provisions, 1750 lbs ham and bacon, 12 rolls leather, 4439 Ibs_lard, 7 pkes lamp goods, 76 pkgs machinery, 1500 kegs nails, 50 bbls oak extract, 7 cs rubber goods, 14,303 Ibs sugar, 28 cs table me:1, S1,575 1bs tan bark, 20 cs typewriters, 7 cs, 2100 gals wine, For Manila—17 crs bicycles and sundries, 464 cs bottles, 76 cs canned goods, 7 cs_electrical supplies, § pkgs groceries and provisions, 20 cs hose, 3310 1bs lard, 3 pkss machinery, 66 bdls, 2 cs paper, 30 cs shoes, 2 cs salmon, 21 cs typewriters, 232 cs, 50 bbls whisky, 145 cs wine. For East Indies—100 cs canned salmon, 623 cs canned goods, 131 pkgs groceries and pro- visions, 4 cs phonograph supplies, 1 bale dry goods. For Korea—9 pkgs furniture, 104 pkgs gro- ceries and provisions, 45 pkgs hardware and machinery, 100 cs ca: £oods. For Vladivostok—50 cs phonograph supplies, 60 bales sheeting, 6 'pkgs notions, 2 pkgs ma- chinery, 84 pkgs agricultural impiements. b i Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. Friday, June 14. Bktn Northwest, Wirschulelt, 12 days from Tacoma, via Flattery 6 days. Stmr Westport, Erickson, 19 hours from Bear Harbor. . Stmr Pomona, Shea, 13 hours from Eureka.’ ours from Stmr Geo W 'Elder,” Randall, 53 h Portland, via Astoria 45 hours. . Ship Glory of the Beas, Freeman, 7 days from Oyster Harbor. Br ehip Lancing, Chapman, 68 days from Sydney. Bark Levi G Burgess, Younggren, 7% days from Tacoma. Schr Lily, Bottger, 8 days from Umpqua. .tides, as sometimes occurs. The he AMERICAN SHIP HENRY B. HYDE IN HEAVY WEATHER OFF THE FALKLAND ISLANDS, DURING A SUCCES- SION OF FIERCE GALES SHE LOST NEARLY A SUIT OF CANVAS AND HAD HER DECKS SWEPT OF e — Bktn Portland, Clark, 7 days from Tacoma. CLEARED. Friday, June 4. Stmr North Fork, Fosen, Eureka; The Chas Nelson Co. Stmr Kavak, Morley, Loring; Alaska Pack- eré Assoclation, mr - Santa R Alexander, H Goodall, Perking & Co. oo S Dieso Stmr Coos Bay, Nopander, San Dlego; Good- all, Perkins & Co, Nor stmr Tellus, Pederson, Chemainus; R Dunemuir's Sons Co. Br stmr Gaellc, Finch, Honolulu, Yokohama and Hongkong: O & O 88 Co. Ship Henry Villard, Lewls, Honolulu, via Seattle; Willlams, Dimond & Co. “'Hr ship Dynomene, Snoddon, Queenstown; G MeNear. Bark Himalaya, Adelatde; T ¥ Moore & Co Borgman, SAILED. Friday, June 1. Aberdeen, Jensen, Eureka. North Fork, Fosen, Eureka. Navarro, Jacobs, Bowens Landing. Ginsy, Leland, Santa Cruz. Mackinaw, Littlefleld, Seattle. Samoa, Hansen, Bowens Landing. Stmr South Coast, Olsen, Eureka. U § stmr Wisconsin, Reiter, Puget Sound. Nor stmr_Tellus, Pédersen, Chemalnus. Br stmr Gaelle, Finch, Hongkong, etc. Br stmr Strathgyle, Gordon, Chemainus, Ship Spartan, Polite, Seattle. Br ship Ladakh, Hannah, Queenstown. Schr Mary Etta, Nyman, Point Arena. Schr Newark, Crangle, Schr Kona (new), Dinsmore, Grays Harbor. Schr Ocean Spray, Olsen, Iversens Landing. MISCELLANEOUS. LONDON, June 14—Bktn James Tuft, from Seattle, for Port Pirie, was spoken June 8, lat 87 S, lon 152 E, with sundry losses and dam- ages sustained In heavy weather. MEMORANDUM. Per schr Arlel at Honolulu, from Newcas- tle, Aus—May 4, lat 28 §, lon 153 52 W, eaw a wooden ship, with loss of mainyards, lower and upper gone, having main skysall yard and wheelhouse, steering E by N. SPOKEN. May 2, lat 26 N, lon 38 W—Br ship Crown of England, hence Feb 21, for Queenstown. May 22, lat 5 N, lon 28 W—Br bark Blair- hoyle, from Oregon, for Queenstown. Stmr Stmr May 7, lat 27 N, 'lon 43 W—Ger bark Schil- ler, from Hamburg, for Santa Rosalla. TELEGRAPHIC. POINT LOBOS, June 14, 10 p m—Weather hazy; wind SW, velocity 10 miles. DOMESTIC PORTS. TACOMA—Sailed June 14—Stmr Lakme, for San Francisco; schr Otelia Pedersen, for Hilo. COOS BAY—Arrived June 13—Stmr Arcata, hence June 10. SEATTLE—Arrived May 13—Stmr Washte- naw, hence June 3. June 14—Stmr Dolphin, from Skaguay. Sailed June 4—Stmr Lakme, for San Fran- ciseo; stmr Coronado, for Grays Harbor. GRAYS HARBOR—Sailed June 14—Br stmr Alcxander, for Petropaulovski. EUREKA—Arrived June 14—Stmr San Pedro, }\\;melzlune 12; stmr Santa Barbara, hence May 13. SAN DIEGO—Sailed June 14—Stmr Coquille River, for Saa Francisco. ASTORIA—Arrived June 14—Stmr Columbia, hence June 12, lSallcd June 14—Stmr Signal, for San Fran- clsco. NEAH BAY—Passed out June 14—Stmr Chas D Lane, with schr Vega in tow, from Seattle, for Cape Nome. ISLAND PORTS. HONOLULU—Arrived—Schr Golden Shore, from Newcastle, Aus. KAANAPAL] Talbot, for —. June i—Schr Honolulu, for FLEELE—Sailed June 4—Schr Columbia, for San Francisco. FOREIGN PORTS. ANTWERP—Arrived June 12—Br ship County of Roxburgh, from Oregon, Salled June 12—-Bark Kilmeny, for San Fran- cisco. PANAMA—Arrived May 23—Br stmr Peru, hence May HAMBURG—Sailed June 11—Ger ship Siam, for San Diego. PORT PIRIE—Sailed June 13—Bark Abby Palmer, for Newcastle. MAZATLAN-Sailed June 13—Stmr San Juan, for San Francisco. OCEAN STEAMERS. HAMBURG—Arrived June 14—Stmr Fuerst Bismarck, from New York, via Cherbours. Sailed June 12—Stmr Northman, for Chicago. MANILA—Sailed June $—Stmr Tyyra, for Portland, Or. LIVERPOOL—Sailed June 13—Stmr Numi- stmr Taurie, for New dian, for Montreal; York. SOUTHAMPTON—Sailed June 13—Stmr Co- lumbia, from Hamburg, for New York, via Cherbourg. NEW YORK-—Arrived June 4—Stmr St Paul, from Southampton and Cherbourg; stmr Auguste Victoria, from Hamburg, Southamp- ton_and Cherbourg. BROWHEADFassed June 13—Stmr Btru- ria, from New York, for Queenstown and Liv- A Sun, Moon and Tide. United States Coast and Geodetic Survey— Times and Heights of High Waters at Fort_Point, entrance to San Francisco Bay. Published by official au- thority of the Superintendent. SATURDAY, Safled May 17—Schr W H | and Low | JUNE 15, 1901 BULLETS AVENGE GRIME OF BAGH Mexican Soldiers Put an American Raider to Death. Firing Squad Sends Volley of Lead Into Blindfolded Prisoner. Special Dispatch to The Call. EL PASO, Tex., June 14—Samuel Baca has pald the penalty of his crimes with his life. He was blindfolded and stood up against a wall and shot to death by a squad of Mexican soldiers. This was the sentence of the tribunal at Chihuahua, and it was put into effect at daybreak on June 10. Baca was an American ditizen, born and reared in Texas, and his stamping ‘ground when he reached the age of ma- turity was the valley adjacent to Mar- fa, Tex. Omne might last August he and a half-dozen friends made a raid across the | border into Mexico. Well armed and | mounted, they rode to the house of a| Mexican’ merchant and demanded his | money. The merchant had ax-rumulated; | considerable property and the members of the gang were convinced that he had money concealed on the premises. He re- | fused to disclose the hiding place of the | treasure and was brutally tortured by the, gang. With the ferocity of fiends they seared his flesh with hot irons and used a keen-bladed knife to mutilate him. He finally yielded and told where they would find the money. They took possession of | it, but were not satisfied with the torture already inflicted. | The merchant was possessed of a young and comely wife, whose devotion to her husband was such‘that instead of seeking | safety in flight when the raiders appeared she remained by his side and pleaded with the brutes to stay their hands. After they had apparently glutted their cruel instincts on the Fusband they turned their attention to the wife, whom they shame- fully mistreated. Toward daybreak the men mounted their horses and rode swiftly away to- ward the border, leaving the merchant | and his wife more dead than alive. Soon | , after the occurrence the Mexican author- lities got on the trail of the raiders and | learned they had returned to Texas. The i United States officials were notified, and | a few months later Samuel Baca was ar- | rested. He was tried before a Commis- sioner here ani extradited on April 11 of the present year. The Chihuahua courts found him gullty and the higher court af- firmed the decision. Last Monday morn- ing at daybreak he was led from his cell to the patio in the interior of the Chi-| huahua prison. A squad of ten picked men under command of a lieutenant had | already been drawn up in line at a dis-| tnn](l‘e of ten paces from one of the thic walls. No one uttered a sound as Baca was | led to the position allotted him beside the wall. An officer loaded five of the | uns with blank cartridges and the cham- | ers of five were loaded with cartridges | containing full charges of powder and lead. While this operation was being per- formed Baca was bound hand and foot and a heavy band was placed over his eyes. He was stood up with his face to the wall and his back to the troops. Then the volce of the officer rang out clear and steady glving the command to fire. The men fired as one and the body of the Texan toppled over and lay upon the ground, riddled by bullets. CHEAP RATE EXCURSIONS g TO THE PACIFIC COAST One Fare for the Round Trip Is An- nounced by the Santa Fe Company. TOPEKA, Kans., June 14—The Santa Fe Rallroad to-day announced that it would inaugurate a number of cheap rate | excursions to the Pacific Coast this sum- | mer in_addition to the one already an- nounced_to the Epworth League Conven- tion in July. A rate of one fare, plus 3I, for the round trip will be made for these excursions, which will be run on the fol- lowing dates: June 18, July 2 and 6, Au- gust 2 and 20 and September 3 and 17. These rates are good from Chicago, Mis- souri River points, Kansas and Colorado. ——pe—is Daylight Train Between San Fran- cisco and Santa Barbara. Southern Pacific daylight train dining- car service. Leave San Francisco 8 a. m., arrive Santa Barbara 9:25 p. m. Leave Santa Barbara 6:15_a. m., arrive San Francisco 7:30 ». m. Effective Sunday, the 16th inst. One of the most beautiful day- light trips in the world. @ et @ 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, e Time Ball. Branch Hydrographic Office, U. S. N., chants’' " Exchange, San Francisco, June 14, 1901. The time ball on the tower of the new Ferry building was dropped at exactly noon to-day— i. e., at noon of the 120th meridian, or at § o'clock p. m., Greenwich time. Mer- Cal., BURNETT, Lieutenant, U. ‘retired, in charge. pst i £ e Steamer Movements. TO ARRIVE. Steamer. Due. Whatcom|June 15 Rainfer. Despatcl San Pedro June 15 Bristol. Comox .. June 16 Wyefleld.. Oyster Harbor ... June 16 | Hawallan |Honolulu June 16 Arcata. |Coos Bay |June 16 Mattewan Tacoma |June 16 Puget Sound Ports. |June 18 San Dlego ... |June 15 | San Pedro & Way Pts|June 16 | Nanaimo . +ev.|June 16 Del Norte Crescent City . June 17 | Humboldt | Humboldt June 17 June 18 Panama & Way Ports.|June 18 | Mandalay. Coquille River .. |June 18 | Czarina.. .|Seattle and Tacoma. Seattle .. Coos Bay Humboldt Tillamook Bay Puget Sound Ports. June 21 TO SAIL. Steamer. Destination. Satls. June 15. Newburs..... |Grays Harbor 5 pm|Pler 1 Alllane Portl'd & Coos 5 pm|Pier 14 Siuslaw Rive 11 am|Pler 13 Seattle & F. 5 pm|Pier 1 Willapa Harbor ..| 5 pm|Pier 2 Puget Sound Ports|il am|Pier § Humboldt 5 pm|Pler 2 Newport ... 9 am|Pier 11 ..|Point Arena 2 pm|Pier. 2 | Humboldt .. 9 am|Pler 13 June 16. Humboldt Pler 9 ISan Diego Pler 11 June 17. Astoria & Portland, Ission-street wharf about Vi twenty-five minutes later than at Fort Foint: ple ey R ol the height of tide is the same at both places. Panama & Wa; 12 m/PMSS SAT = une 19. I URDAY, JUNE 35, Seattle & N. What| 5 pm|Pier 2 Sun rises Coos Bay . I 2 m|Pier 13 Sun sets San Diego 9 am|Pler 11 Moon rises Juane oo Coos Bay 12 m|Pler 13 Date| e Sydney & 10 am|Pler 7 al _L Wi Puget Sound Ports|il am/Pler 9 Seattle & Tacoma.|'5 pm|Pler 8 ' = Humboldt .. 10 am/Pier 2 | % Grays Harbor 5 pm|Pler 16 | 5:10 June 21. ) Mandalay.... coq'gua River ....|10 am|Pler 2 i une 22. = H'kong Maru |China & Japan....| 1 pm{PMss o FROM SEATTLE. 2:34| B ki Destination. Salls. NOTE—In the above exposition of the tides Skaguay & Way Ports. |J 1 the early morning tides are given in the I Notne direct «.. ine 15 hand column and the successive tides of day in the order of occurrence as to time of day; the tht the last tide of "the are tut Lares tven are in addition to the soundings on the United States Coast Survey charts, except when a Nome, Teller & Topkuk| Skaguay & Way Ports. y & Way Ports. & £ Way Porta[h 1 aguay ay Ports.|June Skagu June 22 | June 15 June 1§ June 17 June 18 .| June 22 ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS must béar signature of FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION GCENUINE MUST HAVE S,0NATURE. VW&-—C SEE GENUINE WRAPPER “PRINTED ON RED PAPER.’ RAILWAY TRAVEL. At your Service The porters in charge of Burlington tourist sleep- ing cars are picked men. Most of them have been with us for years. They are honest, civil and oblig- ing. They know what is expected of them, and the excursion managers see that they do it. From Los Angeles, Mondays and Wednesdays; San Francisco, Tues- days and Thursdays; Omaba, Chi- cago, Kansas City, St. Louis— EVERYWHERE east. Tickets and berths at 631 Market Street. Buthnaton Route W. D. Saxsorw, Gen'l Agent. | CALIFORKNIA I(LIEI‘HWESTERI RY. CO. LESSEE SAN FRANGISCO AWD KORTH PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY. Tiburon Ferry, Foot of Market S& San Francisco to San Rafael. ), 11:00 a. m. . m. ~Thursdays—Ex Saturdays—Extra trips a p. m. NDAYS—3:00, 9:30, 11:00 a. m.; 1:30, 5:00, €:20 p. m. San Rafae! to San Francisco. WEEK DAYS—6:10, 7:50, 9:20, 11:10 a. m.; 12:45, 8:40, 5:15 p. m. Saturdays—Extra trips at 1:3 and p. m. SUNDAYS—8:10, 9:40, 11:10 a. m.; 1:40, 3:40, 5:05, 6:25 p. m. Leave In Effect Arrive San Francisco, [April 35, 1901.| San Francisco. Week | Sun- Sun- | Week Days. | days. | Destination. | days. | Days. 7:230 am| Novato, 10:40 am| 3:30 pm Petaluma. pm |1 6:10 pm| Santa Rosa. Fulton. 7:30 am ‘Windsor. 10:25 am 5:00 pm| Healdsburg. |10:40 am Lytton. Geyserviile, 3:30 pm| 8:00 am| Cloverdale. 7:30 am| Hopland 2:30 pm| nd Ukiah. 7:30 am 1 8:00 am| Guerneville. 3:30 pm| 5:00 pm 7:30 am| 8:00 am Sonoma and 5:10 pm| 5:00 pm| Glen Ellen. | 6:05 pm| 6:20 pm 30 am| §:00 am| 10:40 am|10:35 am 3:30 pm| 5:00 pm| Sebastopol. | 7:35 pm| pm Stages connect at Santa Rosa for Mark West Springs and White Sulphur Springs; at Fulton for Altruria; at Lytton for Lytton Springs; at Geyserville for Skaggs Springs; at Cloverdale for the Gevsers; at Hopland for Duncan Springs, Highland' Springs, Kelseyville, Carls- bad Springs, Soda Bay, Lakeport and Bartlett Springs; at Ukiah for Vichy Springs, Saratoga Springs, Blue Lakes, Laurel Dell Lake, Witter Springs, Upper Lake, Pomo, Potter Valle John Day's, Riverside, Lierley's, Bucknell Sanhedrin ' Heights, 'Hullville, Orr’s _ Hot Springs, Mendocino City, Fort Bragg, West- port, Usal, Willits, Laytonville, Cummins, Bell's Springs, Harris, Olsen’s, Dyer, Scotia and Eureka. Saturday {o Monday round trip tickets at re- duced rates. On Sunday round trip tickets to all points beyond San Rafael at half rates. Ticket Office, 630 Market street, Chronlcle Building. H. C. WHITING, R. X. RYAN, Gen. Manager. Gen. Pass. Agt. Santa Fe Trains Leave Market-street Ferry Depot. Local }le’d f()vrl‘d Local l?tllL * Daily | Daily - San _Fran . Stockton.. Merced .. Fresno ... Hanford . Visalta Bakersr1d Kans. C'y{. Chicago ..| TRPEPEPTUY RAILWAY TRAVEL SOUTHERN PACIFIC. enve nud are nrrive as TR e AN FICA NCING (Main Line, Foot of Market Streek) iEAvE — Frow JUNE 9 1201 — AmmivE 6332 6:23¢ 7:552 8:004 Atlautic Kxpress— 1%:23p #:004 Niles, Lathrop, Stoek 7:20p 4:332 Posterville. . - 8:304 Shasts Express—Davis, Williams (for Bartlett S‘Tflnr). Willows, Bluff, Portland... ... B804 Sun Jose, rmore, Tone, ico, Maryaville, Ci $:304 Oakdale, Chinese (Yosemi! Teacy, Lathrop, Htockton, Froano aud Los Angoles oo A Vallejo, Martinez aud »y I:‘::A The (])vcrlxnd Limited—Ogdeu, Den- ‘hicagn 1 P Sacraments 3:30¢ Hayward, Sr00r Benicin, 4:00p Niles, Li . As80r Hayward, Niles, San Jose, Livermore 4:30% Port Cos'a, Tracy, Lathrop, stockton 100¢ The Owl Limited—Fres: 3 e esaaie for Swate Bar #, Los Auelos. 8:00 Marsines, Antioch, Stockion, Mt~ oed, Fresmo « S190r Yosomite. isaa N."t-nn, Baki ersiieid, Los Axngel El Paso, d’“&u‘w-. 8:007 Orlor &1" Mail—Ogden, " Denver, Bt. Louis, Chicago. 7100r Oregon and Calll COAST LINE (Narrow Guug (Foo of Murket Street.) TR e eas oy S e 181007 , Centerville, San Jose, Felton, am;‘l‘.‘. Creek, Sauta Oruz and Way Ss0r ko ';'I'-T‘: on, toulder Creek, o w...' troae, an Jose, Loa Gatos.....{ s1gizen 9:00 11:004.M. OAKLAND—Foot of Brand way. 10:004.. 12:00 3:00 AST LINE (Broad Gauge). " (Third and Townsend Sts.) A San Jose and Ntatie Wi 17:004 Muu Jome wid Way Stntlons. 17:804 Sunday Excursion for San Haata Craz, Pacific Grove Obiapo and Principsl Statlons.. - 10::304 San Jose and Way B o A1k, Santa Clara. A Jove, Tres Piuos, Sunta Cruz, Salinas, Monterey an . 110:45, #:30¢ San Jose and .‘x-'l.A 14:15p S8an Jose and Principal VV‘ kludpl A, 13:002 Bl\a Jose, Los Gatos sn 19004 5:307 San .?l'm and Principal Way Stations 8:33a 81007 Redwood, Nan Jos, Gilroy. Salloas, o o= Santa Barhars, Los Angeles. 6:007 Del Monte, Monterey, Pacific Grove, Lompoe. - 10:034 18004 7:309 P for Afternoon. $ Swné v only. 7 Tuesdays and Fridays. + Sunday excented. @ Saturday only. NORTH PACIFIC COAST RAILROAD. Via Sausalito Ferry. Commencing April 25, 1901 FROM SAN FRANCISCO TO MILL VALLEY J N RAFAEL. . 5:15, *8: For Mill ‘Wednesdays, m. “TRIPS Rafael on Mondays, and -Sundays at 9:30 and 11:40 p Saturdays SUNDAYS—7:00, 8:00, *9:00, a. m., 12:45, °*1:30, 2:30, *3 p. m. 11:00 Sundays, ~ Trains marked (*) run to San Quentin. . 2:30, %3345, 5:00, 6:00, 7 a. m. does not run to San Rafael FROM SAN RAFAEL TO SAN FRANCISCO, WEEK_ DAYS—%:35, &: 7, 8:35, 10:15 ., *12:35, 1:15, 2: :30 p. m. Wednesdays p. m. 0 a. m., *12 45, 7:30, 10:10 Trains marked (%) start from San Quentin. FROM MILL VALLEY TO SAN FRANCISCO, WEEK DAYS-5. 8:55, a _m. 1235, 1:45. 3:45, EXTRA TRIPS on Monda: and Saturdays at SUNDAY! 6:35, 120, 2:3, 5:15 p. I::ldweek days (Saturdays excepted)— Tomales stations. 8 a. m. Sundays—Cazadero and way sigtions. 10:00 a. m. Sundays—Point Reyes and way a for morning. p for afternoon. *:00 a m. train is the Californta Lim- ited, leaving Monday and Thursday oniy, carrying Palace Sleeping Cars and Dining Cars through to Chicago. Chair Car rung to Bakersfleld for accommodation of local first-class passengers. No second-class tickets honared on thia train. Correspond. ink train arrives at B:55 p. m. Tuesday and Friday. 1:20 p. m. is Stockton and Fresno local. Corresponding train arrives at 12:30 o, m. iy 4% p. m. 1s the Overland Express, with through Palace and Tourist Sleepers amd Free Reclining Chalr _Cars to Chicage also Palace Sleeper, which cuts out Corresponding train arrives at 5:35 p. m. dafly. 7:20 a. m. i Bakersfleld Local, stopping at all points in San Joaquin Valley. Cor- responding train arrives at 8:40 a. m. dally, Offices—641 Market street and in Ferry Depot, San Francisco; 1112 Broadway, Oak. Jand. — e MOUNT TAMALPAIS RAILWAY Via Saasalio Perry—Foot of Market 8t. 3 ARRIVE sAN FRAR. ...WEEK DAYS.. BT siay over alghs mh-nnug L b 12:] 10 Faro. San Prancisce to Summtt and Returs, ‘Ticket Offices, 621 Market St., &k-‘llt.o.:a [ —————————————— NEW WESTERN HOTEL, EARNY AND WASHIN -] e CO. European pl 50c to 3150 day; fi\n‘;:la'#':“flmwmm Free baths; h oom? elevator ruzs adl might T i B i KIDNEY & LIVER g BITTERS A PLEASANT LAXATIVE NOT ' INTOXICATING ures Dr. 4. F. GIEEON, Cal Weekly Gall $1.00 per Year guaranteed. Callor write, . San Franeisco,

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