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JUDGE ADVOCATE SUBMITS NAMES Dewey Court of Inquiry Summons Witnesses From Abroad. el . Investigation of the Schley Controversy Will Be Thorough.‘ Special Dispatch to The Call. CALL BUREAU, 1408'G STREET, N. W., WASHINGTON, Aug, 5.—That a full and compiete investigation of the Samp- son-Schiey controversy will be made by the Dewey ceurt of inquiry is shown hy the action taken by Acting Secretary Hackett in ordering witnesses from for- eign stations to. Washington. Before his departure from this city Judge Advocate General Lemly submitted to Hackett a | list of witnesses who could offer import- | ant testimony and in the list was Con mander Schroeder, at present serving as Governor of Guam and during the war with Spain executive officer of the battle- | ship Massachusetts. Hackett cabled to | Rear Admiral Rogers, directing him to send the Yorktown to Guam to convey Commander Schroeder to the United States, Other officers who will be brought to Washington include Lieutenant Com- mander Giles Harbor, naval attache in Paris and St Petersburg, who executive officer of the battleship Texa Lieutenant Commander Alexander Scharp, who commanded the gunboat Vixen and who is now executive officer of the Hart- ford; Lieutenant Commanders S. P. Com- ley, attached to the Alliance; L. C. Hell- ner, op duty at the New York yard; Wil- liam H. Scheutze and W. H. Allen, at- tached to the bureau of equipment; A. C. Hodgson, stationed at Newport; E. T. Capebart, on duty on the New York, ar H. P. Huse, commanding the Villalobos, who were navigators of the figet. Commander Schroeder will be able to | reinforce the testimony of Rear Admiral Higginson, who commanded the Massa- chusetts. As executive officer he was ac- quainted with the routine of the ship and great stress is placed upon his evidence. Whether be will return to Guam is not certain. There have been complaints | made against his administration in cons quence of the scandal in the marine d tachment stationed at Agana. It is thought here that Commander Swift of | the Yorktown will temporarily relieve Commander Schroeder as Governor., Admiral Dewey was in conference to- | day with Acting Secretary Hackett rel- ative to the retired rear admiral to be designated for service on the court of inquiry. The department is now in _tel egraphic communication with an offic who may be given orders. i | HORSES THAT CROSSED WIRE IN FIRST PLACE , Aug. 5—Five thou.- | opening of the ay. The day’s features | g of the $5000 Flash stake | ear-olds and the $10,000 Saratoga | handicap, in which a field of eleven of t best horses in training, including the ol lmp, started. The handicap | Rockton, who was at 10 to 1 g. Imp finished fifth, =h stakes resulted in a closs blds: ux Costa and Chilt head It » through black mare was won by in the bettis The fini; fir only sterly ride on the | the t of Turner, Goldsmith’s jockey, that m 3oldsmith R won 1Isi- ‘sixteenth | e furlongs ; Luxa C nan), 7 to 1 and nd; Chilton, 115 (Shaw), 1:01. Tribeshill, Sir | | ine, Golden Cottage and Han- | also ran Fourth race, the Saratoga handicap, one mile | and an_eighth—Rockton, 116 (Turner), 10 to 1, | won; Water Cure, 166 (Landry), 30 to 1 and | 10 to 1, second; Water Color, 115 (Spencer), | 2 to 1 and 4 to 5, thi Time, 1:33 1-5. All Gold, Imp, Brigadis Blues, Decanter, King Brambie, The Parader and Bonnibert aiso ran: Fifth race, five and & half furlongs, selling— Gay Boy won, Dark Secret second, Man o' War Time, 1:08 4-5 race, one mile and seventy yvards—Roe- m _won, Chuct: da second, Admoni- urlongs—Miss Bennett won, Burnie Bunton second, Federal third, Time, | 12815 Third race, Golf steeplechase, short course— Filon @'Or won, Alice B second, Bermuda Hundred third. Time, :34. Fourth race, mile and a_sixteenth—Vesuvian won, Secotch Plaid second, Strangest third. Time, 1:46 8-5. Fifth race, won, Rosewar 1:00 35, five furlongs, selling—Jaubert | second, Ishtar third. Time, Sixth race, and a half furlongs, sell- ing—Likeness won, Andes second, Fieuron third. Time, 1:3 2. Seventh race, mile and an eighth, selling— Alasks won, Ta y Chief second, Dagmar third. Time, DETROIT, Aug. 5.—Windsor results: First race, four and a half furlongs—Amigart won, El Giva second, Follow third Time, :54%. Second race, six ' furlongs, _selling—Ghetto won, Nanette' second, Mr. Pomeroy third, six , steeplechase, short McGibbon won, Coley second, third. Time, 2:50. Fourth race, one mile—Trebor won, Velma | Clark eecond, Aloba II third. Time, 1:39%. Fifth race, one mile and an eighth, selling— Cyclone won, Jessie Jarboe second, Baffled third. Time, 1:56. Sixth race, six furlongs, selling—Nina B. L. Kent second, Little Land third. course—Jim Tate's Creek ST. LOUIS, Aug. 5.—Delmar Park summar; First race, five and a half furlongs, selling— Crimean won, Miss Dora second, Colonel Stone third. Time, 1:09% Second race, one mile and twenty yards, sell- ing—Monograph won, Tickful second, Quannab | Parker third. Time, 1:44. Third race, six furlongs, selling—Judge Pat- tus won, Benham second, Mona B third. Time, and a_sixteenth, sell- Belle Simpson second, Time, 1:49. purse—Kazen won, rthern Spy third. Time, tle n. Peter Duryea thire Fifth race, six furlongs, Meddiesome second, N FET race, selling—Swordsman wor Seething third. Time, 1354, { BUTTE, Mont., Aug. 4—Results: | tting, 2:15 class—Erudition won, d, 1dol third. Best time, 2:23%, and three-sixteenths, Irving Mayor second, Second race, five and a half furlongs—Justus Goebel won, Maggie K gecond, Phil Branson third. Tim Third rac r furlongs—Rubl won, | 1 na Estada second, Tufts third. 0. Fourth race, Time, sx furlongs—K ime, 1:16, Fifth race, one mile—Free Pass won, Sea Song:second, Joe K third. Time, 1:44. Sixth race, fhree and a half furlongs—Patsy Doian won, Walkapaugh second, Aurora third, Time, 413 —_— Jenkins Rides Three Winners. LONDON, Aug. 5.—Clem Jenkins won three races at the Hurst Park Club bunk holiday meeting to-day, taking the Hurst | Park handicap with Frank Gardner's | Biddo, the Mortlake handicap with Nip- pon and the Scurry plate wflg Mr. Gard- ner’s Angmering. At the same meeti the Earl's Field selling plate was won by Escurial (J. H. Martin). Smith Breaks Three Records. BUFFALO, Aug. 5.—In the National Cy- cling Association races in the Stadium | to-day Walter Smith of New York, holder | of the one-mile record of 1:28, tried for | the five-mile amateur American paced | record. He did the five miles in 8:271-5, | breaking the former record of 9:00, held J. R. Duboise of Boston, Mass. He also broke the two and three mile records of 3:26 2-5 and 5:52 1-5 respectively. Smith’s time for the two miles was 3:20 4-5 and for the three miles 5:40. -——— COroker’s Horse Wins. LONDON, Aug. 5.—Richard Croker's ]'?;e . B:g) 'xn th: Bfll&ley am Au e W! g‘%l!ne s Luke Wl:rd (’H and Huxl—en-unl Minnie plate at to-day. Reiff) came in secons finished third. R | tem. He said that the “feeders’” are op- five runs. Attendance, 1000. Score: | 8w n| Cincinnati . 10 14 1 | Chicago .. ARE TR | Attendance, 4900. | foot_yawl class b; jrectors of the North German Lloyd Steam- EQUALIERS AOO TO ASESSMENTS Figures for the Railroads Million and a Half Higher. e Effort to Add to Southern Pacific Mileage Is Unsuccessful. iy ey Special Dispatch to The Call. SACRAMENTO, Aug. 5—The State Board of Equalization late this afternoon fixed the assessment on all the railroads in the State. As a result of their action the assessment this year is $1,659,730 more than that of last vear. This year's as- sessment is $49,271,485; last year's was $47,711,755. When the board took up the assessment of the railroads this afternoon Equalizer Toland moved as an amendment to Col- gan's motion fixing the assessment of the Southern Pacific Company at $22,500,000 on 2089.02 miles, that the 262,842 miles of “‘feed- ers” operated by the company be added to the mileage of the company’s main sys- erated together in one system and belong to the Southern Pacific, and their earn- ings are returned as part of the general earnings of the company. He objected to the form of Colgan's motion. He wanted the board to first establish the mileage and then fix the assessment. Chairman Alex Brown agreed with him in his contention that the refresentatlon should be made. Toland received no sec- ond to his amendment. The board, how- ever, fixed the entire mileage of the Southern Pacific Company at 2099.23 and the assessment at $22,600,000. Other assess- ments were fixed as follow: Central Pacific, $13,000,000; Santa Fe Pa- cific, $1,500,000; Southern California Rail- way, $3,500,000; North Pacific Coast, $600, 000; Pacific Coast Railway, $250,00; Pajaro | Valley Railway, §200,000; Nevada County Narrow Gauge, $112,500; Nevada, Califor- nia and Oregon, $200.000: Alameda and San . $125580; Sierra Railway Com- $250,000; Randsburg Railroad, $125.- | 000; Gualala River Railroad, $40,000; Cali- fornia and Nevada, $50,000; Sierra Valley oad. $53,375; San Francisco and San Ma- teo Electric, $225,000; Lake Tahoe Railway Company, $0,000; South Pacific Coast, §1,009,680; Southern California Motor Road, ,000; Carson and Colornd(’Road. $120,- 000 San Francisco and North Pacific, | $2.000,000; San Francisco and San Joagquin Valley Road, $2,700,000. The Pullman Pal- ace Car Company was assessed at $500,000. In 2ll of his efforts to have the “‘feeders” of the Southern Pacific added to the main system Toland received but little encour- agement from the other members of the board. He said that the law prescribed that such roads should be considered with | the main system. The other members con- | tended that that was a question of law— | whether the board had jurisdiction over the “feeders””—and that the question could be easily settled by an opinion from the Attorney General in the matter. Toland reminded his colleagues that they had had ample opportunity to obtain an opinion but had not seen fit to do so. The board will take up the matter of county assess- | ments next Tuesday. | INTERESTING GAMES ON MANY EASTERN DIAMONDS NATIONAL BAGUE. CINCINNATI, Aug. 5.—To-day’s game was an old-time slugging match. Fourteen hits for extra bases were made off the two pitch- ers. In the fourth inning, after two were out, Menefee was hit hard and the locals scored Batteries—Guese and Bergen Kahoe. Umpire—Nash. NEW YORK, Aug. 5.—Philadelphia won two games from New York to-day. The first re- quired eleven innings and was lost through | Menefee and misplays. The second game was poorly played on both sides. Attendance, 7 Score, first came: R S New York.. P Philadelphia . -6 9 4 Batteries—Matthewson and Smith; Townsend and’ McFarland. Second game: R H R New York . ) 5 5 Philadelphia .10 10 1 Batteries—Tay nd Bowerman: Duggleby and Douglass. Umpire—Dwyer. BOSTON, Aug. 5.—To-day's game was so evenly contested that luck was the principal factor in determining the result. Boston was fortunate enough to buy hits with Brooklyn's errors, and so won. Both pitchers did excel- lent work. Attendance, 3000. Score: Boston 4 1 Brookly . 5 2 Batteries—Willis and Kittredge; Donovan and Farrell. Umpire—Emslie, PITTSBURG, Aug. 5.—Up to the middle of the eighth inning St. Louis had made fifteen hits and ten runs. Doheny and Yeager were put 1n then, but the slump could ot be checked. | core: R H. - lap 2 2 O’Connor and E Pittsburg St. Louis Batteries—Chesbro, .. Doheny, Yeager; Powell and Ryan. Umpires—0’'Day and Brown. AMERICAN LEAGUE. MILWAUKEE, Aug. 5.—Detroit gave a mis- erable exhibition of ball playing to-day and the locals scored an easy victory. Attendance, 800. Score: B EH R Milwaukee R 2 Detroit ... R Batteries—Hustings and Donohue; Maloney, Cronin, High and Buelow. PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 5.—The home team took two games from Washington by better all round playing. Philadelphia won the first game by solid hitting, while the visitors' hits were so scattered that they were unable to get their men around the bases. The second con- test was a battle of the pitchers, Wiltse having the better of it. Attendance, 5000. Score, first game: B Washington Philadelphia B e Washington . Philadelphia . Batterles—Garrick and Clarke; Powers. CHICAGO, Aug. 5.—Cleveland tried a new pitcher to-day who did some very clever work, batted well and, with good backing, won an casy game.' The local players were decidedly off 'in all departments and played a miserable ol 6 Wiltse and game. Attendance, 2100. Score: R. H. E. Chicago .. 8 ;! Cleveland 3 Batteries—Patterson and Sullivan; McNeil and Connor. Tedious Yacht Races. NEWPORT, R. I, Aug. 5.—A long, tedi- ous race of twelve miles and back, with the wind at all times very light and nearly always abeam, was won to-day In the 30- the Navahoe, and in the 70-foot sloop class by the Rainbow. el b ‘Would Cause New Conflict. BERLIN, Aug. 5.—Referring to the pub- lished statement that the Imperial Gov- ernment has decided to organize a colonial force with the troops who have left China, using this as a nucleus of a future colonial army, the Freissinnige Zeitung expresses the opinion that such an attempt would lead to a new confiict between the Govern- ment and the Reichstag. g Germans Entertain Frenchmen. BERLIN, Aug. 5—The commission from the French Chamber, which arrived Sat- urdl&eln Bremen for the purpose of study- rmany’s canals and harbors, is re- in; celving much courtesy. To-night the di- ship Company entertained the commission at dinner. (T PR Large Glass Works Burned. STOCKHOLM, Aug. 5.—The Kosta Glass Works, the largest in Sweden, have been burned, "THE SAN FRANOISCO CALL, TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1901 JOYFUL MEETING OF TWO BROTHERS AFTER A SEPARATION OF MANY YEARS British Bark Haddon Hall Arrives From Liverpool and Captain Pritchard Is Greeted by His Relative, Master of the Glenesslin, Now in Port, Whom He Had Not Seen .for a Generation HERE was a joyful meeting of two old sea dogs on the water front yesterday. For a score of years Captain J. B. Pritchard had not seen his brother, Captain O. Pritchard of the Haddon Hall, and when the latter vessel came in through the fog about noontime the Glenesslin’s master lost no time in getting across the bay from Sausalito. The Glenesslin arrived here on July 18 from Japan in ballast and her captain's first question to the pilot was, “Has the Haddon Hall arrived from Liverpool?” The bark was then out 148 days and given favorable weather should have been in port. She was behind time, however, and Captain Pritchard beran to fear that he would be loaded and on his way home again before the Haddon Hall and his brother made port. The fates, in the <hape of the strike, intervened and the < — * e BRITISH BARK HADDON HALL, WHICH ARRIVED FROM LIVERPOOL YESTERDAY IN A DENSE FOG. THE CAPTAIN HAD NOT MET HIS BROTHER, THE MASTER OF THE BRITISH SHIP GLENESSLIN, IN TWEN- TY-ONE YEARS AND THE MEETING WAS A JOYFUL ONE. 2 i ol Glenesslin was tied up. Seventeen of her | hand column and the successive tides of the | Astoria; stmr Arcata, for Coos Bay. “lay days” have gone, but Captain Pritch- | day In ths order of occurrence as to time of Salled Aug. 5—Schr Mabel Gray, for San ard did not mind that, as every day brought his brother nearer to San Fran- cisco. After a long run the Haddon Hall finally made port and the brothers met | again after vears. Away back in 18%0 Captain J. B. Pritch- ard, then second mate of a wooden ship, went home for a visit. His younger brother was also home for a run and the two_of them vapped lies” for over a week. Then they separated. and although each has circumnavigated the globe every year since they never chanced to meet again until yesterday. In 1889 Captain J. B. Pritchard was appointed master of the Glenesslin, while at the same time his brother was made chief officer of the Haddon Hall, In 1894 Captain O. Pritch- ard received his command and has sailed the Haddon Hall ever since. The two vessels are chartered to load wheat for Europe and will probably get away from here about the same time. The Haddon Hall had a fair run from Liverpool here. The first part of the voy- age was marked by light winds and calms. On May 21 she was caught in a very heavy east-northeast gale. It was accompanied by a high, confused sea and the ship was swept continuously. Four bulwark stanchions were broken and sev- eral chain plates carried away. Consid- erable damage was done about the deck and everything movable was washed overboard. The run from 50 to 5 was made in twenty days and then fair sail- ing weather was encountered. Off shore a dense fog was run into, which delayed the ship several days. o i At A Coal Cargoes Arriving. More than 25,000 tons of coal arrived In port during the last thirty-six hours and most of it is finding its way into circuia- tion. The Titania brought in 5558 tons, the Milton 4648 tons, the Matteawan 5000 tons, Tellus 3500 tons, Washtenaw 4000 tons and the British ship Dumferline 3000 tons from Newcastle, Australia. All of these vessels will be discharged before the week is out, so0 there is no fear of a coal famine for a few days to com L i R Has a Japanese Crew. The steamship South Portland has a Japanese crew. While the vessel was on the Sound Captain Hall had a dispute with some of his men, so he discharged them all and secured Japanese saflors and firemen. The vessel was expected yester- day morning, but the chances are that she will be a few hours late and will not dock until to-day. Captain Hall will be able to work his men in discharging and 1&35 no fear of a walkout when the vessel es up. a separation of twenty-one —_— ‘Water Front Notes. The wrecking schooner Bessie K re- turned from Halfmoon Bay yesterday with the windlass and thirty fathoms of chain from the City of Florence. The British steamer Monmouthshire that was here last year in the California and Oriental Steamship line has been sold to the Quehec Steamship Company and will run in the Windward Island trade, The army transport tug Slocum got back to port yesterday. At Santa Bar- bara she learned that the Lennox had reached San Francisco, so Captain Mar- shall hurried back here. 0. Wallace, a negro woman, drank car- bolic acid in a water front resort yester- day and was hurried to the Harbor Hos- pital and pumped out. She was not badly damaged. A s T Charters. The Brabloch will load wheat at Portland for Europe, 37s 6d; the British steamer Cym- beline, wheat here for Europe or: Mediter- ranean ports, 40s; the MacMahon, wheat here for Europe, $§s; the Eric, lumber on Puget Sound for Mollendo, 5bs; the India, lumber at Blakeley for Valparaiso (owners' account); the Governor Roble, lumber on Puget Sound for Sydney, 425 6d, with usual options. All char- tered prior to arriv 2dn AL TR Sun, Moon and Tide. United States Coast and Geodetic Survey— Times and Heights of High and Low Waters at Fort_ Point, entrance to San Francisco Bay. Published by official au- thority of the Superintendent. OTE—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, TUESDAY, AUGUST 6. | the ay; the third time column glves the last tide of ‘the day; except when there are but three tides, as Sometimes occurs. The helghts 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 Elven by the charts. The plane of reference is the mean of the lower low waters, et o L, Time Ball. Branch Hydrographie Office, U. S. ., Mer- chants’ Exchange, Sen Francisco, Cal., August 5, 1901. B 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 8§ o'clock p. m., Greenwich time. C. SG_ CALKINS, Lieutenant Commander, U. 8, N., in charge. ot i o Steamer Movements. TO ARRIVE. Steamer, From. Neko.. Hamburg & Way P South Tacoma Rainie: . | Seattle & - |New York + | Tacoma - | Seattle . Seattle -|Panama & Way Forts San Diego & Way Pt: +| Humboldt - |Honolulu . G. W. El North Fork. Humboldt TO SAIL. Steamer. Destination. |Salls.) Pler. August 6, Umatilla.. Puget Sound Ports(11 am|Pler 9 Point Aren 2 pmPler 2 Pler 13 9 am. Pier 2 Pler 7 Pler 13 [Pier '8 Pler § Pier 11 Curacao. Pler 11 &) G. W. Elder. | Astoria & Portland(11 am/Pler 2% Aconcagua...| Valparaiso & Way|12 m|Pier 10 Bonita. -|San Pedro & Way.| 9 am|Pier 11 San Pedro....| Humboldt ... Coronado.....| Grays Harbor City Sydney. | Panama_& 1 PMSS Ralnier....... Eellge & N, What|.......|Pler 2 gnlt 9. -| Puget Sound Ports(11 am|(Pler o August 10, 1 pm(PMSS Honolulu .., 2 pm|Pler 7 San Diego 9 am|Pler 11 Humboldt 1:30 p|Pler 9 Aungus Columbta.....| Astoria & Portland|11 am|Pler 24 Santa Rosa..|San Diego & Way. August 12, Argyll........IN. Y. via Panama.|.......[. FROM SEATTLE. Steamer. Destination. Salls. Senator. Nome direct ... Farallon Skaguay & Way Queen. Skaguay & Way Ports|Aug. City of ‘Seattie.|Skaguay & Way Ports|Aus. Conemaugh...." | Nome & St. Michael Bertha.. .| Valdez & Way Ports .|Nome & Teller City. Aug. 10 .|Skaguay & Way Ports.|Aug. 13 Skaguay & Way Ports.[Aug. 13 Skaguay & Way Ports.|Aug. 14 Skaguay & Way Ports.|Aug. 18 Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. Monday, Aug. b Stmr Clty of Puebla, Jepsan, 60 hours from Victorla and Puget Sound ports. Stmr _Coronado, Johnson, Grays Harbor. Stmr Washtenaw, Zelling, 3 hours from Ta- coma. Er stmr Milton, Rainey, 4 days from Na- naimo. ‘1}?.9 stmr Titanta, Exenes, 4 days from Na- naimo. Br #hiv Dunfermiine, Woodward, 72 days from Newcastle, NSW, Bll' bark Haddon Hall, 165 days from Liver- pool., CLEARED. Monday, Aue. 6. Stmr Pomona, Shea, Eureka, Goodall, Per- kins & Co. SAILED. Monday, Aug. 5. Stmr Pomona, Shea, Bureka. TELEGRAPHIC, POINT LOBOS, Aug. 5, 10 p. m—Weather thick; wind SW, velocity 12 miles per hour. MISCELLANEOUS. LONDON, Aug. 5—Stmr Eureka, from Nor- folk for San cisco, put into Valparaiso with machinery out of order. DOMESTIC PORTS. Aug. 4—Ship Gov. Aug. 4—Schr Sallor i stmr Brunswick, from Se- attle. EUREKA—Sailed Aug. 4—Stmr Fulton, for Boy. hence July Francisco. TACOMA—Arrived Aug. 5—Schr Comet, from San_Pedro. WHATCOM—Arrived Avg. 5—Bark Vidette, from Honolulu. SEATTLE—Arrived Aug. 5—Stmr Queen, from Skagua; Arrived Aug. 4—Stmr Dis’ me. covery, from Sailed Aug. Ship John A. Briggs, for San Francisco, Sajled® Aug. 4—Stmr Humboldt, for Skaguay. Arrived Aux. 5—Stmr Mackinaw, for San Francisco. TELLER—Salled July 23—Schr Balboa, Nome. Arrived July 24—Stmr Jeanie, from Nome. ST. MICHAELS—Sailed July 18—Schr Fal- con, for Port Townsend. Sailed July 19—Brig ourtney Ford, for Port Townsend. Sailed fuly 20—Schr Ethel Zane, for Port Townsend. PORT ANGELES—Arrived Aug. 5—U § stmr Mohican, —. HADLOCK—Sailed Aug. 5—Bktn Lahaina, for Shanghal. Arrived Aug. 5—Schr Erle, from Townsend. USAL—Sailed Aug. 5—Stmr Aloha, for San Francisco. EASTERN PORT. NEW YORK-—Arrived Aug. 5—Stmr Minne- apolis, from London. FOREIGN PORTS. HONGKONK~—Arrived prior to Aug. 4—Stmr Victoria, from TBacoma. Sailed 'Aug. 3—Jap stmr Hongkong Maru, for San Franciseo. UEENSTOWN—Arrived Aug. Zinita, from Tacoma. Salled Aug, 3—Br for —. ANTWERP—Arrived Aug. 2—Ger ship Peter Rickmers, from Portland. Salled Aug. 4—Br ship Bermuda, for San Francisco; Br ship Inchcape Rock, for Port Los Angeles. In port July 17—TItal ship Cavaliere Cjampa, for San Francisco. HAMBURG—Salled — —Brship Lord Shaftes- bury, for Honolulu; Ger ship Alsterkamp, for Puget Sound. TABLE BAY—Arrived July 12—Schr Alice MeDonald, from Montevideo. YOKOHAMA—Safled Aug 3—Br stmr Gaellc, for San Francisco. Arrived Aug. 4—Jap stmr hence July 17. . SALINAS CRUZ—Arrived Aug. 3—Schr J. M. Colman, hence July 27. - NANAIMO—Arrived Aug. 4—Stmr San Mateo, from Port Los Angeles. SHIELDS—In port July 19—Ttal ship Salva- tore Clampa, for San Francisco; Br bark Ven- dee, for San Francisco. PISAGUA—Salled July 25—Br ship Edenbal- Iymere, for Astoria. HIOGO—Sailed July 24—Ger ship Mabel Rick- for Astoria. for 3—Br bark ship Slerra Miranda, Nippon Maru, mers, Will Tell of Santa Clara Fruit. SAN JOSE, Aug. 5.—Horticultural Com- missioner Ehrhorn will represent Santa Clara County at the meeting of the Na- tlonal Horticultural Commissioners, who are to meet soon at Denver. The Board of Supervisors to-day granted him a leave of absence for sixty days for this pur- pose. Ehrhorn will go prepared to make an exhaustive report on the fruit diseases and pests of this county. AOVAL COULE T0 B BUESTS Canada Prepares for the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall. Unique Celebration to Be Held at Vancouver in October. ety Special Dispatch to The Call. VANCOUVER, B. C., Aug. 5.—Great preparations are being made throughout Canada for the reception of the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York, who will i visit the Dominion in September and Oec- tober. The Ophir, on which the royal party is traveling around the world, will arrive at Halifax about September 15, and from there until they arrive in Vancouver on October 1 there will be daily official receptions in all the prineipal cities along the route. The preparations going on now in Vancouver for the greatest celebration ever seen here are a fair sample of what | is being done in all the Canadian cities, | and altogether the tour will be quite the | most aristocratic function since the days when King Edward visited Canada more than forty years ago. Besides their own suite their royal high- | nesses will be welcomed at Halifax and | accompanied right across the continent by Lord Minto, the Governor General; Lady Minto, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, the Prime Min- ister; Sir Richard Cartwright, Sir Louis Davies, the Hon. David Mills and other members of the Federal Cabinet. Trip to the Alaska Coast. From Halifax the itinerary will include St. John, N. B.; Montreal, Ottawa, To- ronto, Quebec, Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary and Vancouver. Other Eastern cities will | be visited on the return tour, after their | royal highnesses have visited Victoria and | taken a trip up the Alaskan coast. The | Canadian Pacific has placed the steamship | Empress of India, which will be in port, at the disposal of the party to make the | run to Victoria and later take the north- | ern trip if the latter is arranged. In order to make satisfactory arrange- | ments Mayor Townley of Vancouver re- cently sent a special envoy to Ottawa, where a statement of the exact pro- gramme to be carried out in Vancouver was obtained. The plan is on a grand scale and will contain features absolutely unique in Canada. The special train of the royal party will arrive in Vancouver at 11:30 o’clock in the merning, and the Duke and Duchess will remain here until next morning. The flag- ship Warspite of the North Pacific squad- ron and eral of the other warships will be in port. A request has been forwarded | to the United States Navy Department to | | allow the Oregon or one of the other of Uncle Sam’s warships on the Pacific to be here and join in the celebration. A naval guard of henor will be in attend- | ance and the flagship band with local bands will play “‘God Save the King" as | the train comes in. Ceremony at Vancouver. His Excellency the Governor General | will then introduce the Lieutenant Gov- | ernor of the province, Sir Henry Joly, Ad- miral Beaumont and Mayor Townley to their royal highnesses. The ladies will present to the Duchess a bouquet of flow- ers and immediately after the civic ad- dress of welcome will be read by the Mayor. The latter will_then escort the | Duke to his carriage. Whether the as- sembled crowd will follow or precede the | procession uptown will appear in printed | instructions later. The party will be driven to the new military drill hall, which will be opened by his royal highness, and at the eonclu- sion of this ceremony luncheon at the Ho- tel Vancouver will be announced by the Mayor. There are to be no speeches at lunch. Afterward the Mayor is to pro- pose the health of the King and later the health of the royal visitors, which will then be drunk. The Duke wiil reply to both at one time. Headed by a detachment of mounted police in uniform, the party will drive around the park in the afternoon and later will be conducted through the Has- | tings sawmill, one of the largest on the coast. In the evening there will be an illuminated procession of fishing boats on the inlet. Including Indian war canoes, there will probably be over 2000 boats in the procession, so that this spectacle alone will be a unique one. Early next morn- ing the party will leave for Victoria by the Empress. HOUSE OF LORDS DECIDES AGAINST A TRADES UNIDN’ Dismisses an Appeal From a Judg-} ment Rendered Against a Butch- ers’ Association. LONDON, Aug. 5.—The House of Lords | to-day rendered an important decision af- | fecting trades unions. The case was | brought up on appeal from the judgment | of the Irish courts awarding a wholesale butcher damages against the Butchers’ Assistants’ Association, which brought | pressure to bear on retailers to boycott | the platintiff until he dismissed a certain | non-union employe, threatening otherwise to call out the union employes of the firms concerned, and finally induced the | non-unionist to 'leave the plaintiff. The | Lords dismissed the appeal on the ground | that the alleged acts of wrongful and malicious cohspiracy were not undertaken to advance the interests of the workmen themselves, but solely to injure the plain- | tiff. Throws Himself Into a Furnace. SALT LAKE, Aug. 5.—A special to the Deseret News from Provo, Utah, says that John M. Wilson, a patient at the in- sane asylum, threw himself head first into the open door of a furnace to-day. He was badly burned before being pulled out. While bandages were heing prepared Wiison broke away and again threw him- self into the iurnace, this time being so frightfully burned that he died within a The Bloo ‘When there is a natural and health quantity, estimated at one-eighth the wei; every five minutes. This rapid flow of entrance of disease germs and impurities of every description. It filters out all that = s dglopmen!:: of the bod: es, tissues, nerves and bones. s can rightly claim an absolutely pure blood su; unpolluted circulation, and in consequence are exposed to is not necessary or good for the ;ng and strengthening the m ew Conu%ous Blood Poison, the greatest throug] the blood, and Cancer, Scrofula, Rheum, Psoriasis, isons or humors thatare engen- s:ted and fostered in a sluggish and impoverished blood. ~Old sores, chron;:u ulcers and rliznieumatilc yd:s e mon, espec am [ le, hose i aigtgcpcnm‘eof‘helackvfihend that give y ul blood. Sallow complexions and rough, oily sg‘m evidence some constitutional or blood trouble, which salves, lotions, or any external treatment can cure. Diseases that they manifest themselves as ulcers, tumors, naturally thin and color and strength to youl pains, require a tonic and blood Sl il i ties that no other blood medicine does. Polluted Blood thi;goin gs Breeds Disease r-v: blood, and when the more filled with new rich blood, the general health begins to gxwefio?er.mdmwdmyfiomo( . S. 8. is the onl; teed purely vegetal Diont seiatle gl.ooddueuu ftbmbem pqnfiftz ears and is more today than ever. il youo - bool k,mxhnflflmfimm (= RpS gt about your cesc, this information will cost you il and most reliable in di the to sen( enced “and ediicated doctors. All Tetter—in fact the majority of human ailments The Blood is ifier such blood poisons and humors, but possesses health-giving tonic the disease and eliminates from the circulation. It builds u THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMP HEALTHY OR DISEASED circulation of the blood, the entire t of the body, passes through the heart e blood through the system prevents the y and nourish- lBut, |an!ortunately, an ect and to mankind, enters the system Rheumatism, Catarrh, Eczema, Salt —are caused by the Source of All Strength Wlts enemy are com- that originate in the blood, whct.l;ler m:hmg eruptions, muscular or bone as 8. S. S., which not only antidotes It goes down to the very 1 the system every- poisonous character or that obstructs and and imy to the old innutritious arteries and veins are once improve, muscles Ploo pasifier tested in and vitality every kind ble 3 dence 1s | men at work, SICK HEADACHE HITE MEN DEFY JIPANESE MOB Santa Fe Railroad Work- men in a Lively Encounter. Ringleaders Are Arrested and Must Answer Serious Charges. Aug. 5.—The Japanese section gang, numbering eighty men, working at Escalon on the Santa fi:- road became involved in a riot Sunday noon, and but for the prompt action of Clark, the timekeeper, and George Dub the foreman of the gang, serious trou would probably have resulted. As it was, one of the Japanese was nearly killed. A Japanese named Kushi was accused by one of the men with having stolen a monkey wrench. A demand was mad that Kushi be discharged, which was re- fused. Thereupon only about seventeen of the gang reported for work. The r organized and made an_ atiack em ine particularly Kushi. The put into freight es rk, who, with the as kept the mob at b htime having been sent at Stockton. STOCKTON, men attacked we s by Timekeeper C ance of Dub word in_the me to_Sheriff Sibl The Sheriff, accompanied by Deputy Smith, w to the scene_and arrested three of the ring rs—Morshita, Ka- | tuski and Sh v vho, with Kust were broug the 1 is_badly cut about th other marks of rough ha dling. 3 twenty ¢ time during the fracas about | the rioters pounced upon Kushi and wo have killed him but for the timely as ance of Clark, who is said to have a r markable inflience over the gang. The arrested men will probably be charged with assault to murder. Mohican Arrives at Port Angeles. Tha S, Wash., Aug. §. ng ship Mohican this afternoon from will wait here for PORT ANGELE United States trai rived in thi San Franc orders. and ADVERTISEMENTS. Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve distress from Dys- pepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizzi- ness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable, Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price. MORDAY AND THURSDAY THE CALIFORRIA LIMITED SANTA FE This Great Train runs but twice per week during the summer. Leaving at 9 am, it arrives in Chicago at 2.18 p@ on Thursdays and Sundays. Its high standard - of service is tully maintained. visit DR. JORDAN'S grzar MUSEUM OF ANATOMY 1051 MAZZZT ST. bot. §:247:3, 8.7.Cal, ; The Lagges: Anazomical Maseum i the World. " Weaknesses or any contracted @sease positively cured by the oldest Specialist on the Coast. Est. 36 years. DR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN Consultation free and strictly private. Treatment personally or by letter. A Positive Cure in every case undertaken. Write for Book, PHILOSOPEY of MARRIAGE. MALED FREE. (A men) g DR JORDAN & 051 Market St.. S. F. : | Dt LASHS KIDNEY & LIVER BITTERS APLEASANT LAXATIVE NOT INTOXICATING DR.HALL’S REINVIGORATORFRTPS Five hundred reward for any case we cannot cure. This secrét remedy stops losses in I4 hours, cures Emissions, Impotency, Vari- Drains, cocele, Strictus ror lou Lost Manhood ing effects of self-abuse or excess- es. Sent sealed, $2 bottle; 3 bottles, nteed to cure any case. Address MEDICAL INSTITUTE, 35 Broad- Cal. Also for sale at 1073% S.'F. Al private diseases quickly end for free book. BAJA CALIFORNIA Damiana Bitters 18, GREAT RESTORATIVE, INVIGORA- tor and Nervine. The most wonderful aphrodisiac and Special Tonic for the Sexual Organs, for both sexes. The Mexican Remedy for Diseases of the Kide neys and Bladder. Sells on its own merits. NABE! ALFS & BRUNE, Agents. 8. F.—(Send for Circulars.)