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The Kaiser’s Friend Says Talks of the Possibility of Noted Writer Considers Emperor Wil- " low, the prominent writer on political and allied ashore from the Minneapolis, which ar- | ahead of i Bigelow added signifi- cantly, he recent visit here of Prince | Henry means nothing whatever. It will | in no ways affect our relations with Ger- | many, and it will have no influence what- | the Germany act.” € This Laxative W ; remedy that cures a celd in one day. The assoclation may be able to reduce the write a book on the subject. He is en- THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1902. ¥ BIGELOW A5 A PROPHET Germany Is Not for Peace. Wear Between American . and Teuton. linm the Greatest Man on Earth Except President | Roosevelt. Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, March 18.—Poultney Bige- | topics, was the first passenger ved from London to-day. | “This country has plenty of trouble | of war with that | o regard for | to inriuence | to bility ation. Monroe when <8 that cou! ready believe there will be You then, that colonizing in reply. “Ger- r best to allenate ut despite her between Eng- terests of the nations are No, there ie was ure with his old schoolmate. se,” he said decisiv as good friends now the German Emperor 1 on earth except Presi- _he had made a study of | Germany and would soon | in writing a book on our colonies. g these he thinks America shoul For several years Big is home in England. coming to America to. stay- is the only place ~for n to live. | much living abroad,” he said, “has | ney to make one imbibe the senti- | an | March 18.—The plant of otton Seed Oil and Manu- was damaged $80,000 by pany ADVERTISEMENTS. | ONETARY balm for the wound- ed feelings of beauty in distress has again been ebtained in Judge Kerrigan's court. Twice within the last six weeks have | distressed beautles received verdicts from juries summoned in that court. Alma de Bretteville was awarded a verdict for $1250 dathages to her heart and affections, and yesterdgy Mrs. Bertha Coulter was given a verdict for $20 for damages to her feelings. In ‘the case of Miss de Bretteville a Kiondike millionaire was the defendant. In the case of Mrs. Coulter the Chicago and Alton Railroad Company must pay the score. Mrs. Coulter is the widow of Clinton R. Coulter, a well-known bicyclist, who was killed in a railroad accident in Nevada in February of last year. She is one of the noted Hadenfeldt sisters, whose beauty has been long the boast of San Men’s | Tailoring Thal Will | Satisfy. The perfection in fit of the Men’s Tailored Suits at Keller's have forced their Franciscans. Her sister Joan, as queen e Rt of the Mardl Gras ball of last vear, elec- way to popular favor on the trified the local world of society by her Besice : £ - beau enduring basis, of merit B “The fair plaintift in yesterday's action, Bertha, is also a beauty. She is a tall, only. | We AimtoFil. regal looking brunette, with a carriage and demeanor indicating that a knowledge of her charms is not the possession of | the soclety world alone. Becomingly at- | tired in black and heavily veiled she | made a charming picture as she sat in the witness chair. | _Mrs. Coulter brought suit against the Wc Aim to Salisfy. Chicago and Alton Railroad Company for Most men before order- . . 4 . | $1500 damages because she was put’off ing 2 suit have two ideas in [ff| 2 train a little this side of St. Louis, Mo., view—the first is to get a ]| Ei Paso instead of San Antonio, Tex. | She testified that she bought her ticket perfect fit, the next, to pay | . © W | that when she paid $250 for the paste- a fair price. Our $2500 [ Business Suit. BHMN BH“WEHS We are now making up Men’s Business Suits at NUW |N uNlnN $25.00 that possess every element of perfection in fit and workmanship that sci- ence and skill can create— the material is the most ap~ propriate and desirable, the fit is absolutely guaranteed, and the making receives the same care and attention as the highest priced Suits. Delegates From Many Counties Meet at Sacramento. Special Dispatch to The Call. SACRAMENTO, March 18.—Seventy-one delegates, representing fifteen of the prin- cipal grain-growing counties of the State, met in this city this afternoon and to- | night and perfected the California Grain Growers' Assoclation. As indicating the interest taken in the movement, the rollcall showed the pres- ence of the full number of delegates pro- vided for in the call for the session. Late this afternoon ine following permanent | directors were elected to setve for one | year from the districts named: Tehama | and Glenn, P. R. Garnett of Willows; Co- | lusa, Jesse Poundsfone of Grimes; Butte, V. P. Richards of Gridley; Sutter and | Yuba, B. F. Walton of Yuba City; Sacra- desirable th [ Bt D e e of Dixon: Contia ng desirable that | Solano, John R. Rice ixon; be procured in the country. | Costa and San Joaquin, H. C, McCabe of g o Brentwood; Merced, L. H. Applegate of The Fi DPerfecti | Merced City; Madera, J. F. Daulton of Ma- c FitIs ection. | Gera: Btanialaus, J. B, Wootten of Mo- § | desto. G. W. Plerce, president of the as- The Prices Arc Low. e There is a distinctive finish about the cut and style of those $25.00 Business Suits that instant- ly commands attention and bears | in words to the letter, satisfy. Keller’s Cuslom Shirts. Our assortment of materials for this season em- soclation, was nominated for director at | large and was unanimously elected. s Chairman Plerce sald that much good / of grain growers at the State capital, but 04 that it was noticed that in some localities o | there was a lack of proper interest. He urged the delegates not to discour- aged if immediate results were not real- ized. He said organized capital was ALSO OAKLAND. | but newly organized must not expéct too | much at the outset. P. R. Gamett of Willows moved to { amend that section of the .articles of the assoclation declaring one of the purposes of the association to be the buying and E#Y signsture is on every box of the genuine Tablets had resulted from the recent convention 1028-1030 IMarke: against the growers, and the latter, being seiling of grain. A long argument ensued, large majority of the delegates holding that the directors should not be tied down when it came to advancing the in- terests of the grewers. In discussing the mobl.ble policy of the association Frank ller of Sacramento said: and_compelled to travel to this city via until she had passed St. I from Agent Kelly in Chicago and said 8reat humiliation, fo— RAILROAD MUST PAY DAMAGES FOR ERROR OF TICKET AGENT Mrs. Bertha Coulter Secures a Verdict Against the Chicago-Alton Line Because Wrong Coupon Was Given Her and She Was Forced to Leave Passenger Train and Travel Another Route .4 s BERITEA COULTER QN THE STAND | i | MRS. BERTHA COULTER, WHO WAS AWARDED DAMAGES AGAINST | THE CHICAGO-ALTON BECAUSE THE AGENT SOLD HER WRONG TICKET AND SHE WAS FORCED TO LEAVE TRAIN. 3 =) board she distinctly stated that she want- ed to go by way o Antonio, with the privilege of stopping over for four days. She left Chicago September 14, 191, on her homeward journ aveled safely , when she finish the used her was informed that she mus trip by another route. s she alleged. A motion for a nonsuit was made by cost of sacks and perhaps to abolish their use entirely and cause wheat to be shipped in Lulk. The association may be able to cut down the enormous port charges in San Fran- cisco which are paid by the farmer, and the Harbor Commissioners may have to meet the organized farmers of this State for consulta- tion. The wheat buyers may find, as in Kan- sas, that their occupation is less profitable, and the shipping of wheat may hereafter be done at Port Costa or some other points with fewer legal and illegal obstructions than in the past. Finally, as the lsthmian canal ap- proaches completion, the raflroads may be able to carry wheat overland to Galveston and thence to Liverpool In competition with the shipowners of San Francisco, provided this assoclation can guarantee a certain number of tons for a year or more. It is intended to establish the head- quarters of the association at San Fran- cisco. The following delegates were in attendance at to-day's session: E. Fagain, Gridley; H. Luth, Live Oak; L. C. Shirley, C. H. Porter, Chico; J. M. Nelson, Durham; D. W. Taylor, J. E. Beets, 'N. H. Lauridson, N. H. Schaefer, Mills Station; E. J. Lynch, Walsh Sta- tion; M. B. Ivory, H. C. McCabe, Brent- wood; J. A. Bousselett,” Antioch; W. W. Hoffman, Byron; C. . Damm, Wheat- land; P. L. Hutchinson, Erfe; Arthur Richter, Gridley; J. Murch, Yolo; V. P. Richards, Gridle; Paul Newman, Merced; J. M. Hampton, Sutter; B. F. Waiton, Yuba City; R. Cosner, Colusa; E. Wickman, Gridle; B R, Willows: George Borceleau, G. W. How- ell, Henleyville; Jud Boyd, Red Bluff; M. Diggs, Woodland; W. A, Vann, Syca- more; J. T. Able, Willlams; Jesse Pound- stone, Grimes; L. Hicok, Colusa; R. H. McDonald, EX% ; D. B. Groff, C. J. Crosby, Lincoln; George Greitman, Bher- idan; ¥. W. Yokum, Legrand; L. H. Ap- plegate; F. W. Wolfsen, Merced; John, Swan, R. W. Hammatt, Livingston; J. H. Peterson, Dixon; T. B. Chaunon, Gridley; L. A. Richards, Grayson; R. R. Snedigar, Oakdale; R. K. Whitmore, Modesto; C. T. Elliott, James Thompson, J. W. Beas- ley, T. Carmichael, J. S. Wootten, Mo- desto. Killed by & Live Wire. PASADENA, March 18.—Ed F. Fisher, a lineman employed by the Pasadena Elec- tric Light and Power\Company, was killed to-day by receiving the full voltage of a wire on Kirkwood avenue. While he was at work on a line he feli against a live wire, hanging there until assistance came. He was alive when taken down, but died a short time afterward. He was 25 years old and leaves a wife. —_——— e Food-Drink. ' A combination of food elements in con- but the amendment was voted down, a | venient and palatable form—makes blood and flesh—brings strength and health to the weak—that's Malt-Nutrine. A real tonic, whose dally use is good for all sorts and conditions of men and women. Physiclans approve it. Sold by all drug- sts. Prepared only by Anheuser-Busch rewing Ass'n, St. Louis, U. 8. A, > the attorneys for the defense, but it was denfed by Judge Kerrigan after severa! hours of argument. The jury retired shortly after 4 o'clock and deliberated un- til 5, when it returned a verdict for $250 damages for the plaintiff. Mrs. Coulter, rumor has it, recelved $10.000 as a compromise of her suit for damages against the Southern Pacific for the death of her husband. DEGLARES DOAGE HAD PISTOL DRAWN Statement of Woods Re- garding Sacramento - Bridge Duel. Special Dispatch to The Call. SACRAMENTO, March 18.—The duel on the Sacramento bridge yesterday aft- ernoon, in which Van C. Dodge, aged 53 years, and Robert Woods, aged 22, were the participants, is still a sensation. A tragic development is momentarily ,exJ pected in the death of Dodge, who was shot through the abdomen. Woods was shot once in the jaw and twice in the bip, but his wounds are not dangerous. At the County Hospital, where Dodge is undergoing ireatment, the fear was expressed to-night that he would not live many hours. He is still conscious, but he hus made no statement concerning the shaoting further than the officlal ante- mortem deposition of yesterday, in which he said he nad gone to the bridge to meet Woods and_try to have him agree to marry his daughter, who, he claimed, ‘Woods had wronged. In that statement he asserted that Woods made a move us if to draw a pistol, whereupon he began fl‘:Ing. He admits that he fired the nrst shot. It is a singular fact that the shooting occurred on a bridge which is the con- necting link between two countles, Sac- ramento and Yolo. There is small doubt, however, that the case will come within the jurisdiction of the Sacramento Cou- ty courts, a clause in the laws giving a county jurisdiction 100 yards over Iits boundary line. Some _argue, however, ‘with equal force, that Yolo County might claim jurisdiction. It is not improbable that the courts will be called upon to de- cide the point. The fact that Dodge carried two pis- tols, fully loaded, indicates the determi- nation which impelled him to have the score out with the young man whom he accused “of ruining his daughter. Even when he was wounded he had the strength of will to force open the door of the bridge cabin, in which Woods had taken refuge, and then fire the shots which inflicted the onl wounds the young man received in encounter. Much sympathy is expressed for 3 especially in view of the motive which FLAMES LIGRT UP HOBOKEN'S -~ RIVER FRONT Piers, Steamer British Queen and Lighters Destroyed. Damage Is Estimated at a Million Dollars and Life Is Lost. Customs Officers, With Drawn Re- volvers, Prevent a Crew of Thirty-Two Chinese From - Invading the Country. NEW YORK, March 18.~-A swift and picturesque fire to-night destroyed the pler of the Phoenix steamship line on the Hoboken (N. J.) river front, with many bales of cotton and hay; burned that com= pany's vessel, the British Queen, to a hulk; consumed several lighters and their cargoes; damaged a dock belonging to'the | Barber steamship line, and for a time threatened the property of the Holland- American line and the Hugh Campbell stores. The loss, according to ' estimates night, will approximate $1,000,000. ‘Whether any lives were lost it is diffi- cult to say. While the conflagration was at its height and after it had been re- duced by the firemen and fire boats, rum- mors were rife that seieral men perished. It was tolerably certain at midnight that Chief Engineer Scott of the British Queen was burned to death on her and that a sailor named Jansen met the same fate. One of the men who escaped says that he saw several men leap into the water when the steamer' became enveloped in fire and he saw few, if any, of them rescued. The quartermaster of the burned ship said that the crew of the vessel were in the forecastle and if they escaped it was with difficulty, Nevertheless, some of the British Queen’s officers said to-night that they were quite sure that all were safe save Engineer Scott, who they simply sald was missing. It is not unlikely that some of the longshorsmen and stevedores who swarmed about the vessel may still have to be accounted for. | The estimated losses in detail are: Plers, | $300,000; British Queen, $100,000; cotton and lighters, $250,000, Seven lighters are more or less damaged. i The scene of the fire was Seventh and" River streets, Hoboken. Together there are docks and basins of the Phoenix line, the Holland-American line and the Bar- ber line. | From the Phoenix line pler the flames spread to the pler of the Barber line, and | then to the steamer Heathburn, newly ar- | rived from Hong Kong, China, with al cargo of tea. Among the crew of the steamer Heathburn were thirty-two Chi- nese. When the flames began to run over the vessel they all scampered to_ the pier | for safety and began to make their way | to the streets of Hoboken. There was a | large force of customs officers on hand | guarding property. As soon as these | officlals saw the frightened Chinese they | became alarmed, fearing the aliens would | make an illegal entry into the country, | so with drawn ‘pistols they-ordered the | Chinese to halt. The command was heed- ed and then, surrounded by guards, the foreigners were marched to a pier some | distance away and there locked up, under | surveillance, for. the.night. | to- - e DECLARE HE STOLE AN IMMENSE AMOUNT New York Brokers Ciusn the Arrest of Former Member of Their Firm. | NEW YORK, March 18.—Max C. Mayer, formerly a member of the brokerage firm of Rathborne, Mayer & Rathborne, was arrested to-day at Bayonme, N. J., and charged with embezzlement of funds, said | to amount in all to $100,000. The charge | was made by C. L. Rathborne & Son, the | successors of the firm of which Mayer was formerly a member. He was taken | before Judge Blair of Jersey City on a warrant charging him with embezzlement | in one instance of $4800, and was released on $25,000 bail. Subsequently an indict- ment was found against him by the Grand Jury of New York. After his arrest Mayer made the following statement: 1 did not intend running away and they could have arrested mesany time they might | Nave wished. I have been in New York for the | last two vears, almost every day. I was in | New York all day yesterday and came out here only last evening to spend the night with my mother. I have asked my attorneys to make a detailed statement. The charge will not stand when it is explained. T was in partner- ship with Rathborne and it is because we dis- solved that partnership that this has occurred. s Robbers Loot the Postoffice. TACOMA, Marcn 18.—Burglars blew open the safe in the postoffice in Bremer- ton, the naval station, at 2 o'clock this morning and stole $2000 in cash and stamps. The postoffice was in a drug- store, which was completely wrecked. L i 2 i e e S ol had evidently prompted him to kill or be killed. Woods has made a statement to a police officer that he had not wronged Dodge's daughter and that another man was responsible. For this reason, he said, he declined to wed her. He assert- ed that Dodge had a revolver in his hand when he came up to him on the bridge to speak to him. R ADVERTISEMENTS. A CERTAIN CURE Goughs, Catarrh and Group For TAKEN IN THE AIR WE BREATHE The new treatment will destroy at once the germs which cause the disease. By using HYOMEI croup is cured in thirty minutes. . Colds are cured in twenty-four hours.. Coughs in one night." Bronchitis in two days. Catarrh is completely eradicated from: the system in a few weeks. 1t takes but two weeks to stop the pro- gress of consumption, and the time re- quired to cure this dicease depends only upon how deeply the germs are imbedded in the lungs. You take mo chaices °whatever In using HYOMEL In the first place, a five days' treatment Is sent free on appifcation to Ths . T. Booth Co., Ithaca, N. Y. The HYOMEL outfit, at your drugsist's or sent by mail, costs you but $1.00, and the money is re- funded when ft fails to cure, <20, A ?D:‘r‘[‘h-‘lt ) & ' DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT. KIDNEY- TROUBLE, LAME BACK AND RHEUMATISH CURED BY SWAMP-ROOT. To Prov: What the Great Kidney Remedy, Swamp- Root, Will Do for YOU, Every Reader of The Call May Hav: a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. N \\\\‘T T. F. McHUGH, ESQ. - TACOMA, Wash., Nov. 29, 1901 DR. KILMER & CO., Binghamton, N. Y. Gentlemen: It gives me great pleasure to add my testimonial to that of hun= dreds of others regarding the wonderful curative properties of Swamp-Root. I had a lame back three years ago before leaving North Dakota for the coast. Soon after my arrival in the Puget Sound country it became very much worse. I felt certain that the coast climate had given me acute rheumatism and came to the conclusion that I could not live in this climate. Later I became con- vinced that what I really had was kidney trouble, and that the rheumatism was due to my kidney trouble. The lameness in my k increased rapidly and I had other symptoms which indicated that I would soon be prostrated uniess I ob=- tained relief quickly. Noticing your offer of a ple bottle of Swamp-Root, free, I had a friend write for one and began taking immediately. Within three weeks the lameness in my back began to disappear. During that fall and winter 1 took three one-doilar bottles of Swamp-Root, with the result that I be- came completely cured. I no longer have pains in my back and exercise vio- lently without feeling any bad effec I have recommended eral of my acquaintances who were similarly affected and w bave been greatly benefited by its use. Yo very trul FF - )4 (T. F. McHugh.) 701 E. Lame back is only one symptom of kidney troubl ture’'s timely warning to show you that the track If these danger signals are unheeded, mor erious r are sure to follow; Bright's Disease, which is the worst form of -kidney trouble, may steal upon you. The great kidney remedy, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. is used in the leading hospitals, recommended by physicians in their private practice, and is taken by —and not clear. is na-~ doctors themselves who have kidney allments, because they recognize in it tie greatest and most successful remedy for kidney, liver ar adder troubles. EDITORIAL NOTE—Swamp-Root has been tested in any ways and has proven so successful in_every case that a special arrangement s been made by which all readers of The Call who have not already tried it ma ave a sam- ple bottle sent absolutely free by majl. Also a book telling all about Swamp- Root_and containing many of the thousands upen thousands of testimonial let- ters received from men and women Wwio owe their good health, in fact their very lives, to the wonderful curative properties of Swamp-Root. In writing, be sure and mention reading this generous ofter in_the San Francisco Dally Call when sending your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. 1f you are already convinced-that Swamp-Root is what you need chase the regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles at the dr where. Don't make any mistake. but remember the na mer’s Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y you can pur- 5_stores every=- e, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kil- on every bottle. ADVERTISEMENTS. OCEAN TRAVEL. HYPNOTISH Steamers Pacific Coast Steamship Co. leave Broadway Francisco: —Would you achieve business and eichikan, . Junead. social suctess; improve your talents; v, etel Alaska—il gratify your ambitions: cure diseases Maren 7. 12, 11, 22 W and bad habits; and wield wonderful power and April 1" Cnangs o, _com- influence over others? If so, write fof our book | P r Victoria, Vancouver, —by thirty eminent specialists. It thoroughly | PP Rk explainsallthe hidden secretsof Hypnotism, coma. ersonal _Magnetism, Magnetic | com—11 a. m.. March 7. ealing, Etc. "It is the most remarkable | Change at Seattle to this company'a steamers work of the cent; Positively nothing like it | for Alaska snd G. N. Ry.; at Seattls or at Vancouver to C. ever before published. It has brought success | coma to N. P. Ry. P. Ry. ;"fl“'?lalndl. ‘We gnarantee success to you or | ‘Fm‘h )iurlzklxRAH ):n‘“fl-!;pglfi‘/:—l-:“’ > - forfeit $1,000.(0in gold. T arc , 13, 18, 23 3 2. A& postal card froms vt tom opk 18T | _For San Diego. ~stopping only at Santa to-morrow. Address. | Barbara, Port Los Angeles and o E i3 (Los Angel Spok ine. Sund-fl‘!) a M. American College of Sclonces, | Mgty of SMICERE, YRUESHIY ahe cree Dept. (84, 420 Walnut<St., Phila.,Pa | Monterey. San Simeon. Cayucos. Port Harford (San Luis Obispo). Hueneme, Rast San Pedro, *Newport (*Boaita orly). San Pedro DR. MEYERS & CO, | SPECIALISTS FOR MEV, Established 133l Coa- sultation and private bove | 1Iee at otfice or by Waww | Cures guarant 731 MARKET SI. BAN FRANCISCU, Cala Coos Bay, 9 a. m.. March 19, 27, April & Fof Ensenada, Magdalena month, For further information obtain folder. to Right is reserved ealling _d TI street_(Palace Hotel). GOODALL, PERKINS & 10 Market st.. gan Francisco. BRUSHE Santa Barbara, Ventura. Ronita, § a. m., March 7. 15. 23, 31, April & Bay, San Jose del Cabo, Mazatlan., Altata. La Paz Santa Rosa- Wa and Guaymas (Mex.)—10 a. m., 7th of each 3 change steamers of KWT OFFICE—4 New Montgomery CO., Gen. Agents, FOR BARBEWRS, BA ers, bootbiacas b e meorpinaers, cantr sy | Pacific Ceast Steamship Ce. hangers, printers, painters. Bl e Son NOME DIRECT. LEAVE stablemen, tar-roofers, tanners. BUCHANAN BROS., u 6 OCEAN TRAVEL. PAGIFIC STEAM NAVIGATION GO, And Cia Sud Americana da Vapores To Valparaiso, stopping .at Mexican, Central and South Ameriean ports. Sailing from How- ard 3, pler 10, 12 m. COLOMBIA ..March 29 GUATEMALA .Apr. — TUCAPEL ....April'19 A STEAMER ——— These steamers are bullt expressly for Cgn- tral and South Amegican passenger service. (No hange at Acapulco or Panama.) Frelght and senger office. 318 California street. H UK. GUTHRIE & CO., Gen. Agents. PANAMA R, R, “Cine T0 NEW YORC VIA PANAMA DIRZCT, SEATTLE. leaving San Francisco May 26 spectively, connect with abov new and elegant steamships of California made regular apply Ticket Office, (Palace Hotel). GOO! 10 Market st., San Franciseo. O.R.& N- CO. ©Only Stoamship Line ta PORTLAND, Or., ps to Nome last year. landing ‘all passengers and freight with- out foss. mishap or delay. For passenger rates 4 New Montgomery st DALL. PERKINS & CO., Genl. Agents, And Short Rail Lins from Portian{ ts all 2 2 points East. Through Ticket« to all Cabin, $105; Steerage, $40; Meals Free. pointa, a!" pail or steam<hio and rail, a2 6. 8. Leclanaw eails Frilay, mar 28 LOowEST RaTms. S et i Fri _May 2| sTEANER TICKETS INCLUDE BSRTH aai MEALY. From Howard-street Wharf. Pier 10, at 2 p. m. Freight and Passenger Office, Market st. F. F. CONNOR, Paclfic Coast Agent. AAVIALL, GAMOR, WEl 86. GEO. W. ELDER Zalls.. Steamer sails fro: m foot of Spear > DIREOF LINE 1o TAINTL - §8. VENTURA, for Honolulu, Samoa, Auck: land and Sydney..Thurs., March 20, 6 p. m. §S. AUSTRALIA, for Tahiti Saturda; M for Honolulu. Saturday, Ma: . . GKELS & BNGS. G , senera. Anents, 327 Marssc 3t Gon’| Passenger Offce, 843 Market S1., Pier No. 7. Paeifc 8 P o OOMPAGNIE GENERALE TRAVSATLANTIQUE DIRECT LINE TO HAVRE-PARIS. ery Thursday, instead of T e o pies 4 SRS North River, foot of Morton street. First class to Havre. §70 and upward. Secon Havre, and upward. GENERA , $45 AGENCY FOR UNITED STATES and CAM “e‘m s.s.t ZEALAND ana SYDREY XKobe (Hlogo), Nagasakt and Shanghal aj Depifig at Hongkong with steamers for etc. No cargo received on o, U, SPEl sailing. ES. AMERICA MARC.... Fr March 21st, £8. 3 N Round-trip 421 Market street, con irst. W. H. AVERY. General Agent. S 88, COLUMBIA Salls.. .Mar. 14, 24 April 3, 13 11 a. m. D. W. HITCHCOCK, Cen. Agt., 1 Mong'y, S.¥. TOY0 KISEN KAISHA, TEAMERS WILL LEAVE WHARF, COR- -ner First and Brannan streets, at i p. m., for TOKOHAMA and HONGKONG. calling at con- on day of For freight and passage apply at company’s office, rmer ADA, 32 Broadway (Hudson building), New —— - York, J. F. FUGAZI & CO., Pacific ' Coast Agents, 5 M avenue, San Francisco. | BAY AND RIVER STEAMERS. 3 ontgomery 3 Tickets sold by all Rallroad Ticket Agents. | _ OR U S, YORK—SOUTHAMPTON—LONDON. Philadel.. Mar.26,10 am St. Louis. Apr. 9, 10 am | St. ul im Philadel. Apr. 16, 10 am HAVY YARD AND VALLEID, Steamers GEN. FRISBIE or MONTICELLO Paul.Apr, 2, 10 a PR . :45 & m.. 3:15 and $:30 p. m., except Sun- REBD STAX LINE. . Sunday, 940 8, My 8:30 5 M Leaves NEW_YORK—ANTWERP—PARIS. YValiejo 7 a. m.. 12:80 noon. 6 p. m., except Haverford. Mar 26, noon Southwark Apr. §, nooh | Sunday. Sunday, 7 &. m., 4:15 p. m. Friesland..Apr. 2, noon Vaterland. Apr. 16,noon | cents.. Telephone Main 1508. ani INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION CO., office. pler 2, Mission-street dock. TCH Chas, D, Taylor, G. A. P. C.. 30 Montg'my. | BROS.