T HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, APRIL 1902. MAINS DEFIES THE MARSHAL Refuses to Return to County Jail With a Deputy. NEE TO-DAY (Saturday), April 3. any seat, 25c; Balcony, 10c; Chil- any part except reserved, 10c. NOVELTIES GALORE! and Mrs. Sidney Drew; Homer Lind and Company; Fred Stuber; Papinta; Gorman and Keppler, aad the Biograph. Last times of Frank Lincoln; Simon, Gardner and Com- pany, and the Milani Trio. NEXT WEEE—ENGAGEMENT EXTRAORDINARY! MARIE WAINWRIGHT Shine Asserts His Authority and Prisoner Submits to Handcuffs. | And Co. in “THE LADY AND THE CLOCK,” A — L i '!er“T!ESYFJE!&YDElEG!:\ Charles R. Mains, who is held in custody by the United States authorities on the | charge of being connected with a four bil- | lion dollar myth syndicate operating | through the postoffice, made a foolish ex- | Rf H .AT R 51? hibition of himself shortly after 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon in the office of the Belasco & Thall, Managers, United States Marshal. When Deputy | 5 | Marshal Benas announced that he was| | ready to take him back to the County | Jaf),” Mains declared that he would .not | | budge a step; that he was being unlaw- fully held a prisoner, and that the Mar- | shal had no authority to hold him. ! Mr. Benas telephoned for Marshal Shine, | who appeared shortly afterward with Dep- | uty Marshal Gamble, whereupon Mains | | asked for information as to the authority | | under which he was held. Marshal Shine replied that he was acting under order of | United States District Judge de Haven, | that he was geing to take Mains to jall | and did not intend to have any nonsense about it either. The prisoner seeing that he had in Marshal Snine a determined men to deal with, meekly held up his hands, while Deputy Gamble placed the handcufts on his wrists, and he went lamblike to jail. Mains served notice yesterday morning | on Assistant United States Attorney Ban- e | ning to the effect that he would move in ITS FINISH. | the United States District Court for an | order dismissing the prosecution and ask- | ing for his discharge because thirty days have elapsed since the order holding him to answer was made before the Mederal | Grand Jury and Do indictment or infor- | mation against him had been filed. Mr. | Banning informed the court that he had received the notice of ‘motion and that was not present in court. MATINEE TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW. TO-NIGHT AND SUNDAY—LAST NIGHTS. Martha Morton's Successful Comedy, BROTHER JOHN A Charming Play New to This City. PRICES—15c, 25¢, 35¢, 50c and 7bc. Seats on sale six days Tn advance. NEXT MONDAY—Extraordinarg Double B, MME. BUTTERFLY,” and “THE GREAT UNKNOW Securs Your Seats in Advance. +*TIVOLIx EVENINGS AT 8 SHARP. MATINEE TO-DAY AT 2 SHARP. GET IN FOR THE WIND-UP! THIS WEEK SEES —THE—— Serenade! MONDAY, APRIL 7, 1 The Great Alice Neilsen Opera. “s‘fiY‘lre of lnk ld.}{fll\(dar;l( was m and led on his behalf the mo- “The Fortune Teller.” | fon Tererrea to, Mains cites from the - - 111]](»“0 States Revised Statutes to show POPULAR PRIC 25c, 50c and TSec. | that the State law governs in procedure one Bush 9. | in cases of this d, and that the law of % \CHIH"I’HL{ B s that when a person been held to answer for a public of- fens if an indictment is not found or an information filed against him within thirty days thereafter, he shall be discharged. Judge de Haven deferred action on the The Grand Jury was investigat- he case of Mains yesterday. | tant United States Attorney Mec- Telep! [FISCHER'S meares] O'Farrell, bet. Stockton and Powell Streets. Telephone Main 231. ONLY TWO MORE “LITTLE CHRISTO- ¥s that there is no merit in - | atention, the Revised Statutes, e e SRR 4, applying only to arrest, im- e i gy nent end bailing for trial, and cov- O the progeedings before the Court | foner. < the Dimmick case more 13 99 | than thirty days had expired between the quashing of the first indictment and the » | fin g of the second, yet George D. Col- With All the Well-known Comedians and | NES atiormays i 0L MilomDS e 0k point on that fact. Mains is a lawyer. rather has been admitted to the bar, | has practiced as a lawyer, but he has in his own case on almost every motion tha Comediennes. Secure Seats at Once and Avoid a Positive T | OPERA GRAN iouse PACKED EVERY NIGHT. MATINEES TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW. | he has raised to avert a trial. | SAYS TRADES COUNCIL FORMED A CONSPIRACY | Attorney Hutton Makes an Argument on Behalf of the Carpenters’ Union. AY AND The motion to dissolve the injunction LAST TWO NIGHTS OF restrgining P. H. McCarthy and the Build- o n ing Trades Council from fpreventing the THE EMPRESS [1ocal carpenters' union frdm becoming & | VE: | member of the council was argued and X — "“Q\O(\,fi‘;ycfi,‘,i},a gml,"x submitted before Judge Seawell yester- |day. The complaint for the injunction also MELBOUR"E MAEDDWELL }asks at the local unjon be awarded $300,- e des h laint filed b; poetal By e demurrer to the complaint file y e e . Attorney Cleveland Demm, who repre- | . - sents the Building Trades Council, was [ lSMON DA 99 |overruled,. Damm contended that union- . | ism was for the purpose of affording pro- YPUL °S. 10e, 15 50¢, T5e. tection to the workingmen, and sald that P e a1 Matinses 350~ | the council had a right to take what steps s 23 it chose to protect its own interests. | (L, W Hutton, who appears in the sult | or the carpenters, said that trades unions BI S;AImlD’_SUIT! are desirable organizations, but branded | LEADIG THEATRE | the attempt of the council to exclude the carpenters as the result of a conspiracy. He said that unionism, when it becomes oppressive, must be curbed. | — | NEW. ADVERTISEMENTS. A PESTIFEROUS GERM. Burrows Up the Scalp Into Dandruff | and Saps the Hair’s Vitality. Powell Street, MATINE! T TO-NIGHT AND SUN LAST TIMES Hall Caine’s Great Play. THE CHRISTIAN. EDWARD MORGAN ss John Storm. Beats for The Christian, $1 50, $1, 75c, 50c, 25¢. EXTIRRA | et MR. E. S. WILLARD BECINNING NEXT MONDAY. near Market. In ® New Play by Louis N. Parker, Entitied | People who complain of falling hair as a rule do not know that it is the result of dandruff, which is caused by a pestit- us parasite burrowing up the scalp as THE CARDINAL, | it dics down to the sheath in which the | hair is fed in the scalp. hair root is shriveled up and the hair | arops out. If the work of the germ is not destroyed, hair keeps thinning till bald- | ness comeés. The only way to cure dan- | ruff is to kill the germ, and until now Before long the | UTILIZES FUMIGATIN Class of Chinese G PROCESS | and Their Teachers - = = SRy | 1 m(r«»u | e i i | - CHines™ | AND The | i kS — LANDLORD BURNARD, TO GET RID OF CHINESE SCHOOL THAT HE SAYS MAKES HIS BUILDING LIKE A HOUSEBOAT ON THE YANG- TSE-KIANG, BURNS SULPHUR IN BASEMENT. E> >, BURNARD, property own- pigtails were lined up for rollcall a fright- er, has discovered a novel and effectual method of Q ejecting tenants. He fol- lows the example of the farmer who wishes to part company with | a conventlon of hornets, only he goes the farmer one better and uses sulphur fumes instead of smoke. Some time ago Mrs. Brown and Miss | Brown rented the premises at 935 Wash- ington street from Burnard and an- nounced their intention of opening an in- | stitution for the education of the Chinese youth. When their deté¥mination to es- tablish the school became known to the W | landlord he seriously objected, but his protests, even to the police at the Central Sla\lun. were without avail Landlord Burnard lives in a flat overhead and nightly was obliged to listen to the glibbering of the heathen youth below, while he paced the floor and said things. But Burnard, in the parlance of the ca- naille, was “‘up against it.”” He had rent- ed the premises and the only wa{ to rid himself of the nuisance and restore his peace of mind was to lose Mrs. Brown and Miss Brown as neighbors. The notice to move was served upon Mrs. Brown and Miss Brown in a sum- mary manner, but they laughed the mat- ter off and tried to pay rent in advance. Then a happy thought struck the land- | lord. When the school opened a couple of nights ago and the twenty-six juvenile L o e e i e e 3 GOOK DECAMPS TH DAUGHTER Fails to Appear to Pros- ecute His Suit for 1 Divorce. LAST TIMES—MATINEE TO-DAY. T there has been no hair preparation that would do it; but to-day dandruff is easily eradicated by Newbro’s Herpicide., which | makes hair glo and soft as silk. O-NIGHT, AL. G. FIELD GREATER MINSTRELS RROW NIGHT. AY AND SATURDAY | Wnllxams & Walker And Their Beats Selling D DDV DRV DD visit DR. JORDAN'S great FUSEUM OF BRATOMY¢ 1051 MAREET C7. bet. 6:b&Teh, 6.F.Cal, §‘ gl MARRIAGE, MAILED FREE. (A valuable book fof men) nl JORDAN & CG.. 1051 M:u-knvs: 8. F. World. ~ Weaknesses or any contracted dhiscase positively cmred by the oldest Speculist on the Coast. Est. 3 years. DR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN Consultation free and strict) ate. Treatment personally or by Fositive Cure in every case undertaken. Write for Book, PHILOSOPRY of Gilt-Edged Company. for_To.morrow Night and All xt Week. Following Comes the Favorites. Mr. NEILL AND THE NEILL COMPANY. MAX HEINRICH. JAMES SONG RECITAL THIS AFTERNOON AT Z:35. SHERMAN & CLAY HALL. RICHARD STRAUSS NOVELTIES. Scats 70c, §1, $1 50, at Sherman, Clay & C MAPLE ROON—PALACE HOTEL. Beginning MONDAY, April 7. One Week Only. From 10 a. m. to Midniwht, Dally. First Time in America of the Great Manlh War Paintings by SANTOS GONZALES, the Eminent Philippine Artist, “THE SURRENDER OF MANILA” AMUSEMENTS. ENTRAES: MATINEE TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW. ’ro NIGHT AND SUNDAY—LAST NIGHTS. The Great Comedy-Drama, the SLEEPING Beautiful Scenery, “SEALUTING THE WOUNDED.” Pronounced Masternieces by Connolsseurs. Siastiing mmc; ADMISSION, 50c. CHILDREN, 25c. o Comady, 7 PRICES Evemnzs BASEBALL. ST Next Monday—The Big Success, CHAMPIONSHIP GAME. “THE LAND OF THE LIVING.” CALIFORNIA BASEBALL LEAGUE. BATURDAY, April 5, at 3:15 p. m. SUNDAY, April t 2:30 p. m. SACRAMENTD s, SAI FRANCISCO. RECREATION PARK. EIGHTH and HARRISON STS. ADMISSION, 25c. Reserved Seats, 25c extra. A Great Production. RACING Every Week Day— Rain or Shine. NEW CALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUB OAKLAND RACETRACK. Races start at 2:15 b, m. sharp. Ferey boat leaves San Frn;.\cum at 12 m. ang Desirable location, Palace i %30, 1, and 3 p. m., connec unsurpassed cuisine, fm, traine stopping at the entrance to ik | unequaled ser- || rack. Last two cars on train reserved ror a“d vice and modern ]|l jadies and their escorts: no smoking. Buy your %rry tickets to Shell Mound. All trains v, :).kllnd ‘mole connect with Szn Pablo avenus o cars at Seventh and Broadway, Oak. | fama. Also all trains via Alameda mole con. pect with Eln Plbla avenue cars at Fourteents ind Broadway, Oakland. These eclectric cary UnCgirect to the track in fifteen minutes, Returning—Trains leave the track at 4:15 | and 4 45 p. m, and immediately ufter the iast | ‘I'!lOl(AE H. WILLIAMS JR., President. CHARLES F. PRICE, Secy. and Mar. N conveniences are the attributes that have made these two ho- tels popular with tourists and travel- ers who wisit San Francisco. Grand Hotels | | The Largest Aratomical Museum in the C | i | = JULIA HE!NRICH. el ; Orders promptly filled by E. G. Lyons & lmss Co., | Ella Cook was granted a divorce from | George A. Cook vesterday on the ground | of cruelty on a cross-complaint filed in | answer to a suit for divorce for desertion | commenced by her husband some time | | ago. Mrs. Cook was also awarded the | custody of her two children. A peculiar | feature of the case is the disappearance of Cook and one of the children, a little girl 4 years of age. Cook failed to put in an appearance yesterdey, though he is the plaintiff in the action, and when Mrs. Cook was asked if she knew of his where- | abouts, she answered no, and said her husband had left her after filing his suit | and had taken the little girl with him. Mrs. Cook easily proved her charges of cruelty and was granted a divorce, the custody of the two children and $40 a month alimony. Harry H. Glendenning was divorced was also given the custody of their one | child. Magdalena Agaton was granted a | divorce from Emile Agaton for W"lfllh neglect. Alice Bunker, who was married to Clande C. Bunker in Oregon in 1895, com- menced an action for divorce yesterday. She alleges that for more than a year Bunker has failed to provide for the sup- port of herself and their child, & years of Bfidnry Williams is suing Homer Williams for divorce for desertion. They were married in 1876. Willlam Joseph Jordan is suing Annie J. Jordan for divorce on the ground of intemperance. They were married fn 188. According to Jordan's complaint, his wife has indulged to ex- cess in intoxicants for the last five years. Charles A. Sutherland is suing Katherine Sutherland for divorce on the grounds of intemperance and cruelty, he has frequently struck him while she was un- der the influence of liquor, he alleges. May Attend Normal School. K The Supreme Court decided yesterday that Henry E. Miller may attend the State Normal School at San Jose in spite of the ?posmon of President M. E. Daile; the rest of the faculty. Miller was dismissed from the school arbitrarily without its having been shown that he was in any way deficlent in his studles. The matter has been in the courts since September, 1800. The court’s decision de- fines the dismissal power of faculties of |publlc institutions as available only when egitimate regulations have been infringed upon. The United States Court Has awarded the Anheuser-Busch Brew- ing Ass'n absolufe and exclusive use of the name BUDWEISER, and all other brewers who have used that name have been defeated and compelled to drop it. cigco from Ethel Glendenning for desertion. He gment with the Board of Supervisors show- ful odor permeated tI g\ room. “‘Bubonic plague!” shouted the pupils in consternation. “The Board of Health is here again.” Then they made a wild exit and thought of the dose of serum and the bluecoats on blockade duty. Policeman Tom Handley was called to interrupt the stampede. He found the landlord burning sulphur in the basement and the suffocating fumes pouring up- ward through holes in the floor of the Chinese school. The policeman held sev- eral moments of stormy conversation with the landlord and threatened him with ar- rest if he should use the ‘‘smoke-out’ pro- cess again. “They drive mie craz; sald Burnard last night. “Yéu would ‘think the shack was a houseboat on the Yangtse-Kiang and that fourteen highbinder tongs were trylng to argue with the Six Companles; and my sorrows do not stop there. They have Chinese signs pasted up all over the windows and the house is often mistaken for an opium joint. Every day heathens are ringing the doorbell, trying to rent rooms and all my friends are steering to the other side of the street.” The landlord’s methods have been ef- fective, though,y despite police interfer- ence. His tenants will move. ‘“We got our class out yesterday,” said iss Brown, “and will soon find another place of residence. We could endure the man- dates to quit the premises, but this last scheme of getting smoked out is a bigger pill than we can swallow, so we will move on.” S0Y3 HE NEEDS MORE DEPUTIES County Clerk Mahony Appeals to Finance Committee. County Clerk Mahony appeared before the Finance Committee of the Board of Supervisors last night to urge that he be allowed ten extra deputies in addition to | those he is authorized to employ under the charter. Mahony _represented that the work of his office is six months behind, a condi- tion which, he said, had come to_him as a legacy from his predecessor. Wills and other important documents filed six | months ago had not been recorded as yet because seven of his sixteen copylsts are obliged to do office work, Mahony said. Superyisor Wilson advised Mahony to interview the Mayor, with a view to In- ducing that official to recommend the em- ployment of additional employes, as the charter provides shall be done in case of necessity. Mahony will also file a state- ing why the employment of additional ! help is” required in the office, so that| should the Mayor make the recommenda- tion provision for the payment of the added force may be made in the next udget. The committee instructed the clerk of the board to confer with Auditor Baehr, with a view to hastening his estimate tm‘ the required expenditures of the city ernment for the next fiscal year. he committee desires to secure the Auditor's figures by the end of the present month in order to begin work on the next tax budget. The Board of Works was directed to gear and explain WhY certain dem: or supplies are irregul arlv dr&wn on the ‘tearing up the street” fun VERNE IS A SUBJECT OF KING OF ENGLAND Judge Hebbard Orders Release of Sailor Arrested on Demand of French Consul. Joseph Verne, who was arrested on a charge of desertion preferred against him by the French Consul on March 23, was released on a writ of habeas corpus by Judge Hebbard yesterday. The arrest of Verne caut considerabie comment at the time it was made, owing to the cir- cumstances surrounding it. Verne arrived here on the French ves- sel Reine Blanche, which came into port flyln .a police flag. Verne was in irons on the vessel, and on demand of the Srorion: Consul s squad of policemen fro the harbor station boarded the vessel mfi took him into custody. The sailor claimed that the arrest was illegal, because he was a French Canadian and not subject to_the ]urlsdlctlon of a Consul of France. The procee vesterday _established the fact mt Vernee contention was right. As a native of New Foundland he wholesale dealers, San Fran- ril a Brmlh lubjeet l& Judge Hebbard FSINIMS ASHORE TO EXPEL MONGOLIAN STUDENTS Landlord Burnard Uses Pungent Fumes of Sulphur to :Drive From His Premises a AND ESCAPES Deserter Eludes Officer| on Vallejo Junction Ferry. Los Angeles Policeman Makes a Profitless Trip North. Policeman Charles Graham of the Los Angeles department is mourning the loss of a prisoner who abruptiy left his care yesterday shortly after boarding the ferry at Vallejo Junction on the way to Mare Island. Last week Graham's ecagle eye chanced to light upon a well-dressed stroller in the southern metropolis and he at once marked him as a deserter from the United States steamship Independ- ence, of whom a description had been sent out. He affected the arrest and planned a little trip to San Francisco at the Gov- ernment’s expense, expecting that in re- turn for hanaing over the deserter to the authorities at ‘Mare Island he would ‘be recouped for money expended on the trip and receive $20 reward additional. On the way up the prisoner was a model of propriety and so won the confidence of his guardian that the customary hand- cuffing was dispensed with. Shortiy after the two boarded the ferry at Vallejo Junction the prisoner walked forward as though to get a better view of the de- lightful scenery and suddenly plunged overboard. He swam to shore without difficulty, and the last seen of him by the chagrined oficer was a dripping streak of black disappearing over the Port Costa hills. The ferry-boat was backed to the slip and Graham went ashore, but the in- habitants would not aid in the recapture and as there was nothing more than a moist trail to follow over the mduntain tops pursuit was abandoned. Graham had %rlp to San Francisco all right, but lhe Xpenses, amounting to $60, including railroad fare one way for a deceptive and profitless prisoner, will be borne by the officer himself. OFFERS LOWE POST OF SUPERINTENDENT Baltimore Syndicate Shows Intention of Changing Management of Railway System. From good authority it is stated that James Lowe of Hopland was recently of- fered by the Baltimere syndicate the po- sition of superintendent of construction of the United Rallroads. The position is at present held by H. H. Lynch, who was promoted to the post by the old Market Street Railway directors several months ago. Mr. Lowe, however, after due considera- tion of his many interests in Mendocino County decided that he would not accept the offer. The action on the part of the Baltimore syndicate in offering the place to Mr. Lowe clearly demonstrates that when they take active charge of the road they will place new offitials in nearly all the positions of any importance. —— New Incorporations. W. C. Walker, H. J. Diggles, M. H. Shackelford, H. J. Plersol and Welles | ‘Whitmore are the directors of the Bay Barge and Tug Company, which was in- corporated yesterday with a capital stock o8 420,000 The Eagle Brewing Company has been incorportaed with a capital stock of $50,- 000, with the following directors: C. Thornberg. John H. Claasen, O. berg, ! Flathmann and A. W. Ander- s0 The Japanese Merchant Association Club was Incorporated yenerdny The | directors are T. Komada, K. Iki, &1-1 zuki, C, Akalane and H. Takahashi. The San Francisco Stevedoring Com- pany was incorporatd yesterday. The di-/| rectors are Charles W. Willard, P. J. Mul» | ler, H. L. Atkinson, A. H. Winn, W. Bllxrnett Charles R. Page and Lioyd Bfl-ld_ win. —_—— Brutally Kicks His Cellmate. ‘William Lyons was locked up in the City Hall station yesterday afternoon on a charge of drunkenness. He was placed in a cell with Amer Schultz, another in- ebriate, and shortl, after the keeper heard the sound of blows. On going to ascertain the cause he saw Schultz in the act of kicking and beating his cellmate. Lyons was in such a condition that it was_deemed necessary to remove him to the Emergency Hospital, where Dr. James Murphy pronounced his injuries serious. It was several hours before Lvons Te- gained consclousness. Schul was charged with assault with lntent to kil o s ADVERTISEMENTS. 0000600050060000000000 ORDERS RECEIVED NOW. HERALDS OF EMPIRE H By A. C. LAUT, : Author of “Lords of the North.” [3 © 12mo. Cloth, $1 50. ‘The Book Will Be Published the Lat- ter Part of April D. APPLETON & COMPANY, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK. 0000006068000000000 OCEAN TRAVEL. TOYO KISEN KAISHA. S IEAMERS WILL LEAVE FHARE, con- ur First and Brannan streets, for YOKOHAMA and HONGKONG, - nl.llln‘ a Kobe (Hiogo), Nagasaki and Shan; and con- at Hongkong with steam for lndli. etc. 0 cargo recelved on board on day of ss "HnaronG MARU. W 1902 nné Mp tickets at reduced rates. For Ip..uxe apply at company’s office, Bt [street, corner First AVERY. Gonerat Agent PACIFIC STEAM WAVIGATION CO. And Cia Sud Americana ds Vapores To Valparalso, stopping at Mexican, Central and South American ports. Sailing from How- ard 3, pier 10, 12 m. COLOMBIA ..April 10|GUATEMALA. Apr. — TUCAPEL ,..April 10/PALENA. .....May These_steamers are built expressly for Cen- and South American passenger service. (No change at Acapulco or Panama.) Frelght and passenger office. 316 California street. BALFOUR, GUTHRIE & 0., Gen. Agents. PANAMA B, R, "HRE" » LINE 10 lEVI YURK VlA PAIAIA DlREflT. salllnny From Howard-street Whart, msx‘o“’lz"y m ow ree at! r Office, 830 Market st. Freight_and Passenge: et st ". F. CONNOB. Pacific Coast Agent. San_Pedro), ADVERTISEMENTS. TO YOUNG WOMEN A Denver, Colorado, Young Woman recently Wrote a Letter to Mrs. Pinkham, which Aptly Pictures the Condition of a Great Many Young Women. Read What She Says: “ DEAr MRS. PINEmAM:— This is the first opportunity I have found to write and thank you for the good your Vegetable Compound has done me. I feel better than I have for years. It seems a ‘seven days’ wonder’to my friends. Where I used to be pitied, everything is the opposite now, and there isnot a day but some one wants to know what I have done to make myself look so well. “ Before taking Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I had constant headaches, was constipated, bloated, eyes weak and watery, bearing- down pains, pains in the small of my back and right side; took cold very easily, which always caused intense pain in the ovaries, and 1 did not want to go anywhere or see any one. I was called cross, but 1 could not help it, feeling as I did. I could not lift anything or do any hard work without suffering for days afterwards. Menstruation lasted for eight or tem days, the first three or four days being almost constant pain day and night.” Nothing in this wide world has relieved so much female suffering as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable : Compound; no medicine can produce such positive proof of-cures and good results; therefore, no other medicine can be “ just as good.” Office women are frequently afflicted with sickness brought on by constant work in one position. Perhaps in go- ing to the office, they get their feet wet and sit all day long with damp shoes, and stock- ings. Nothing in the world is so injurious. Wet fee -hard_work, and confine positions have made in- valids of a great many robust and ambitious young women. A Richmond Girl’s Experience. ““DEAR MRs. PINgHAM: —I have just purchased a bottle of Lydia Ee Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound but am advised to write you before treating myself. “I hardly know how to express myself. At times I feel well, and in less than ten minutes I am actually wretched with headache, that tired feeling, and so nervous that the sound of a door bell will make me start. I cannot walk two blocks without feeling fatigued. Menstruation has never been regular, have a slight discharge of leucorrhoea. I would like your adviee, and sincerely hope I may find relief in your medicine.” — Miss CLARA PORTR- WIe, Richgonond, Va. (Oct. 26, 1900.) Statement No. 2. “DEAR MRs. PINKHAM : — It gives me great pleasure to thank you for the ‘benefit 1 received from your Vegetable Compound. ‘ When I wrote to you I could not go up-stairs or walk a hundred yards without being completély fagged out, but to-day I can easily walk two miles. I was also very nervous and suffered from a misery in my back but these troubles are all a thing of the past. I was at a loss to describe my feelings, but now thanks to your Vegetable Compound I am a well woman. *“Iadvise all suffering women to write to Mrs. Pinkham, and I shall never fail to recommend your remedies to my friends.” — Miss Crama PorrEwWie, Richmond, Va. (March 26, 1901.) Miss Thompson’s Pains are Cured. “DEAR MRs. PINkgAM : —I want to tell you what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me. ~For several years I had suffered with loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, constipation, palpitation of the heart, e, pains in nearly all of the body. My physician said it was only indigcstion, but his medicine did not help me any. I began the use of your Vegetable Compound. I have taken four bottles and now those troubles * cannot praise it enough.”—Miss Berie S. THOMPSON, Box 14, Aonshnet M s, RF. WARD. — We have deposited with the National City Bank of Lynn, $5000, vAsich will be paid to any person who can find that the above testimonial &8 not geauine, or were published betare obtainin the writer’s special ine Co., Lynn, Masee OCEAN TRAVEL. Pacific Coast Steamship Co. Steamers leave Broadway ‘Whart, San Francisco: OCEAN TRAVEL NOME 5 z sx:fiiayf‘"ii‘c'.‘f”;udflsfi’_;i“i SAILINGS, %6, Siay 3 Change to com- THE FIRST CLASS Dpany’s steamers at Seattle. For Viectoria, Vancouver, Port Townsend, Seattle, Ta- coma. Everett, New What- com—11 a. m., April 6, 11, 16, 21, 26, May 1. Change at Seattle to_this company's steamers for Alaska and G. N. Ry.; at Seattle or Tacoma to N. Ry.; at Vancouver to C. P. Ry. For Eureka (Humboldt Bay)—1:30 p. m., April 7, 12, 17, 22, 27, May 2. For San Diego, Santa Barbara and Los An- geles (via Port Los Angeles and Redondo)— Spokane, Sundays, 9 a. m.; State of California, Wednesdays, 9 a. m. For Los Angeles (via San Pedro and East Santa“Barbara, Santa Oruz, Mon- terey, San Simeon, Cayucos, San Luils Obispo (via Port Harford), Ventura, Hueneme and *Newport (*Santa Cruz only). Goos Bay, 0 a. m., April 4, 12, 20, 25, May 6 *Santa Cruz, 9 4. m., April 8, . (*Freight only. For Ensenada, Magdalena Bay, San Jose del Cabo, Mazatlan, Altata, La Paz, Santa Rosa- lia, Guaymas (Mex.)—10 a. m., 7th each month. S.S PORTLAND WILL SAIL FOR NOME DIRECT Leaving San Francisco. Leaving Seattle. (Stopping at Unal For Freight and Passage Apply to NORTHERN COMMERCIAL CO., 645 Market st., San Franciseo, Or EMPIRE TRANSPORTATION CO., Puget Sound Agent, Seattls, Wash. ,O.R.& N- CO. ONLY STEAMSHIP LINE TO PORTLAND, Or., 4 And short Rail Line From Portland to All For further information obtain folder. Right is reserved to change steamers or saliing aaten: Points East. Through Tickets to All T T b Points, all Rail or Steamship an, .g?;c"m..'.lleofi.n““‘ e ek LOWEST RATES. GOODALL, FERKINS & CO.. Gen. Asents. | Steamer Tickets Include Berth and Meals, £S, COLUMBIA Salls.. W. 10 Market st., San Francisco. LAST EXCURSION TRIP! SPECIAL RA_TES TO PORTS iN MEXICO. A DELIGHTFUL VOYAGE, . April 13, 23, Ma ELDER Salls. . 313 88, GEO. Say 8 stume toot of Spear st., i1 & m. . AITCHCOCK, Gen. Agt., 1 Mong'y, 8. F'. —— J¥amburg-American. TWIN-SCREW EXPRESS SERVICH. PEYMOUB—_CHEREOURG-HAMBURG. Deutschland ..April ‘olumbia .. - L] Only $60, including meals and berth, for the | Deutschland .- ApeT IT|COTRRDE, oo ;:;u round trip, on board the Pacific Coast Steam- ship Co.’s steamer CURACAO, leaving SAN FRANCISCO APRIL T7th, due back April 27th, calling at ENSENADA. MAGDALENA BAY. SAN JOSE DEL CABO. MAZATLAN, AL- TATA, LA PAZ, SANTA ROSALIA and GUAYMAS, Mexico. For $20 additional excurslonists can return from Guaymas by rail. For further ntnleu lars inquire at TICKET OFFICE, 4 Montgomery street (Palace Hotel), or 10 Aar ket street, San Francisco. Pacific Coast Steamship Co. TWIN-SCREW. PASSENGER SERVICE. PLYMOUTH—CHERBOURG—HAMBURG. ‘Waldersee .April 12{ Pretoria . April ’ Pennayivania .April 22/ Moltke .. May Hamburg-American Line. 37 B'way, N. v. HERZOG & CO., -General Agents for Pacifie San Francisco. Coast, 401 California st., - m A mm s’s‘c"’ mnfim LInE nluull. §S. SIERRA, for fiommlu, Samoa, A land and Sydney..Thurs., April 10, u = m, §S. ALAMEDA, for Honolulu. ................ Saturday, April i §S. AUSTRALIA, for_Tahit{ -.Sunday, May 4, 10 & m. 1. D. SPRECKELS & BROS. 0., Generai Agts., 329 Markst 6en’] Fass. Office, 643 Market St., Pier No. 7. Pacifle St COMPAGNIE GENERALE TRANSATLANTIQUE. ARIS. 'ALENCIA ....... And fortnightly tnernnar durin; Steamships CITY O) leaving San Francisep ! First class to Havre, $70 and upward. Second class to Havre, $45 and upward. mmlmu. AGE.NCY FOR UNITED STATES and CAN- Broadway (Hudson bullding). New Yal‘k. F. FUGAZI & CO. Coast Agents, 5 Montgomery avenue, e Prassissm Tickets sold by all Railroad Ticket Agemts e —————— BAY AND RIVER STEAMERS. FOR U. S, HAVY YARD AND VALLEID, Steamers GEN. FRISBIE or NORTICELL gents, K1 10 Market st., s-n Praiicisen. AMERICAN LINX. oEw YORK—SOUTBA)(PTON—LONDON Phnasel x i ldg st Touts Apr.0, 10 am el . Apr. = & RED STAR LINE. S ’““"’m’"' % day. 9:45 a. m., 8:30 p. NEW YORK—ANTWERP—PARIS, Vllll’o 7 .. ‘m., 12:30 6 Southwark. Apr. l,noon'Vld!rhnd.Apr 18,noon , 7 a. m, $:15 p.” . % Pennland. Apr. 14,3 pm INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION CO.. Chas. D. Taylor, G. A. P.C., 30 Montgomery. cents. Telephone Main pler 2, .