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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1902 ADVERTISEMENTS. o 3 Store Closed Monday, Sept. 1st. Labor Day A Suit Made to Your Measure $10.00 to $35.00 How clothes? and stitch in that garment. that you can have your money back if you want it, even after the suit has been cut and made up to your You know as well as we do that o‘her tailors do not allow such a privilege. free of charge, all clothes made by us for a year after You pay nothing extra for all these privi- measure. purchase. : leges; in fact, our prices are Samples freely given to Suits for out-of-town customers satisfactorily made to order through our self-measuring system—write for samples and blank. SNWOO0DS(0 718 Market Cor. Powell and Eddy Streets many tailors guarantee or Not as many as should—all should who could We guarantee every garment, every fabric, seam | | | | | | | warrant their And the guarantee means Furthermore, we repair, the lowest. interested inquirers. Street and Railroad Agent Is Robbed. PRESCOTT, Ariz., Aug. 2..—While| Agent ine of the Prescott and | tern oad at Providence was at last night some one entered he depot building, broke | d cured $800 in gold. rs belonged to him he railroad company. has been foun: | e | | | w to the robb $30.00 From St. Louis. New Orleans or Mis- points. Santa Fe colonist | September and October. be paid for here and tele- | your friends. Ask the Santa | rket street. > — | nphis —At 6:30 to-night | a well known Spanish death while at sup- of beef: ak re a phys Crushed to Death by a Log. SANTA CRUZ, Aug. 21.—Glovanni Fer- rari was killed yesterday while working near the Loma Prieta mill, in Hinckly Gulch. He was engaged in rolling a log down the hillside to the skid road below, | when it got beyond control and rolled over him, crushing him to death. Ferrari | was a native of Italy, 38 years of age. He has a wife and five children living in —_———— $25.00 From Kansas City. Or from St. Joseph, Atchison, Omaha, | Ft. Worth, Houston or Missouri River points. Santa Fe colonist rates during September and October. Tickets may be paid for here and telegrapned to your friends. Ask the Santa Fe, 641 Market. * SRR S SIS Wanted for Alleged Timber Frauds. WHATCOM, Wash.,, Aug. 27.—Sherift Stiles of Menominee, Mich., left here to- day with John Crooman, who is wanted there for alleged complicity in timber frauds. How to buy furniture and carpets without ready money We will loan you the money for a reguldr banking rate of interest—six per cent. back little b; The For example: we will charge you $106.00—which is a six per advance; $79.5 month. You save four per cent. lege of buying *in a first-class store, and yet you get all the advantages of the easy payment plan as offered by the installment houses! No amount of money is too small for us to loan. Worth looking into, don’t you think? Govld, Svllivan & Co., Room 1403 “Call” Building, Corner Market and Third Sts. little in unfelt amounts. g0 to one of the first-class furniture stores, with whom we have made special arrangements, where the stock is big and fresh and where satisfaction is certain, and when you have made your selection you can pay your| | bill in full with good hard cash. | Isn’t this better than buying in the installment stores and being compelled to select your goods from smaller and inferior stoc installment above their cash prices when you ask for long credit. All you pay us is then you pay us $20.00 cash and the balance in monthly payments amounting to $8.60 each month. If your purchases amount to $75.00 we will charge you ; you make us a cash payment on this of $15.00 and pay the balance at the easy And you can pay us Then you can stores charge you ten per cent s per cent. If your purchases amount to $100.00 cent rate of $6.45 per { You have the great privi- ! as the Sermon on the Mount. | into English Grover Cleveland’s phrases. | important” ouice to tion, | Willlam H. Beatty. | vention desires to put a ticket | that will command the respect of the people | Monterey . CONTESTS OVER SEVERAL OFFICES Nominations of Aspi- rants to High Station. e Continued From Page 3, Column 5. want for the Chief Justice of this State a man who, with his clear brain and a retentive mind, can keep track of the legal fecundity of a Cali- fornia Legislature in a prolific session. (Laugh- ter.) We want a man who can clearly interpret to the people the real, inward meaning of a street | rallway franchise. ‘with its vagaries and sinu- osities, dips, angles, spurs, leads and pockets, after it has been handled to its pocket by a City Counigll and declared by a city attorney, in the salary\of the city and the pay of the corpora- | tion, "to be as moral as the tenth amendment, as clear as the whole Guty of man, and as pure We want a man who can hand down a decision on a Democratic platiorm. We want g men who coh interpret o want a man who can tell the plain people the meaning of Bryan’s speeches. We want a man who can give us a decision on the Mugwump policy, a man who has a brain so massive, 80 mighty and clear that it can tell us even what Edward Atkinson thinks he means when he says anything. (Laughter.) We want that kind of a man, clear brained, clean-handed, pure-hearted, and we have him in Judge Garoutte. How can we prove this man of ours whom we present to you now as a can- didate, seeking the suffrages of the convention, but as a man who ‘represents the need this State of California has for its best. How can. we prove to you he has all these qualities. Gentlemen, we do not have to prove it; we ad- mit it. (Laughter.) ACHIEVEMENTS OF BEATTY. R. T. Devlin seconded the nomination f Justice Beatty. He said: The position 1or which you are about (o place a candidate in nomination is the most be niled by this conven- Everything else may go wrong with our Government; INComipetent'ien ur corrupt o | men may be placed in power, but when the people of this United States lose conuden. in their courts, then there is an end /to free government. The people of the State of | California have always iooked to the Hepubli- can party as the foundation stone lor that conservative element in our population and whenever an Issue has arisen, when men have been called away by some cry of the hour, the Republican party has stood like a rock of adamant, speaking for honesty, speak- ing for integrity, and speaking for the protec- tion of property, and whenever it has placed in nomination candidates for the highest tribunal of the Sgate, it has placed men in nomination n whom the people have the ut- most confidence. Fourteen years the highest tribunal of this State, the Supreme Court, has been presided over by & man whose name, as was sald by Mr. Chickering of Alameda, s a synonym for honesty, a synonym for integrity, and I can | conceive of no reason why any Republican de- | siring the success of his ticket, why any man who desires the integrity of _that bench, should, for a moment, think of displacing him and of putting another one in nomination, no matter how learned or how great he may be. Speaking as a Republican, desiring the suc- cess of my ticket, speaking as an native son, loving my State and revering the memory of those ploneers who crossed the wilderness and whoee labors have made this great State the earthly paradise that it 1s, speaking for the | uniteqd delegation of Sacramento County—nay almost for every man, whether he be a Repub- lican or Democrat, within its borders—I stand here to second the nomination of that able, fearless Judge, that honest, incorruptible mau, (Applause.) If this con: in the fleld it seems to me it can do naught else than to to_this man who has served us so well: You have been a good and faithful servant, and, God willing, we will call upon you to give your talent and energy to the service of the State for many years yet to come.” VICTORY FOR BEATTY. This closed he oratory and, the roll call being demanded, a vote was taken. The detailed vote on Chief Justice fol- lows: COUNTY. -onnoaEn Del Norte Siskiyou Trinity . Humboldt— Second District. Third District. Shasta Modoc Lassen Tehama Plumas Sierra . Mendocino Butte IS = Sutter Nevada Placer : El Dorado, Amador . Calaveras .. Alpine Mono Glenn . Colusa Lake P Sonoma— Thirteenth District. Fourteenth District. Napa. Yolo Sacramento— Seventeenth District. Eighteenth District. Nineteenth District. Solano Marin Contra San Joaquin— Twenty-third District... Twenty-fourth District Stanislaus Merced Madera . Tuolumne Mariposa Tulare Inyo ... San Franc| Twenty-eighth District Twenty-ninth District. Thirtieth District. . Thirty-first District. Thirty-second District Thirty-third District 1 ourth_District. Thirty-fiftth District. sixth District eventh District elghth District. Thirty-ninth District Fortieth District. first_District. second District -third_ District. fourth District -fifth District. Alameda— ixth District... Forty-seventh District..... Forty-eighth District lunlmoaBoalol | sl oo w500 e - wnwenen | pelanceos wol ||| Se cwalomant §||| e it ale kbl varhianaen] cas laslenlil wlEebe 1l e luwl lowlel ol Basgamet | 115kl nee H Fiftieth District. first District cecond District San Mateo Santa Cruz. Santa Clara— fifth District sixth District Fifty-seventh District. an Benito Boclmle Secan Fresno— Sixtieth District. Sixty-first District Kings San Luis Obispo. Santa Barbara. Ventura . | | amana Los A Sixty-seventh District... Sixty-eighth District Stxty-ninth District Seventieth District Seventy-first Distri Seventy-second Distris Seventy-third District. Seventy-fourth District Seventy-fifth District San Bernardino Orange . Riverside . San Diego— Seventy-ninth District Bightieth District. £ L& mlnleol ©5 Totals Votes necessary to nominate, 416. Nominations for two Associate Justices of the Supreme Court being declared in order by the chair, Meyer Jacobs of San MARIN COUNTY MAN WHO MANAGED JUDGE ANGEL~ LOTTI'S CANDIDACY. = st Francisco presented the name of Supe- rior Judge J. C. B. Hebbard of San Fran- cisco in the following address: For the office of Assoclate Justice of the Su- preme Court of the State of California, one of the most important offices in the gift of the people of this State, I desire to present to you the name of a man who is well and favorably known throughout the State of Californla, Judge J. C. B. Hebbard. For twelve years Judge Hebbard has occupied a position upon the bench of the Superfor Court of the City and County of San Francisco. During that time he has had a large and varied experlence in the law, and he has presided over some of the most important litigation that -has been held in the courts of San Francisco during that time. He has from time to time exchanged benches With other Judges throughout the State of Cal- ifornia and become acquainted with the people generally throughout the State, and he s well known to the members of the bar from one end of the State to the other. He has established for himself a reputation as an able jurlst, as a fearless and independent judge, as a consei- entious, honest, broad-minded, falr-minded, {m- partfal Judge, possessed of all the qualifications that are necessary and requisite for one who sits as the arbiter of the difficulties of his fel- low men. His course through the twelve years tipon the ‘bench in San Franelsco commends its€lf to the people of the State of. California, bench of the State, so far as he is concerned, the interests of the people will be well guarded and he will perform his duties upon that bench ‘with the same fidelity and' the same zeal as has always characterized his efforts upon the Su- perior bench. He will perform them with the same fearlessness, the same independence and the same courage with which he has always erformed them upon the bench that he has so ong, so well and go honorably filled. I submit to you, gentlemen, the name of Judge J. C. B, Hebbard of San Francisco, (Cheers.) SHAW IN NOMINATION. Los Angeles Judge Presented to the State Convention. E. A. Meserve of Los Angeles placed Judge Lucien Shaw of Los Angeles in nomination. He sald: There are times when Los Angeles County fs divided, but when the name of Lucien Shaw is ever mentioned in that county (cheers) there is never any division of the party or a portion of it. For thirteen long years Judge Shaw has presided over the Superior bench of that county. Twice he has gone before the people for re- eléction, each time receiving the largst major- ities poiled in that county of any candidate on any ticket. In all these years he has been fear- less, able, honest Lucien Shaw. Whenever there there has been a great contest in any of the adjoining counties they have sent for Judge Shaw to preside over their Superior Court. San- ta Barbara County, Riverside County, Fresno County, Kern County, Tulare County, San Ber- nardino County, San Diego—all can come here and attest from actual experience to his ability as a Judge and a lawyer. My friends, we ask at your hands this nom- ination. We do not come here 53 to 43, but we come here 96 solid. And we ask it, and we ask it without one dissenting voice. 'Right in the prime of his life, just when he is ready to take up this great work and assist your great chief in the duties of that office, he comes pre- pared with learning, experience, and with a manhood demanding and commanding the re- spect of every man in this State. On behalf of all that is pure and noble, in the name of jus- tice, T submit to you the name of Lucien Shaw of Los Angeles County. (Cheers.) Judge A. G. Burnett of Santa Rosa placed in nomination Judge Angellotti of Marin County. Hjs remarks were warmly received. He said: It is impossible to exaggerate the importance of exercising care in the nomination of can- didate for th. position of Assoclate Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of California. The position involves such a grave responsibil- ity, imposes such important and laborious du- ties and involves so vitally the civil rights and the lives and liberties of our citizens that the only consideration worthy of honest men that should influence our choice is based upon the character and legal attalnments of the gentlemen who aspire to this exalted position. Fortunately the judiclal posicions of the na- tion and of the State since the foundation of the Government have been filled by Judges amply equipped to meet the requirements of our civilization and also the demands of a free, enlightened and progressive people. Passing by those that are gone, we may re- fer to the present bench of our own State, the living ones, a: ears Which would you rath- er have, if you could have your choice, transparent skin or perfect features? All choose one way; and you the world would can have it measurably, If you use Pears’ Soap and live wholesomely otherwise, you will have the best complexion Na- ture has for you. Sold all over the world. and if nominated and elected to the Supreme | examples of the eminence to | ENCIVEN THE BUILDING OF TICKET which men of honest purpose may "hopetully aspire. No one claims that our Supreme Judges are infallible, but thelr industry and learning, their courage ard their love of justice entitie them to our confldence, to our respect and to our support. It may be said that at least a few of them are entitled to be enrolled among the really great men of this Stale and the man whom you have honored to-day with the nom- ipation of Chief Justice of ihis State Is one of the towering men of the State of California. No better man, no grander man lives within the State of California than the Hon. W. H. Beatty. I propose to nominate a man that is worthy to be associated with Judge Beatty and also with the great and_incorruptible Temple, from our own county. I refer to Judge Angellottl of Marin County, (Cheers.) I submit to you. gentlemen, that no name that will be pre- sented to-day is more entitled to your consid eration than that of our friend. Judge Ang lotti. |He is a graduate of the Hastings College of theiLaw, he has been District Attorney for six years, Judge of the Superior Court for | twelve years and no Superior Judge in this State has a record with the Supreme Court that can be compared with the record of Judge An- gellotti of Marin. 1 speak from:the heart, gentlemen, because I have known Judge Angellotti for twenty years. I know of his honesty, I know of his integrity, I know of his abliity, and I know that you will continue the good work that you have begun if you place Judge Angellotti upon this ticket. Gentlemen, it becomes our inper- ative duty to do all that we can to preserve and transmit uncorrupted and, unimpaired all the institutions which high heaven has allotted | to us. Never before lived a people possessing such ‘a birthright, such an unbounded horizon of greatness and glory as that which spreads | itself before the enraptured vision of every en- lightened American citizen. Let us do all that we can to preserve the judiclary, because the | judicigry 1s the safety and the 'guarantee of the rights and the privileges of our citizens. | Gentlemen, vote for Judge Angellotti, and show | your appreciation of one of the most striking | examples of the rising young men of the State who has. established a character for integrity | and honesty and ability that is more enduring | than the stars themselves, SHAW AND ANGELLOTTI. Marin and Los Amgeles Judge the Highest Vote. Get | ‘W. 8. Tinning of Contra Costa }gre- sented the name of Justice Ralph.C. Har- rison. He said: I have the honor to place before you to-day as a candidate for Associate Justice of the | Supreme Court of this State the name of a | gentleman who has occupied the bench of the | Supreme Court for twelve vears, a gentleman | Who needs no encomium at my hands; a gentle- man whose record is written in the books and who is known to every lover of justice within | the State of California, a man of the highest | integrity, the finest legal ability and a man who has’ won the confidence of the entire bar | of the State. I refer to the Hon. Ralph C. Harrison of San Franeisco, . A number of seconding speeches fol- lowed. Daniel A. Ryan of San Francisco spoke in behalf of Judge Angellotti, and | he was followed by John F. Davis of | Amador with an eloquent tribute to the | Marin County Judge. Robert Ash of San Francisco indorsed Judge J. C. B. Heb- | bard, and Chester Rowell of Fresno sup- | ported Judge Shaw. Frank Otis of Ala- | meda and Schooler of San Francisco in- | dorsed Angellotti. A ballot was then taken with the fol- 10wing result: Shaw, 5%0; Angellotti, 536; | Hebbard, 410; Harrison, 132. Shaw and | Angellotti having received a majority of the votes of the convention, they were declared the nominees of the convention ADVERTISEMENTS. Bret Harte Memorial Number Overland Monthly Now Ready September Issue All Dealers, 10 Cents. SOME CONTRIBUTORS : Josephine Clifford McCracken Prof. E. L. Larkin Noah Brooks Ina Coolbrith Joaquin Miller W. D. Howells Charles A.Murdock Frederick M. Stock- L. D. Ventura ing James D. Hague ! Charles S. Greene David Starr Jordan Hon John Hay Prof. Daniel T. Gil- Victor Henderson Prot. Willlam Wal- lace Campbell W € B.Tun The Most Interesting Magazine Issue of the Century. man Irving M. Scott Harte’s Famous Short Stories with Original lllustrations. DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. Catalogues and Price Lists Mallal on Applieation. COAL, COKE AND PIG IRON. 1. C.WILSON & C0-. 222 R0me ain 1a64 Telephone Main 1864, FRESH AND SALT MEATS. JAS. BOYES & CO. Shipping Butchers, 104 Clay. Tel. Main 1204 OILS. 'ATING OILS. LEONARD & ELLIS, LUEX’:";M( at, 8. F. Phone Main 1719. PRINTING. E C. KUGHES. PRINTER, 511 Sansome st., S. F. by _ex] X oty ADVERTISEMENTS. DOCTOR ENSOR SUPT. SOUTH CAROLINA STATE INSTITUTION. Endorses the Catarrhal Tonic Pe-ru-na=-= A Congressman’s Letter. Dr. J. F. Ensor, Postmaster of Colum- bia, S. C., late superintendent and phy- sician in charge of State Insane Asylum at Columbia, S. C., writes: ““After using your Peruna myself for a short period, and my family hav- ing used and are now using the same with good results, and upon the in- formation of others who have been bansfited by it as a cura for cafarrh and an invigorating tonic, | can cheer- fully recommend it to all persons re. quiring so effective a remedy.”’—Dr, J. F. Ensor. Hon. C. W. Butts, ex-member of Con- gress from North Dakota, in a letter from Washington, D. C., say “That Peruna is not only a vigorous, as well as an effective tonie, but also a cure of catarrh is beyond controversy. It is already established by its use by the thousands who have been benefited by it. I cannot too highly express m: ;pptreclauon of its excellence.—C. o utts.” COnly the weak need a tonic. People are never weak except from some good cause. One of the obscure causes of Weakness and the one oftenest overlooked is catarrh. . Catarrh inflames the mucous membrans | and causes the blood plasma to escape through the mucous membrane in the form of mucus. This discharge of mucus is the same as the loss of blood. It pro- duces weakness. Peruna stops the catarrh and prevents the discharge of mucus. This is why Pe- | runa is called a tonic. Peruna does not | glve strength by stimulating the nervous | system a little. I It gives strength by preserving the mue cous membranes against leakage. It gives strength by converting the blood flulds and preventing their draim= ing away in mucus disebarges. Constant spitting and blowing the nose will finally produce extreme weakness from the loss of mucus. If you do not derive prompt and satis- factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be l:}en.sefl to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohie. -——— e ———_ for Associate Justice of the Court. Supreme CURRY IS RENOMINATED. Semblance of Opposition Disappears Early in Contest. For the office of Secretary of State, Thomas D. Riordan of San Francisco | placed in nomination Charles F. Curry, the incumbent. He referred to Curry as an honest, faithful and efficient officer, whose election, if nominated, was a cer- tainty. Holmes of Sacramento seconded Curry’s norhination. Myer Jacobs of San Francisco placed in nomination for Secretary_ of State Leon E. Jones of San Francisco. = nomination was seconded by Meyers of Siskiyou. There were no further nomi- nations and the convention proceeded to ballot. Before half the Assembly dis- tricts were called Curry had a majority vote,.and on motion the balloting was discontinued and Curry’'s nomination | made unanimous. Before the balloting om Secretary of | State bégan a motion was made direct- | ing the chairman to request Governor Gage to address the convention at the | evening session. There were cries of “No, no,” and Chairman Neff announced that the proposition could not be entertained except by a two-thirds vote of the con- vention. During the balloting Chairman Neff yielded his gavel to J. O. Hayes, and after the latter announced the nomina- tion of Curry, Guy C. Earl of Alameda moved that Governor Gage be requested to address the convention in the evening and that the rules be suspended in order that Gage might speak. The motion be. ing -put to vote was unanimously carried and the convention took a recess until $ p. m. — BARTLETT SPRINGS. Here is an opportunity to gain Health and Strength; also, have a pleasant vacation. Hotel $10 to $15 per week. House- RATES. keepicg Cottages $3 to $15 per woek. Send for jllustrated booklet. Two routes; Via C. & N. W. Rallway and 8. P. Co. AMUSEMENTS. GEORGE W ATSON, manager of amuse- ments; Hahn's Orchestra; dancing every week day evening: Tennis, Bowling, Cro- quet. Billlards, Shuifle-Board, Ping Poug, Burros; Swimming Tank, 20380; vabor, Tub. Mineral and Ro- competent Massagists; Guides. Dogs and s for Hunting and Fishiog: fhady Drives and Walks. BARTLETT SPRINGS CO., P. O.. Bartlett Springs, ©Or No. 2 Sutter Street, San Francisco. £ CONTRA COSTA CO., CAL. Fine hotel, modern improvements, perfect appointments. Suits with mineral baths. Waters and hot mineral and mud bat cure rheumatism and malaria. . Address MANAGER LEWIS, Byron. Hot Springs, Cal. Call on Lombard & Co.. 38 Geary s St, Heleng osms: =G vacation. Drives over picturdsque and sprinkled roads. Good hotels. Fummer resorts adjacent. Special round trip tickets, good from Saturday until Monday, §2 50 Take boat foot of Market st., 7:30 a m. and 4 p. m. pa County. The most charming spot in Califor- BLACK ROCK RANGE Resort. Altitude 3000 feet. 10,000 acres; rich in game. Hunting reserved for guests. 20 milas of fshing streams. Guides, livery, saddle and pack horses. Mineral springs. Hot and cold baths. Superior accommodations. 38 to $10 per week. Special rates to families (cir- cular). T. J. CROWLEY, Laytonvile, Mendo- cino County, Cal. Peck's Information Bureau, 11 Montxomery st. On line of Sterra Ry TURNBACK elele]m:‘ m&u 1i INN. most elegantly ap- TUOLUMNE, i Bomted hotel fa, the CAL. on your wav to or from Yosemite Valley MT. VEEDER FAMILY:-ROBMSORI Redwood Elevatioa Ne gog.” Climals delencrnl AT vacloan” el Tt Do good table. | Terms reasonable. Ad- dress P. E. HOLZREITER, Napa. (LIMB MOUNT SHASTA m_Sissons Address H. McGuinness, Prop. Expe- BETWONe HOTEL. s ool PARAISO SPRINGS. The leading summer and winter resort of the State. Send for beautiful booklet to F. W. SECHROEDER, Mgr., or call at City Agent, 11 Montgomery st. MOUNTA.N HOME. At foot of Loma Prieta, highest point in Santa Cruz Mountains. Grand scenery. Fishing, hunt- ing and swimming. Table and climate unsur- passed. Stage at Madrone Monday, Wed. and Sat. Train leaves S. F. 9 a. m. dally. Send for touvenir. VIC PONCELET, Liagas, Cal., Prop. KLAMATH HOT SPRINGS. Finest fishing, hunting and health resort oa PoSot s Dm0 35 B per any: 3104 $1a pa ek Can “Traveler Office, 20 e e . e kiatess EDSON BHOS., Beswick. Biakiyed County, Cal. HOBERG’S goee. s Siraiaasis The to the swim- [HE SEASON IS NOT OVER YET AT ZATNA SPRINGS California’s Ideal Family Resort. Its health-restoring waters are world-famous. Charming Cottage Life. First-class Table Service. Walks, Drives, Rides and a va- riety of Amusements. Prices to suit every one. Send for descriptive pamphlet. Aetna Springs Co., Aetna Springs, Napa Co., Cal. SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE, 7 TENTH ST. HOTEL MATEO, SAN MATEO, CAL. WRENN & SPAULDING, Props. Write for Winter Rates. YOSEMITE VALLEY, Via Southern Pacific, Slerra Rallway, Big Oak Flat and Yosemite Stage Company. Ruaning directly through the Tuolumne Big Tres Grove, the largest trees In California. Special rates for Knights of Pythians and friends. Shortest. quickest and most scenic line. Leave here tow day and there to-morrow, arriving at Yosemite Valley at 5 p. m. Send for an iliustrated fold= er. WM. J. WHITE, Gen. Passenger and Ticket Agt., 630 Market st., opp. Palace Hotel, San Francisco: tel. Black 3571, g ORCHARD HOME,” Duncan’s Mills, Cal. Line North Shore Ry.. situated on the banks of Russian River. Health, comfort and pleasure; hunting, fishing, ing; fresk milk, cream, butter, tables ‘;‘,nd frutt ho;n ’lhn home. week, $7. Address J. F. ORR, Manager, Dun= Miils, Cal. CONCRESS SPRINCS. A charming resort in the Santa Cruz Mts., 2 hours from San Francisco; delightful clf mate; swimming and all sports; table- ubsur- passed; best minera) water on the coast; opem all the year. E. H. GOODMAN, Manager. Lak hm‘.nzx't'. uonovz,x" = 3 , mile east of Tallac. Rates, §2 per day, $0 per week; meals, 50c; good sade dleTorses ‘and the best of % AKEPORT AND BARTLETT SPRINGS STAGE L!.N’l—mflwhnd to Wh T L ing passengers and Bartlett Springs. Stages connect with traing at Hopland. Leave Hopland at 12:30; arrive Lakeport at 3:30; arrive at Bartlett Springs 7:30. New 6-horse 14-passenger tourist wagons, made to order for this stage line, with all the most modern improvements. Passengers for Lakeport or Bartlett Springs call for tickets by Paztlert Springs Stage Line. ~Tickets can be bad at office Northwestern Ry., 650 Mare ket st., or at Tiburon Ferry. MILLER & HOWARD, Proprietors. miles from Ukiah, electric tal JA. BEAUTIFUL CAMP MEEKER—Ons lornia’s mx roman spots; cottages rooms newly furnished: under new management; terms boating. bathing and other amusements: Bausalito ferry, lots for sale, $10 up. Address H. M. GREGSON, sole proprietor. BLCRGESHEIM—In Santa miles from S. Cruz. Plenty of fruit, milk Cruz_Mountains, @ $7 _per week: children under 10 MRS. E. WILKEN, Santa Crug. cream. rates. TEEm niroy, Bt SRt ut 'ms"i‘.';?... Best deer hunting in the #7 to $8 per week. Jerry Lierly, Potter Valley. i AWNINGS, OUNTAIN View Ranch—Hotel, M i aown table. Phone, swimming. B e B R DANN. Santa Cram HITE SULPHUR SPRIN( the best rew N, e Bus meets all traios. E. HAWES, Santa