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2 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1903. REPUBLICAN LEADERS IN THE LEGISLATURE DECIDE ON CAUCUS AS A MEANS FOR THE DISCUSSION OF THE IMPORTANT MEASURES Governor Keeps a Watch .’ on Bills for Appro- || priations. Tax Levy May Have to Be More Than Forty- Two Cents. < i AL RS, SACRA- M ), Ja 6 T administra- < € | o apply g L In this way of a measure r ¥ d closed door i ¢ N the Rep ar i e f } h alled the ttention " ' 7 GISLATOR: i e fact that owing to LEaving NMEARST . | P | | numberea Assem es from . the same ca spresenting arp aling for a | sittal, while the door | the defendant. M CIVIL SERVICE IN STATE. A Assembl man Camp’s Constitutional more Amendment Will Be Favorably Backing wp. this do A A Reported bill intreduced McLaughlin at A ARTE me time. It is amendatory of ‘ v 8 of the Penal Code and provic . hearing a court m 1dgme ard to any . s 1 ts which do not . M arge nor prevent m mself of f: T ries by the s 8. same 1t adds - a new Penal Code and 2 5 yvides that the defendant shall not be 1t same « sitic cutie sta commissions — AT THE «UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNI )RS FROM, BACRAM | L I |1 VMIEWING THE OoROUNID S | & | 11 | | : 3 WHEN THE PARTY 1 ENTERTAINED BY NTO WERI FACULTY AND STUDENTS AND INSPECTED THE INSTITUTION. | K3 = X i presented a bill correcting mileage dis- | receiving congratulations, although he is | taneces from v us county seats to the | being subjected to some good-natured ‘ Capitol The House adjo: ed until 10 | joshing. | clock Monday morning i s - COMMITTEES NEED ROOMS. | ROMANCE IN ASSEMBLY. Houser's Associates Learn of His Marriage in the South. CALL HEADQUARTERS SACRA- MENTO, Jan. 16—When Assemblyman Fred Houser of Los Angeles c Sac ramento he it home a bride He did n. his and it was associ, 5 ftions, such t Be allowed to object to the | MOt until to-night that the fact that he is r. those ir action resulting from a | @ benedict became known z s instance or without | ©On January 1 the home of her pa - ection. p! ents in 1« Angeles, vhe married M shall, at all times, Satah L. Wilde, one of the few wonfen - S criminal as in civil actions lawyers practicing at the Los Angeles . . Bill 284, by the same author, provides | bar. His bride has an additional claim to ” that if the accused is charged with em- | distinction, however, which probably ac- o bezzlement or a lar offense it st counts for the secrecy with wh it was - e deemed an immaterial variance if t tempted to surround the marriage. She T evidence tends to show the commission list and was a candidate on the g o of of one or other of these crimes ticket for a place on the Supe- a € ann ppose this | e S rior bench at the t election. She ran m b sistent with the | 1& far ahead of her ticket as a result of her BRIEF ASSE LY SESSION. rsonal popularity. Houser was more e T f matter | ” 3 successful, being a Republican, and was by the committee and | TWenty Bills Are Introduced in a . gpvmpperpins. s h' e by s sion when it was pro- | Fleeting Half Hour. | That he was to marry a candidate on the ’ > mendment favorably | SACRAMENTO, Jan. 16.—The Assembly | Socialist ticket was not an argument used A - hairman MecCartney | ened fo alf an hour this morning, g he would n be sur- | | - " ar- 4 ng which twenty bills and resolutions, dment was one of the v introduced. Among. the re im- " measures was a resolution by | 2 1 ap giving the clerk of the Suprer St Court an .additional stenographer at an | s nual salary of $1000 and an amendment . - S Lewis authorizing Cjty Recorders to perform marriage Transue introduced »n appointing a - = ONCE IN JEOPARDY ISSUE. Assemblyman ceremgonies. i a coneurrent :reso- | committee and ap- McLaughlin Proposes | : propriating $000 for the reception ufi Houser finally admitted that he was Changes in the Criminal Law. | president Roosevelt and party. Pann | the later bridegroom, and he, too, is now CA ARTER SACRA- | & NT T I T o o o e e e e e E introduced an . Y | proper order. She apparently began at morning :‘,‘;AN AB&?;:?E:E:&OEFBANCE the beginning of her life and went - 87 | Code relating to | o | through it until on 'h‘rI:iLn‘v\h“l:!sr}:‘a"ni‘: 1 | Deliri eached the time whe v arried . g m'f Droviass | Dl cions, Mo Recalls Language | [T0C 08 | 7 lren—growing up boy and : e subiected 10 & sec- | Long Unused and Practically | gin curious that after a lapse of o s e e s Forgotten. | sixe rs, during which time ehe the merits of the An interesting case of abnormal mem- | had not spoken ndustani, this lan- no other event shall he be deemed | ory in delirium is recounted by Dy. Henry | 8uage of the d‘(:(l‘lfli?:m:‘nfll:l{;::ntl).‘:lr:’(;;;ldnnrywl:‘ been once in jeopardy. An ac- | Freeborn. The patient was a woman of [recalled in nipio, ; The: a1 by direc of {he court upon the |7 years, who was suffering from broncho- | speaks English, French an mmm;‘ mnlc ~ eElance o $F e ot | Semble fluently as'the other), but although evide the evidence is sufficient,| “On the night of the 13th and l4th of | F“‘(lk';m;_]:“ L“)“ I !:‘}\'"‘i;“p l‘\;"‘;‘\)l: spsore ‘; sufficiency is created by an er- | June she was found to be speaking, in a | ‘l"}f‘ q . M: l‘“:mlwr el “l‘l T Bt 1s vidence at the in. | language unknown to those about her. It | PUt one sentence togetier. She says that 1 or a reversal of | scunded if she was eating some | She has no recollection (nor had she any L n, or a determina- | Pcetry sometimes, or carrying on a con- !I-i!]gn“nh:;o;{(l!:‘;i\’;m«: "\'m _Il_:\’\i:fml;;((-: that id at the instance of the | Versation at others. She repeatéd the 'lh‘"‘ this language l_”’“"\j P Hindus[nn; =e action' of court or jury | Same poem time after time. This lan-| Faf TS ANETEES A6 W it r t e defendant and at guage was.found to be Hindustani.. On|'* that Sae d0C8 DOt Anow. nor has Ah Btance r mecessarily resulting from | the 14th, in the evening, the Hindustani '”‘";!" :;m‘;j-m;:‘ff Ry i x;mx)stgo:xlc:;v jections urged by him which do not | besan to be mixed with English, and she | hose metvioned i (his paper. A lady r it or in . | spoke to and of friends and relatives of | WhO e 2 cence mpon th shall not »secu her girlhood. On the 15th the Hindustani | had disappeared altogether, and shé was talking to and of friends of a later date in English, French and German., The pa- | tient was born in India, which country | she left at the age of 3 vears, and land- | ed in England after five months' voyage before she was. 4 ‘years old. Up to the time she landed she had been under the care of Indian servants and spoke no | English at all, her only language being | Hindustani. On her coming to England | the ayah was sent back, and she then be- | gan to learn English, and from that time | she had never spoken Hindustani. She | apparently, on the 13th, went back in her | delirium to-her very earliest days, when she spoke agaln in the first language she ever heard. The poem was found to be something which the avahs are in the hebit of repeating to their children, and thé eénversations were apparently ,with | the native servants, one being recognized | as a request that she might be taken to | the bazaar to buy sweets. _ | “Through the whole delirium there | could be recognized a sequencve. As time went on the friends she spbke of were of later date, and she took events in’thefr be a bar e seen the measure, which is ADVERTISEMENTS. JHumors possession of the body, and ¢ Misrule. are nded by pimples, bot tetter, salt rheum and other cu- eruptions; by feelings of weak. iguor, general debility and what ke . the cause more suffering than any- strength., peace and pleasure r expulsion, and this is posi- srding to thousands of I testimonia Hood’s Sarsaparilla Which radically and permanently- drives them out and builds up the whole system. him during his ca paign and it was | Empty Garret of the Capitol Will Be Rendered Serviceable. | CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- | MENTO, Jan. 16.—Where to find meeting | | places for the numerous committees of | the Senate and Assembly has become a ion to some of the vnn|nli|-! and i rder that future Legi: tures will not be met with this same difficulty an appropriation will be passed at this session authorizing the Secretary of State to convert he unused space in what Is | now the garret of the Capitol into thirty or more committee rooms. When the committees were announced the various chairmen began searching for suitable meeting places. It has been found necessary to place several com- mittees in various rooms. For example, | ten of the committees will hold their | meetings in theoffices of the State Lunacy Commission and six will meet in the office of the adjutant general. Four will de- | liberate in the Department of Highways and even the sacred precincts of the office [ of the Secretary of State may be used | | by some of them. | seri tees us que v not until to-night that his friends learned BT of his good fortune. In some manmer the | Masons Honor Governor Pardee. rumor was started that it was Goodrich | CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- who h: 1 married nd when he was | ME 16.—Sacramento Command- approached to-day by his friends he ac- | ery Knights Templar, held a spe- cepted their congratulatio it so |clal meeting in Masonic Temple this happens that he has not married | evening at which Governor Pardee was more than a few months, The graceful | the guest of honor. The affair was manner in which he thanked his friends | strictly Masonic and nothing was dis- for their good wishes led to the belief that | cussed but the good of the order. After it w he who had married the Socialist candidate and who speaks the language recognized the poem as one commonly. in use among the ayahs, and also transiated some of the conversations which the patient car- ried on with Her imaginary visitors.” The Lancet. AR e A Guaranteed Cure for Piles. Itching, Blind, Bieeding and Protruding Plles, No cure, no pay. All druggists are authorized by the manufacturers of Pazo Ointment to re- fund the money where it falls to cure any case of piles, no matter of how long standing. Cures ordinary cases in six days; the worst cases in fourteen days. One application gives ease and rest. ~Relieves itching instantly. This is a new discovery and It is the only pile remedy sold on @ positive guarantee, no cure, no pay. Price 50c.* — e Notice of Bankruptcy. Thomas Potts, a merchant of Blue Lakes, Humboldt County, filed notice of bankruptey in the United States Circuit Court’ yesterd: His liabilities are $1760, there being no assets. e e——— To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinihe Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove’'s signature is on each box. 26c. * the meeting a light collation was served and the Governor was greeted with hearty handshakes and good wishes by his brother knights. TERM “INDIAN SUMMER” NOT AN AMERICANISM Not in General Use Here Until 1800, Used Abroad Thirty Years Before. | An elaborate dissertation on the origin jand use of the term Indlan summer is | printed by Albert Matthews In the Monthly Weather Review. From & care- | ful study of American and English liter- |ature he concludes that the term first : made its appearance in the last decade of | | |"the eighteenth century. During the next decade the phrase was “second summer." This indicates that the spell of weather | known by this name was not generally noticed much before 18)0. The term In- | dlan summer became established about | twenty vears after its first appearance, | which®was in western Pennsylvania, and | spread to New England by 179. to New York by 17%, to Canada by 1821°and to England by 13%0. The term is, then, not ‘of us all that no matter to what propor- | MASONS INSTALL —— Legislators Are Guests at the State Uni- versity. | Starr "King Lodge Officers Promise of Generous Aid| are Presentea With Is Given by the | Watches. Statesmen. : Ceremony Is Witnessed by Many Members of Fraternity. Mission Chapter of the Royal Arch Ma- sons had its officers for the current term -— installed Thurs v ht in Mission Ma- Special Dispatch to The Call | sonic Hall in the pre of alarge num- ~ | ber of the companions of the seventh de- ERKELEY, Jan. 16.—The Univer- | gree of Masonry. Pa gh Priest PoD. sity of. California " has some | Code was the installi officer, with H stanth friends among the legis- | C. Bunker as master of ceremonies. The lators, and it the words they rve for the ensuing spoke this morning in Hafmon | gymnasium before the assembled faculty | and students are prophetic in the least, the State institution will get the half- | million dollars it desires during the pres- officers who are to s twelve months are Helling, tre Alien, ent sessfon of the Legislature. Assembly- |1 master of cond vail; I T. mar W. H. Waste of this district and |Janes, master of t i YOil;: Jamen K. ¥ i * | melee, guard; R. D, Burness, organis chairman of the newly organized Commit- g 2 . : A | A. M. Cox, the ing high priest, was tee ‘on Universitles, is satisfied that the | % o S0% H8 OO R R Tt BEE0) ant appropriations will be made, and he so . token of the chapter’s appreciation of his expressed himself at the university meet- | (o viioc in the several stations he has filled lng a e las but owing to California_entertained the lawmakers | Juii& the last six vears, but oWing 1o tp-day and was sntertained by elght of fent, so it was decided to make the p them with speeches full o encourage-|eniation at his home. The ceremonies of ment. The speclal train bearing the | Shiocion at I8 home. '"7he Coremon o et. guests from Sacramento reached Berkeley | 1% Svening were followed by a banaicle station at 1l a. m., an hour behind the | {1 SUTCh there was much oot <Prer IT0 time originafiy set. Professor W. J. V. | JI0TMCl speeches. Among the pper i Osterhout, Lincoln Hutehinson and A. W, | peve Willam H. Jordan, W. S €90 Whitney of the faculty received them at | pran MeGowan, ©. H. Beneticl ' o the station and they were driven imme- | proman Jr. H. W. Jones ¢ diately to ‘the gymnasium. where the | " g gt of the installations in Masonie students and townspeople were already |y,,q Joqges was that in Starr King Lodge, sembled. The legislators were escorted | NG, 344 “in Devisadero-street Hall Thurs- o seats on the right of the platform and | gay night. The retiring master. Isaac e Ity Ok el e A e r. | Behantz, was the installing officer and . President Wheeler presided at the meel- |y, "ygrhal of ceremonies was Past ing. He spoke briefly, leaving the main | o= GMFITIR OF SEPAEONE derson. The task of making welcome the legislatars’| “FE BECMICT LAMES e SOttt an to Professor Krank Soule, representing | *J 0% "G SNt SANCR, RO DB Y SO the faculty, ahd Bruce Wright, represent- | o0 g oy 0 nid®virden: George (. Wolfenden ing the student body. President Wheeler anior warden ph Harry Scott, treasurer said: Archibald A. Anderson, secretary; David = “Phis Loaiaity ing of | Hirshberg. senior dea Willlam A. Keller This is our first university meeting of | Hirehberg. senior deacon: William Kelle the year. There are guests at our hearth- | (., 014 Graser, senior steward: George E. D: stone and we are g'ad that they are here. | jels, for steward. Al R. Wilkie, We have not dressed for the event, that | ganist: Abraham Cooper r they may see us in our every-day clothes. | David S. Hirshberg, on behalf of the Our doors are wide open in order that |lodge and in a most eloquent presentation they may come and go as they please | speech, gave a magnificent watch, suita- and sce us as we are.’ | bly inscrived, to the retiring master. who After making welcome the legislators in | was the first worshipful master of the appropriate terms, Professor Soule said: |lodge. After that Hiram F. Wright, also | ““This university was founded by the |on behalf of the lodge, presented a simi- State and has been supported by it. While | lar watch to the first secretary of the in the past it has been fed well and fully, | lodge, Archibald A. Anderson. A banquet in these latter days it grown very | partaken of by about 150 fraters, follow rapidly and in the ine ed stature of [and at the close thereof there were ad- vigorous youth it has considerably out- | dresses by Past Grand Lecturer J. W grown its clothing.” Anderson, Past Master Libby of M : Bruce Wright, president of the Associ- | Lodge, Past Master Wilson of the same ated Students, spoke on behalf of the |lodge, David S. Hirshberg, Rév. Jacob body he represents. ]N!Mn. D. Clifford, W. €. Hacke, Willilam Senator G. R. Lukens and Assembly- | Crocker, Colonel A. S. Hubbard, H. A man Waste made the principal addre 5 | Keler, A. Cohn, Past Master Piummer, of the day. Lukens referred to the great | Past Master Diebold and A. D. Clar anges in college affairs since he at- | There were also a number of musical se tended the university in 1885. He declared ‘]muun.\' by a quartet. the university to be the largest single interest in the State, but there were El Capitan Council's Officers. oflicrs. Wil neoded sugport " The following named were giving suppart to the untversity,” he said, | . ¢ TOTPEREE BEGEE N apitan “we must regulate it by the requirements’| =/ CCES LR by Sens of the other State institutions and of the | [OVHRCH OF the Natona) Tnlon by, B means of the State. It is the sincere hope | Norbai 1. A b ek aaer William D. also. tions the students increase the State will Clarke, ex-president; - G figd = ‘way:ito support. them' gll.. The | Baltic_ president. Leo de Cardana. vice spirit and disposition to help the univer- | crots o . NEW OFFIEHLS installed tor dent | | PAINE'S CELERY COMPO |The Year Just Closed WILL NEVER BE FORGOTTEN Paine’s Celery .~ Compound Gave New Life and Happiness vear rable or r Paine’s Compound. A muiltitude of men and women, weak- ned, nervous, run down and suffering the pains and agonies of se. ha had their bure moved fee Iy planted on the solid rock of healtt Stirr tical events the past vear, ! er n tten in a. few with the streng life after years of suff alth after wasting disea: curk after the verdict of ne re Compound * be indelibly wil weeks or months, h after weakness new 1nc membrar makes sick as life lasts The victo P pound over disea work, and physician earth’'s best medi reader, how b na . ve Paine’s Celery Compou honest trial and you will surely s s n ings it has bestowed ‘Diamond Dyes requirs mo skill—only care and ths simp'e following of directions. They give mest valuable results. The colors are fast and do not crock. Direction book and 45 dyed sam- es free. DIAMOND DYES, Burlingten, Vt. dDOHEMIAN - ALL BOTTLED KNG OF " ge SOLD EVERYWHERE. Big @ is » non-poisonore remedy Gonorrhiee Gleet, Spormatorrhea, Whites, annatural charges, ‘r-r any Infllimm~ o tion, irritation or ulcers: P weniagion, #l0% of mucous mem- Lo, branes. Non-astringe: rveEvns CHEMEALCO. “para by v eeato, GINCINNATI.O or sent in plain wrapper, é’_'r‘:‘. xpress, n:a JJod CURES inlte 5 days. h 't ular sent oa request. sity s admirably reflected by the mem- | Paige fin bers of the Legislature this year. You | treasurer; Charl may rest assured that the university wi l:m”j‘*““ kave no check to its healthy growth. We | he fnstallatt g ~ looked after Stanford last session when | After the installation the new and the P we made much of her property exempt | 0ld officers, the members and several in- T B gy 8 frem taxation, and we will look after you | )""‘" f-'“;“~:~r - \_"“k‘ "lTit\“”m-" i, wns Seat this time. Remember, though, as I have | fashionable rofis l'”»n'w he "‘“‘"'l\ pind SR % ? re are other State institu- | ¢ntertaine e Mg e emperp g 15 -~ =i e steamers for Alask s or Lukens blyma "4 e Gon; vocal selectigns ¢ For Eureka (H it ‘Bay)—Pomona, 1'3 Ao B SRt ental music by D. Bardue. m._Jan, 19 Feb. 6 dents. 'They called him “Billy” and | Strumental music by D. Bardu m_Jin 10,35, 3L Veb & L e and ——————— otherwise made him feel that he was onc: Redonds). San Diego and Sants Barbara— more one of them. Waste's speech was General William Booth advises Santa Rosalia undays Sam full of humor, but he had some serious | young men in The Sunday Call of | e ok Co o o i Fedro and’ East HHuBs to say.ad well. 2 . January 18. San Pedro), Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz. Mom At the close of the exercises the guests | ¥ terey, San cos, Port Harford, San and members of the faculty were enter- AP ———— Lauis Obis ura, Hueneme and *Newport, tuined at luncheon in Hearst Hall by Seal Rocks ‘“‘at Home. | *Ramona on! Jan. 17. 25, Feb. 2 President and Mrs. Wheeler. Mrs. Hea The *at home” given by Court Seal | Gamona. 9 M T 31 39 Feb 6 with President and Mrs. Wheeler, re- | Rock of the Foresters of America in Pyth- | da, Magdalena Bay_San Jose del ceived the legisiators and faculty mem- | ian Castle Thursdaynight to members and | Cabo, Mazatlan, Altata, La Paz, Santa Rosaiia, bers at the head of the stalrway leading to the upper hall. The tables were spread lady relatives and by nearly friends 00 persons. was attended there and about 200 were seated around | programme of music and song, also the them. The Senators from Sacramento | presentation of the honors of a past chief were C. M. Belshaw, J. D. Byrnes, A. 2 ranger and a gold watch to retiring Past Cauldwell, Clifford Coggins, Robert Chief Ranger Joseph Gallagher by Dr. C. lett, Marshall Diggs, Thomas Flint, B. W. ! M. Troppmann on behalf of the court. Hahn, J. R. Knowland, W. B. Lardner, | Dancing followed H. Lange, Ed Bur- F. W. Leavitt, J. J. Luchsinger, G. R. rows and Charles S. Johnstone were the Lukens, John H. Nelson, W. C. Ralston, | committee of arrangements. Chester Rowell, John G. Tyrrell, M. L. —_———— Ward, E. F. Woodward. 3 : The Assemblymen present were E. R.| . 0ourt Washington's Officers. Amerige, J. Clem Bates, N. Baxter,| Deputy Grand Chief Ranger E. J. Mc- Marshall Black, John A. Bl Henry Devitt, assisted by Henry Goldman as Carter, J. N. Copus, Harry Ells, Dr. N, | herald, installed the following-named as K. Foster, W. A. Johnstone, A. M. Lum- | 0fficers of Court Washington, Foresters of ley, J. G. Mattos and wife, S. H. Olmsted, | America in Elks Hall Thursday night: Chris Pann, George T. Roiley, Jo V. Sny- | Joseph Rizzo, chief ranger; 2 Anthony, sub- 5 Wl | chlef; A. Figel, treasurer; M. C. Laskey, finan- San Wil R N | clal_secretary; E. H. Goldstein senior ‘and L. H. Brownstone junior woodward; A. A. Lewrs PURDY, Mo.. Jan. 16.—J. M. Huff, proprie- | scnior and K. A. Zimmerman junior beadie: | tor of the hotel here, shot and killed his wife Sylvester Shaben, trustee; D. G. Grean lec- early to-day and then killed himself. | turer. KITCHEN REQUISITES. «Time for more.” — Oliver Twist. About the onlyadvance toward per- fection is that an Americanism; to write in praise of Indian summer is now a literary conven- tion of three continents. It is by no means easy to account for the origin of the term. The principal characteristics of the season which it describes are haziness, smokiness and high temperature. Some explanation of the origin of the term are (1) that the red Indians predicted such spells of weather; (2) that the smokiness was pro- duced by Indian fires: (3) that this was the last season of Indian attacks on the | settlements of the whites; (4) that the season partook of the Indian character of deceptiveness; (5) that the name was given because one of the seasons uf East India was similar in character. Horace Walpole used the term in 1778, no: in ref- erence to America, but in relation to weather in the tropics. *“Squaw winter” was a name for the spell of cold weather preceding the Indian summer, and per. haps the key to the nomenclature is to be cought in this latter term. made by H-O. Our process turns into an easily digested sugar the starch in oats. H-O gives you that h.kl'ng for H-O which can never again be satishied by any other oatmeal. You can taste the five cents’ difference in the price with every mouthful. Lo There was a short | Guaymas (Mex.) er information obtain folder. Right reserved to change steamers or sailing aate. A TICRKRT ~WICE—4 st., Palace Hotel | Freight office, 10 Market st | €. D. DUNNANN, Gen. Passenger Ast 10 Market st., San Francisco. Montgomery | ©O.R.& N. cCo. W. Elder” salls Jan. 18, 28, Feb T, sails Jan, 23, Feb. 2 12 | X e Steamship Line to PORTLAND. OR and shart rail line from Portiand to ail petnie east, Through tickets to all points. all rafl or steamship and rail, at LOWEST RATES Steamer tickets Include berth and meals. amer saf ot of Spear st._ at 11a. m. D, | W. HITCHCOCK. Gen. Agt.. i Montgomery st TOYO KISEN KAISHA. | (ORIENTAL STEAMSHIP CO.) Steamers will leave wharf. corner First ani | Brannan streets, at 1 p. m.. for YOKOHAMA and HONGKO calling at Kobe (Hiogo) Nakasaki and Shanghai, and connecting a Hongkong with steamers for India, ete. cargo recetved on:board on day of sailing 8. 8. HONGKONG MARU..Thurs., Feb. S. S. NIPPON, MARU (via Mantla) S o Tuesday, M; 1908 s MERICA MARU..Friday, Mar. 27, 1903 Via Honoluln. Round trip tickets at reducedl 5. 1903 rates. For freight and passage apply at Com- pany's office, 421 Market street. corner First. | 'W. H. AVERY. General Agent. WAL, 3ANON, (23 ZRALAND mp 3YONEY ALAMEDA, for Hondlulu, Jan. 18 2pm 'TURA, for Honolulu, Samc Auck- Thursday, Jan. 20, 10 a.m. or Tahiti, Feb. 16, 10 a. w |42, PNECEELS 2 B0BS.5., ., et e 43 rtai | s, 320 Naket 1. b, 7, Pasifi 88 AMERICAN LINE. ; NEW YORK, SOUTHAMPTON, LONDON. ! Flnhnd.{’ln. 17, ‘13 am i( Paul..Feb. 4, 10 am Phila....Jai , am Kroonl'd, . | Friesi'd..Jan. 28, 10 am| - RED STAR LINE. | NEW YORK, ANTWERP, PARIS. Zeeland..Jan. 10, 10 am Kroonl'd.Jan. 31, 10 am Finland.Jan. 17, 10 am Zealand..Feb. 7, 10 am DIRECT LING 70 HAVRE PAm | XGENCY ‘FOR UAITED SEATRS San Ba | CHAS. D. TAYLOR.G.A.P.C..30 Montgom'y st. Sailing every Thursday, instead of First-class to Havre, $70 and upward. Sec- | ADA, 32 Broadway (Hudson building), New Tickets sold by all Raliroad Ticket Agent FOR U S. PAVY VERD AND VALLE)L Steamers GEN. FRISBIE or MONTICELLO 9:45 a. m., 3:13 and 8:30 ay. Sunday, 9:43 a. m.. 8:30 B m. . Leasne Vazllejo, 7 a. m., 12:30 noon, 8 p. m., exce Sunday. Sunday, 7 a. m., 4:15 p. m. Fare, cents. Telephone, Main 1508. Landing and office. pler 2, Mission-street dock. MATCH