The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 16, 1903, Page 10

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10 BAUM RECEIVES POOR SUPPORT) AT NEW THEATER Angels Make Many Mis-|{Students of Berkeley takes= Behind the | Cheer the Baby Youngster. Eleven. | Moskiman and Messerly Hit|President Wheeler Inspires Ball Over Fence for Crowd With a Spirited Home Runs. Address. e i —— playing good ball for a | Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, Oct. 15. A pit full of howling, roystering, f nts curled around a big fire fre football eleven the runs, while rally to-night any freshman eleve ves to making error got the University of California. There es Dever: Oakland were 7000 people there, filling e seat in the new Greek theater, all of th‘m doing their best to. scare the plaster off the walls with thelr shrieks and warwhoops. There was a lot of speechmaking, too, and it all wound up with the serpentine dance around the pit, that engaged two usand young men, hugging s, threes and fours. Carer, the vell leader, waved as much ginger into the rooters as his White shirt sleeves would let him.- J. E. Road- house ass in the capacity of master of Cercmnn es. President Wheeler was the first called upon, and just as he “as about to begin hi fved that bad kind of team is wont to give At times the the offerings of yet many of the n the side should off Baum in the d they \p‘nr’d on as I was about to Wheeler. “The rather an un- them to go They are three eleven is but we ex through to vict onfident, but about confi- to hit the line hard every ct you freshmen to roil freshman reliable lot ight on righ Schwartz leared the Moskiman and the thr just until you have a vietory we that tims r be forgotten. We expect Oakian Los eood. hard work for our be- : y g universit » att, '01, recalled the old days Cochran was at California the siudents to enthusiasm big games; Colonel George C. P Edwards of the athletic committee told i a good story: Trainer C told the nen to it them again, bc laude Kern, of captain ito h Profes proposed wow-wow" vell and told how necessary it is to enthuse; Roy | Smith, ex-vell leader, said there wasn't enough velling, and Sam Stow, y guard, stirred up the crowd for harder work and more enthusi- | ple asm. A crowd of students gathered at Berke- | fter the rally and a few pro- rd a train and hold it up, ne after last Year's , but Smith of the sophomore class and other - heads prevailed with speeches and dispersed. e BAKER BY SCORE OF 57-0 Farcical Football Game Does Not Even Give Cardinal Eleven | Hard Practice. | What came near being the record- | breaking football score for the Pacific Coast was made on the Stanford campus yesterday when the cardinal eleven piled up 57 points to the goose-egg of the team . R H E of soldiers from Fort Baker. So easy | 516 "o 3 were the Hoys of the artillery corps for rs, Hodson and d that It was not even a good| practice game. The collegians merely ran the ball down to the goal in one, two,| three order, never giving thelr opponents | 1c2 even to breathe. first touchdown was made in three e second in two, the third i in, and so the continuous pro wn the field went on until the whistle gave the soldiers peace- ful respite. Only once did the boys in blue make their distance, and then they were <o surprised that they immediately fumbled the ball and lost it to the car FARCICAL GAME AT SEATTLE. St. Vrain Walks Fourteen, While Eodsc" Is Hit 'Iwemy—()ne Times. ’xm 0000010001 and Shea, Fitzgerald and mpire—Levy —————————— PITTSBURG NATIONALS DISBAND FOR THE SEASON PITTSBURG, Oct. 15—The Pittsburg | dinal. | team of t N nal Basebal!l League dis- Lieutenant Hawes, their coach, who i banded for the season to-day after divid- an old player from the Virginia Military Institute, sat disconsolately on the side share | lines and recalled that his team of gun- of the receipts s champlonship series. ;org pag been scored against by-Nevada | s 321060, and President jost week even to the sad tune of 45 to 0. Dreyfus divided it into sixteen parts. All | The line-up: | the players received an equal share ex- tanford Position. Fort Baker. cept Doh Thompson, Carisch, Murphy ith-Clark. L E. R v and La Foree, among whom one-sixteenth . ~L T. R hilling wa2s divided. The members of the team = . presented to President Dreyfus a fine ‘6. L. gold stop watch. L. Ewaldt Pitcher Phillippl was given an extra X AL check and ten shares of stock by the club 5 1 owners in token of thelr appreciation of | D. R T T aort his work against the Boston Americans. Scholfleld. » -McMasters Umpire—C. R. Lewers. Referee—William Blaki Yale’s Star Tackle Is Injured NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 15.—An ex- amination to-day showed that James H. Hogan, Yale's star tackle, broke a rib during the game’ with Holy Cross yester- day. Ralph Kinney, the other tackle, suf- fered a sprained ankle. —_———— ‘Wreckage of Bark Is Washed Ashore. LONDON, Oct. 15.—Advices received to- day say that wreckage from the bark Loch Lomond, which sailed from New | Caledonia April 29 for Greenock, had been washed ashore at the Chatham Islands and that it is feared that the vessel and in the seventh and deciding heat of the | pecy e 00, Per20n8 On board have Mclowell stake, purse $5000, for 2:10 trot- | ——— e ters. Summa [ Glory of the Seas Is Safe. The ship Glory of the Seas is safe. Word was received yesterday from Dutch Harbor that “the famogis 0ld vessel had reached that | CHICAGO, Oct. 15.—The local championship closed to-day with another defeat for the Nationals and without result, each team having won and lost seven games in the local champion- Not & bit was made off of either cher after she fourth inning. Attend- , 400. Beore: series for the ———— { MONTE CARLO WINS ! THE DECIDING HEAT LEXINGTON, Ky., Oct. 15.—Chief inter- est in the trotting races to-day centered | McDowell staices for 2:10 trotters, purse rom dnesday) — Monte second and seventh heats Strong won the fifth and Hawthorne won 2:06%, 2:08%;. and Dan’ T als | ourt?, heats in Roman, Walnut Hall sifarted. Sccond race, the Wil . ce, son stakes, “first, second in port discharging her cargo of coal. It wae ! with general satisfaction that assurance of the #hip's safety was received. The Glory of the Seas is a picturesque link between the present day of strictly utilitarian steam freighters of large carrying capacity but limited beauty and the past when the Glory was one of a fieet of graceful windjammers whose sajling feats made the stars and stripes a synonym for speed in the waters of many lands. The | 063 the third' heat 1o Mary Anna, Fantine and Mush also started Third race, 2:16 class trotting, purse $1000— fe Keller won three straight heats )i in 2 1. 2:124, 2:11 Direct View, Millard | Glo 2:12% 3lory of the Seas is safe and those that k k::zd :r' Bonner, Austin Boy, Margaret Bath- her best say that in epite of her thny-;‘:u'r & - oronat r; and Victor Jr. also started. years of hard service she still has the timbers ourth ras :02 class pacing, purse lm— to stand many a- battle. Hz;;lx‘!d K\ w v'|l lwl')\ straight heats in . 2:05%, —e. 2 N ervolo, an R and Shadow Chlmn als) started. Half a Dozen New Overdues. Fifth race, 2:20 class trot. ‘purse $1000— | laced boara Bessie Brown won two straight heats in 'zlxx\. S ——"pE ou B - 2:12%. Redwood, The Parson. Claymont. F.: | terday for reinsurance, ail quoted at 10 per pire Wilkes, Allen W and Balliet also started.{ °Nl. The vessels listed are as follows: Sixth race, trotting to wagon, amateur | French bark Alice Marle, bound from Newcas. ’dnlcn-’hl ner K fl‘o‘n the second &nd third heats in 2:21%, 2:21. Semfor won the first British #hip Crown of Scotl heat in 2: The Postman also started. from Newcastle, England, for San ;;‘lld;acl:?: | out 188 days: Norwegian, bark Midnatasoi, out s | 97 days from Buenos Ayres for Brisbane; Brit. days Buenos bark COOK BOOK OFFER TO CLOSE OCTOBER 30. Jaide; and the lialian bark Erminia, out 136 | days’from New York for Melbourne.” The Co- | rolia is =til on the board at 90 per cent and £ [ the Catharina The Call’ i and St. Mungo remain un- r will NP o TR, jum offe close on Oet'bsr D 30, 1803, and all readers of this paper who desire a copy of this Lousehold treasure should not fail to- place their order im- mediately. This splendid premium will be offered to Call subscribers at the exceptionally low rate of A cablégram from London received yesterday At the Merchants' Exchange repom $¢ the Britigh ship Hawthornebank, bound from Ant- werp for San Pedro, was luth!ly dun.lm & collision ‘e:d the lw h Channel. wu 1o proceed. able to GRAND JUBILEE AT TULARE. STANFORD DEFEATS FORT i1 | Among the passengers; were many | ge | and nine’returned by the | B Blake, Mex. port September 46 and that while owners and | R. others were worrying about her she was snug | Storey, D. | Yule. B. Yule, Mrs Celebrating Payment of xmnui.. Bond : f THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1903. Toyo Kisen Kaisha's White’ Liner Carries a Large Cargo and Nearly 100 Testimony That Passengers, Among Whom Are Many Tourists and a Large Number of Civilian Employes of the Government Bound for Duty in Philippines o FAESHMEN RALLY [JAPANESE STEAMSHIP NIPPON MARU TAKES DEPARTURE FOR THE ORIENT HAS ITS DOURTS | i r | | MONTH. g HE Japanese liner Nippon Maru, laden with freight and crowded with passengers, sailed yesterday for the Orient. She l¢ft the Pa- cific Mail wharf promptly at 1 o'clock, and half an hour later was plow- ing her way toward the Golden Gate. tour- sts, some traveling independently and | others as members of personally conduct- ed parties. Although the Nippon does not call at Manila on this trip, she carried many passengers for the Philippine port. Most of them were Government em- plo; ; [li addition to nearly 100 cabin passen- s the liner carried a large numnber of Of the latter for- Japanese and Chinese. | ty-eight were voluntary passengers, six- teen were deported from Arizona, eight t!| deported from this State, two remanded Bureau of Im- migration. The cabin passengers included the fol- lowing named: % For Yokohama—C. S. Averill, Hugo Bing, D. D. H. Blake, two children and H. E. Bostwick, J. W. Cato, C. A. Mrs. C. A. Francis, L. Hoffman, Mrs. Lockerby, Fred Meng, Mrs. E. C. Nich- F. Penfleld, A. Rasmussen, Mrs. J. vant; Fraacle, W. W. 4 Y. Tsuji, K. Yamasaki, A. Zan- gerle, John Zangetle, Kobe—W. J, Mitchell. James F. McConnochie. Shanghai—Mige B. Allen, Miss M. Bernin- ger, Mrs. M. Bowman, Miss A. Brek W H. Brennan, Mre. C. Keener, ston, Rev. W, W. wood, J. S. McConnell, . Miss L. P. McConnell, kong—A. §. Allan, C. R. Bangs, Rob- J, Mrs. Bauld Burns, Miss A. Burns, T. L. €. R. Craig, Mrs. L. P. Daven- Madame B. Deblangy, Miss M. Dupy, J. Ford, Mrs. W. Ford, H. Glover, L. B. Goldsmith, Herbert Goode, Mrs. 1. F. Goulden, F. C. Graves, Rev. O. Gregory, Mrs. E. E. Gregory, W. Hastings, Mrs. C. Hayward, . " Heberle, Hornsteain, Major J.' ©. Hutchinson, H. M. Ickis, J. A. T. B. Lawler, 0. E. Lautzenheiser, iss Lewis, H. Luzurlaga, Miss L, 'Maxwell, C. F. ¥. Minisini, A. F. Perry, A. H. Put- ney, C. E. Rapelyea, Mrs. C. E. Rapelyea, J. Richards Jr., R. H. Robson, G. G. Rundle, wart, H. 'W. E, Storéy, Mrs. H,_W. D." Wilson, Miss C. Youn, wuu-m J. R. Stewart. ert Craig, vort, w. Miss Herbert Goode, Mrs. F. C. Graves, Honolulu—Mrs. NEWS OF THE OCEAN. The British ship Cambuskennetl sailed for Melbourne yesterday with 420,800 feet of lum- ber, valued at $12,624. Charters. The British ship Ardencralg fs chartered for wheat from Portland to Algoa Bay at 21s 3d; French bark Admiral Halgan, same busines from Portland to Eurove at 94, with o) tion of Cape town at 25s, prior to arrival; tl British ship County of Inverness is chartered for wheat, flour and barley from Portland to Algoa Bay; the sehooner Fred J. Wood loads lumber at Grays Harbor for Guaymas, barkentine S. N, Cestle and the bark R. P. Rithet return to Honolulu with general cargo. i e Cargo by the Japanese Liner. The Japanese steamer Nippon Maru sailed vesterday for Humm:‘ via Honolulu and Yo- ‘merchandise kohama with an Nahica ot 8350600, ceciustve of treasure, distributed as ' foliows: ~For Japan, $72,906; '!I PEast indies, vostok, The potatoes, 2433 lbe 6 pkgs butter, 2564 gals wine, 2120 Ibs chocolate, 2280 Ibs 2 'bxs raisins, 82,466 Ibs 4 pkgs dried fish, 28 cs bread, 1143 00 flasks quicksiiver, 8 cs elec:rlg;‘l rolls leather, Ibs coffee, 5298 80 cs paste, 155 cs table prepara- Ibs beans, 8400, 1bs pearl barle: cs honey, 2 ds boots and shoes. 1000 bales sheetings, 10,536 casks beer. To Philippine Islands—1611 Ibs milistuffs, 50 cs canned goods, 672 ibs candy, 100 Ibs cheese. £30 Ibs ham and bacon, 50 cs liquors, 6 bdls cs boots and shoes, 12 ‘cs elec- 4 kegs nalls, 6 cs drugs, 1 pkg arils, Ibs_ginseng, To Fast Indies—i03 cs canned goods, 17 pkss grocerics and provisions, 113 cs canned salmor 1300 Ibs hops, 22 es cartridges, 18 bales hay, 1 cs cheese, To Korea—3544 lbs butter, 1062 1bs dried fruit, 63 cs canned goods, 100 Ibs 4 cs mill- stuffs. 12 pkgs groceries ‘and provisions, 400 Ibs sugar, 410 Ibs nuts, 1 cs honey, 31 bxs fresh frult, 172 Ibs cheese, 30 cs table prepara- tions, 430 ibs raisins, 2 cs codfish, 2 cs rubber n:;xw 3 cs drugs, 4 s dry goods, 6 pkgs ma- chinery To Viadivostok—300 Ibs raisins and 258 Ibs millstuffs, PSS w2 5, % Notice to Mariners. Notice is hereby given of the following changes in the aids to navigation in this dis- trict, which affect the list ‘of beacons and buoys, Pacific coast, 1903: OREGON AND WASHINGTON. Columbia River entrance, pages 50 and 51. South channel shoal buoy, an H. S., first-class can, will not be discontinued as published in local notice fom mnrlnen‘ No. 18, of 1903, dated ‘buoy, No. 0, a red first-class ember, 1003, was changed to a lass can, new style, and will known as Peacock spit buoy, No. ould rot pass to the northward nun, black, flrs hereafter be By order of the lighthouse board. G. C. CALKINS,. Commander, U. 8, N., Lighthouse Inspector. Office of Inspector, Thirteenth Lighthouse District, l’(rlland Or., 13 October, 1903. No. 241903 i =L Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. : Thursday, October|15. Stmr Arctic, Refner, 10 hours from | rey. onte- Stmr Newsboy, Adler, 35 hours from Eu- reka. " Stmr_Point Arena, Miller, 1¢ hours from endocino. Stmr Greenwood, Jphnson, 16 hours from Albjon. S{mr Santa Rosa, Alexander, 40 hours from San Diego. Simr Coos'Bay, Nicolson, 70 hours from San Pedro and way ports. Schr Novelly, Hoftman, 6 days from Colum- bia River, CLEARED. " Thursday, October 15. Jap stmr Nippon Maru, Greene, Hongkong, ete; WoH Avery.. Loy . Thursday, October 15. Stmr State ol California, Thomas, San Diego. Stmr Geo W_Elder, Randall, Astoria. Stmr Whitesboro, Fcsen, Point Arena. ‘Stmr Alllance, Hardwick, Bureka and Coos Bay. G, e e Bt B e, sttt . Dr lmoTCmMennm. Cook, Melbourne, lenburg, Everett. m'wm Lembkc. Coos Bay. OUTSIDE, nom!n 5 TN, 10 P. M. ‘Barracouta_and Coquille River and Sequola. .;‘s::m Claudina. < & Jat 21 N, lon W, Ger ship Nal- AMERICAN SHIP GLORY OF THE SEAS, FOR WHOSE SAFETY GREAT ANXIETY WAS FELT, BUT WHICH IS NOW REPORTED AT DUTCH HARBOR, WHERE SHE HAS BEEN ANCHORED SINCE THE MIDDLE OF Eth BRSS: BRI RN % TS 7 BAN PEDRO—Arrived Oct 15—Stmr Samoa, hence Oct 13; stmr Alcazar, from Greenwood; stmr Bonita, hence Oct 12. 1 Sajled Oct 12—Stmr San Gabriel, for Eu- | reka; stmr laqUa, for San Francisco: stmr Bonita, for San Francisco: echr Soquel, for Olympla; schr R W Bartlett, for Columbia. SAN DIEGO—Arrived Oct 15—Stmr Fuiton, from Hardy Creek. WESTPORT—Sailed Oct 15—Stmr West- | port, for San Francisco. FORT BRAGG—Arrived Oct 15—Stmr South | Coast, from Caspar. Arn\ed Oct 15—Stmr Brunswick, hence ii. | NDOCINO—Saliled Oct 15—Stmr Phoenix, an l-ranc(lz‘o 'H BEND—Arrived Oct 15—Schr Louis, from Lahaina. TATOOSH—Passed in Oct 15—Schr Albert yer, from Monterey, for Whatcom; Br stmr Yeddo, from Astoria, for Puget Sound. Passed out Oct 15—Schr Wm Olsen, Tacoma, for San_ Franclsco. Passed in Oct 15—Stmr Queen, hence Oct 13, for Vietoria. 1 SEATTLE—Arrived Oct 16—Stmr Valencia, from Nome: stmrs Dirigo, Dolphin and Santa Ana, from S ‘ay; stmr Geo Loomis, hence &l 10. Oct 14—Stmr James Dollar, hencei NOME—_1n port Oct 6—Stmr Nome City, to | sail Oct 18 for Seattle; stmrs Corwin and Eu- reka, for Scattl ASTORIA—Sailed Oct 15—Stmr Columbia, | for San Francisco; Ger bark Nauarchos, {Dr' from | Queenstown; stmr Whittfer, for San =y cisco. Hhflved Oct 15—Br stmr Inflrlllmh.l from | fongkon; DUT(‘H HARBQR—Arrived = Sept IHND Glory of the Seas, from Ladysmith. TILLAMOOK—-Arrived Oct lt—sehr Oak- land, hence Oct 2. ISLAND PORT. HONOLULU—Salled Oct 14—Stmr Ventura, for Sydney; Br stmr Dorie, for Yokohama. FOREIGN PORTS. HONGKONG—Arrived D"olr; to Oct 14—Br Stmr Clavering hanos Sept COu)V——Arrlved 3—Stmr Seguranca, | from New York. ;d Oct 13—Stmr City of Washington, for GRANTDN—SIIled Oct ll—-Br ship Rajore, Sail New Qreg: MARSEILLES—Arrlved Oct 13—Br stmr Keemun, from Taco: X SYDNEY —Arrived Oct 13—Bktn Andromeda, Eureka. OCEAN STEAMERS. CHERBOURG—Arrived Oct 15—Stmr Fuerst Blsmarck, from New York, via Plymouth, for Hamburg, and proceeded. Sailed Oect 15—Stmr Kaiser Wilhelm der Gl’ol.ei {:om Bremen and Southampton, for New "NEW YORK—Arrived Oct 15—Stmr Pre- toria, from Hamburg, Boulogne and Plymouth; strr’ Noorge, from Copenhagen, Saiflefi Oct 15—Stmr La Savole, for Havre; stmr _Biucher, from Hamburg, via Cherbourg and Southampt: QbBbVSN\VN-—&Ikd Oct 15—Stmr Noord- 4:‘(:6‘ for Phll-flelphll. stmr Teutonic, from verpool, for New York LIVERPOOL—Arrived Oct 15—Stmr Ivernia, from ton. Sajled Oct 15—Stmr Bavarian, for Mont- real, via Movilie. GLASGOW—Arrived Oct 15—Stmr Ethiopia, via Moville, from New York. g e b Time Ball. < 3 Branch Hydrographic Office, U. 8. N., Mer- chants’ e, San Francisco, Cal, October 13. fle“mnmumbww‘r“ml’m ‘builats mfimmr“mm—m 'Lt.nl'.t of the 120th meridian, D-m‘.finen'khuml. J. C. BURNETT, Lieutenant, U..S4 N., in charge. L AR R Sun, Moon and Tide. United States | thrown at Mrs. | that the mattter be more fully investigat- | ed and that in the proper courts the hus- i idence, 214 Seventh avenue. | immediately after the burns | her. | BUSHNELL JURY Threw Lighted Lamp at His Wife. Story of Tragic Ending of a Drunken Orgie Is Told at Inquest. “Owing to conflicting evidence we, the | jury, are unable to determine whether the lamp was accidentally exploded, over- turned during a scuffle, or whether It was Bushnell! We recommend band be required to clear himself of the | suspicion that he threw the lamp, there- | by causing his wife's death.” Such was the essential portion of the | verdict rendered by the Coroner’s jury yesterday afternoon in the.inquest upon the body of Mrs. K. Bushnell, who died in the French Hospital on October 8 from burns received on September 12 at her res- There was | some positive testimony to the effect that Mrs. Bushnell told several persons that her husband had thrown a lighted coal | ofl lamp at her and had set her dress on fire. Dr. T. J. Petne, who was called in | were re- ceived, testified that while he was dress- | ing Mrs. Bushnell's wounds she said to her husband, ““This is the last time you'll throw a lamp at me.” The doctor testi- \ fled further that both Mrs. Bushnell and her husband were drunk. When the wit- ness asked the woman about the matter later on she denled that her husband had | thrown the lamp. Mrs. W. Tiedemann, who lives in the flat upstairs over that occupled by the Bushnells, told the jury how she heard Mrs. Bushnell screaming and calling for | She went downstairs, passing the husband, who was standing on the front porch, and she found the injured woman | on the bed with her clothing burned off | her body. She sald to the witness, “Har- | ry threw the lamp at me.” Then turning } to_her husband Mrs. Bushnell said, “That’s the last lamp you'll throw at| me.” Her husband made no reply to | either remark. She told the witness after- | ! ward that her husband had thrown the | lamp and that she would not live with | him any more. She added that when her husband came home to supper she had a | quarrel with him and she left the house and went to her mother’s, and that when | she returned the quarrel was renewed and | he picked up the lighted lamp and threw | it at her. B, Ward, the father of the decedent, ) swore that while the parties were quar- | reling and standing by the table, Bushnell | picked up the lamp and dashed It to| pieces on the floor close to Mrs. Bush- | nell and set the table cloth on fire. The | witness ran out of the door with the| burning cloth and did not re-enter the | house until the doctor came. The wit- ness refused to swear that Bushnell | struck his wife with the lamp or aimed it | at her. Before throwing the lamp Bush- | nell sald, “'You'd better go home.” Then | he brandished the lamp two or three | times around his head before throwing it | down. - —_———— Visit the Wrecked Gifford. Captain Alex Woodside and Diver Abraham- son visited the wreck of the Gifford yesterday In Peterson's launch Sybil. Although _the | weather in the harbor has been fine for several | days the sea at Musse] Rock is still restless, | and it was found impossible even to get close | !? the derelict, which is rapidly going to pleces. | © i i i @ | day in the order of occurrence as to time; the | fourth timé column gives the last tides of the day, except when there are but three tides, as | sometimes occurs. The heights given are ir lddlllun to the soundings of the United States Coast Survey charts, except when a minus (—) sign precedes the hfl!hl and then the number | glven is subtracted from the depth given by the charts. The plane of reference is the meas | of the lower low waters. —_— Movements of Steamers. 2 TO ARRIVE. Steamer. From. Lakme San Pedro . Phoent Mendocigo . New York vi Tahiti [oe Coos By & Port Orford, Humboldt | San Diego & Way PortsjOct. 10 Puget Sound Ports.....[Oct. 19 S!dnay: Way Ports. %‘c“ 19 American. S. Portland. Coos Bay. New York via Panama. Oct. Hamburg & Way Ports. |(>ct Seattle & Tacoma. e s & ey Portiost: Mendocino & Pt. Arena. Oct -| Willapa Harbor . Portland & Wi Mexican TO SAIL. Destination, Oectober 16. Arcata direct | 5 pm|Pler Eureka & Coos Bay|11 -mler Humboldt . endocine City....| 1 pm San Diego Way Pts| 9 a: Sound Ports. |11 am!Pler § 5 pm{Pler £ ii wel B ESEEE o o 9 Pler 10 &.‘._.'2., sghd O, W. Blder| A fober ok - mm_ A MUST REMOVE DBSTRUGTIONS He|Union Oil Company Is Given Ultimatum by Street Committee. Permit for Spur Track Will Be Granted on One Condition. A mreaiet The Supervisors’ Street Committee yes- terday gave the Unlon Ofl Company to understand that its application for a per- mit to maintain a spur track already laid on IHinofs street to conneet with the Santa Fe system would be denied unless the corporation would agree to remove certain obstructions consisting of oil tanks from the roadway of Illinois street. Owing to the absence of any represent- ative of the company, temporary permis- ston was granted for one week to use the spur track. Captain A. H. Payson of the Santa Fe Company consented to the con- dition that if the obstructions are not re- moved the spur track will be ordered taken up in thirty days and the Santa Fe will refuse to run fts oil cars on the track. 4 Chairman Curtis said that the Arctic Oil Company, to which the Union Ou Company succeeged, had been ordered to remove the obstructions, but had failed to do so'and the latter company was ec- cupying city property to which it had ne right. The committee decided not to con- sider the granting of the privilege for o vear, as recommended by the Board of Works, and insisted that the company's | representative appear at next Thursday's meeting and agree to remove the oil tanks from the street at once. The petition of the Santa Fe Railroad Company for an extension of four months’ time to construct a steel bridge on Nine teenth street was referred to the Board of Works for a report. Similar action was taken with the petition of propert owners that a sewef be built in Buena Vista avenue and the application of F T. Newberry for permission to treat the roadway of Second avenue with heavy oil. The petition of the Western Pacifie IRaHWu) Company for franchise on Sixteenth and other streets went over for one week. APPOINTS INSPECTOR OF STREET SWEEPINGS Board of Works Names Edward J. Coffey to Succeed Thomas Reagan, Now a Police Commissioner. The Board of Public Works yesterday put Edward J. Coffey to work as inspec- tor of street sweepings and at its next meeting will formally appoint him to the position. Coffey will succeed Thomas Reagan, who was recently appointed Po- lice Commissioner by Mayor Schmitz. Coffey was taken from the civil service list of eligibles for inspectors in the De- partment of Works and will receive a sal- ary of $100 per month. His duties will be to supervise the work of cleaning the public streets, which is done under con- tract. Coffey was formerly connected with the Leader, a newspaper published in this city. it Corporations Want Taxes Refunded. E. Black Ryan sent a communication to the Board of Supervisors yesterday in which he makes formal application for the return of protested taxes pald under the special levy for schoolhouses and ho: pital on a total assessment of 34,751 | of which the Southern Pacific Railroad is credited with 388 Central Pacifio Company, $677.850; Southern Pacific Com- pany, $1,02,775; Geary-street Rallroad Company, $449,060; Central Pacific Rail- way Company, $75,300; Pacific. Improv ment Company, $1,170,185. The taxes ag- gregate $71,274. CE————— ADVERTISEMENTS. UNITED STATES BRANCH STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION AND AFFAIRS OF THE a4 () T, FAMBURG, IN THE STATE OF GER- many, on the 3lst day of December, A. D. 1902, and for the year ending on that day, as made to the Insurance Commissioner of t State of California, pursuant to the' provisions of sections 610 and 611 of the Political Code, condensed as per blank furnished by the Come missioner. ASSETS. Cash Market Value of all Stocks and Bonds owned by Company. Cash in Company's ce .. Cash in Banks Interest due and accrued om all Stocks and LOSNS................ 2,585 00 Premiums in due Course of Collec- tion 81,27 51 | Due trom other Companies for re- insurance on losses already pald.. 324 T Certificates of Deposit in hands of TUnited States Trustees Tetal Assets ................ LIABILITIES. Losses adjusted and unpaid........§ §20 00 Losses in process of Adjustment or in Suspense .. 13821 53 Losses resisted, including expenses. 4.135 00 | Gross premiums on Fire Risks Fun- ning one year or less, $275,704 reinsurance 50 per cent. 137,552 38 Gross oremfums on Fire. Ris) ning more than one year, $17 y reinsurance pro Commissions and to become due Total Liabilitles .... " INCO! COME. Net cash actually recejved for Fire premiums . . $323,653 41 EXPENDITURES, amount paid for Fire Losses (In- . " ur'u 35, losses of pre- $489.630 <3 467,742 16 448,514 76

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