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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, DECEMBER-1, 1903. ST el . Retrial of Important Case. Los: Angeles Special Tax Law Is'Declared to Be Valid. —— T B ourt rendered a gecls in favot - of Geore the peren John 0 acres of land. Staacke and xecutrix of the.estate of wanted the land -held a trust in favor of the Bell for money advances made to tiff during the time of his trial court gave the land to Bell and a he estate him Court lower 4 and 2] xes w as paid year and ter- 1 ed fell Insclvent Laborer. arbegelata, laborer, ‘Oak- & Petition -in insolvency yes- He cwes $425. and has $12' as- e—— GRAPE-NUTS. “CLEANING ;{OUSE” Change of Food Cleans the Soul’s House. is clogged up by the d and sickness sets thing so zood as a “house the' right way to do this od, for although tak- ay afford temporary re- e change of food is much lical authority in the of London, says of T anslysis shows it is nutritive of 2 high order, since it con- the constit ts of a’ complete food in very satisfactory and rich pro- rtion and in an easily assimilable te.” “Aboyt two years ago,” says a resident of Springville, Ind., “I'had ter- ble stomach trouble and although I ed all kinds of medicines none of them cured me. I was so run down I 4 not eat, got very little sleep, and as dizzy-headed and miserable all the t About that time a friend told me the only way to cure my trouble to change my food and recom- d Gragpe-Nuts, very first meal of Grape- stomach began to get better the improvements that come from a healthy stomach in place of an inhe: one soon followed, and this was not afl, for just as great an im- vement came I8 my brain. ra Nuts w clear and acsive. I can eat any- hing 1 want, sleep well and am aito- r a new man meantally and phys- the time I commenced to use this d I was nothing but a skeleton cighing 136 pounds, but now I have #0t back my normal weight of nearly . 0.” Name given by Postum Co., Bat- Creek, Mich. There's a reason. e famous little book, “The Road to Safety p All of | When she interfered she was also at- the dizziness is gome and my brain is | tacked. HARBOR BOARD EW HIS FIGHT] ~ SEEKING FACTS Wo_odward Law Will Form the Basis of the . Investigation. F-ivev Merchants Are to Tell ‘What They Know of Its Workings. | Next Thursday morning four ‘whole- | sale dealers in perishable products and ; @t least one retail dealer will appear before the Board of Harbor Commis- sioners and will testify relative to the manner in which the fruit and produce business is carried on in San Francisco. The hearing may not be long, but it will he.replete with Interest, especially for the dealers in perishable goods, and hardly less.so for the farmiers.on whose ranches the products originated. { Allegations have been recently made that the wholesale produce dealers, by means of an assoclation maintained by them, have been diseriminating against certain retail dealers and that such act Qr acts constitute a violation of the Woodward law, which was enacted by the Ca ia Legislajure expressly. to prevent such discrimination in testraint of trade. - Foy of the Board of Har- has been formal rd has determined to get what in- formation it can concerning the man- ner which b s is transacted. purpose there have been sum- to appear - before the board A. Runyon of McDonough & A. Gianini of 'A. Scatena & Jobn G. Wetmore of - Wetmore d W. M. Wolf of Wolf & no complaint..-or -allegati Y of these dealers, Mr. re included ree that 1 (or we) will life of such permit bhe g eement I (or we) o sell any soivent pur- ¥ from any person what- I r we) will gell d at the same prices to to purchase for cash d.to their business or in- sition of the products, and I exercise no discrimigation what- ire of these condi-T followed by 2 vocation of the permit by the Bo > rs to sell pér- harves of the _be noticed going language ions appear to be made ap- prevent discriminat: buying, whether the trans place on the wharves of at any other place. This interesting question as-to the extent of the jurisdiction of the Board of Harbor Commissioners, which may be treated by the attorneys who are ex- pected to appear. —_———— | CAPTAIN OF THE RUTH | IS FREED FROM BLAME Recent Collision Between the Ferry Steamers Oakland and Newark . Is Under Investigation. Captains O. F. Bolles and John K. Bulger handed down a decision yester- day exoneriting A. Reed, master of the steamer Ruth, for the loss of that | vessel near Bihler Point Landing on November 11. The Ruth broke loose ! from her moorings and drifted upon a known rock near 'by. The Ruth was lued at $40,000. All on board were saved . The recent collision between the ferry steamers Oakland and Newark on Oc- | tober 17 was investigated and taken under advisement. No new facts -were | developed. Captain Robert Bradley of the Newark and Captain G. C. Ander- | son of the Oakland testified that both Steamers were going slowly in a thick fog and whistling the proper signals ' and that when they saw that a collis- | fon was inevitable they adopted the usual and proper means of making it as | light as possible. 2 H | —_——— 'UNPLEA.SAH’T ENDING TO | THANKSGIVING DINNER Mrs. Margaret Tracey Causes Arrest | ! of Two Saloonkeepers on Charges { 3 of Battery. | Mrs. Margaret Tracey, o1 | etreet, had an unpleasant experience | on Thanksgivirg' night and ‘westerday £he swore to warrants for the arrest of | James Wilson and Henry .Callahan, | | preprietors of a saloon on Montgomery | avenue, on a charge of battery. - Wil- son and Callahan were arrested and re- leased on $5 cash bail each. Mrs. Tracey alleges that she and her | sistér and a séldler. friend enjoyed their | Thanksgiving dinner together and while {on their way home they went into Wilson & Callahan’s saloon to have a | nightcap. Mrs. Tracey says she was| nervous and broke the glads from which she was drinking. After they left the saloon the proprietors followed them and demanded 30 cents for the broken | glass. The money was paid, and Mrs. Tracey says that her soldier friend was beaten by Wilson and Callahan and be 1 Greenwich : | ——— Yougg Thief Pleads Guilty. Frank Loudgr, 19 years of age, plead- ed guilty in Judge Cook’s court yester- day to‘two charges of grand larceny. He was sentenced to serve five years in San Quentin. On August 28 he stole a gold watch and chain valued at $9 and $9 in coin from Rudolph Pfeiffer in the Winchester Hotel and the fol- lowing night he stole a watch and $1 from C. J. Flynn. Y ———ee———— y Ameri each year. ins are peculiarl ‘We use 144,000,000 of them | | i | ~AND AL { r I just a neighborhood cuarrel, involving | several matrons, was interrupted at ir- | regular intervals yesterday morning by a feminine howl that shrilled through every nook and cranny of. the Hall of Justice and even penetrated the calm precincts of the Coroner’s quarters across the -alley. It was a mezzo fal- setto screech of piteh and’duration that Patti might envy and its tone was a mixture of anger and resentment. Ex- perts in operatic vocalism opined that nothing exactly like it ever wafted from the Tivoli stage, and persons with little or no appreciation of musical nov- €lty profanely compared it to the shriek that emanates from an.ungreased wag- on axle bearing a heavy load up a steep hill. Mrs. Mary Bean, aged 69, was the producer of the vocal innovation. It was {nspired by certain statements not complimentary to her character made on the witness stand by Mrs.” Agnes Curtis and corroborated by Mrs. Her- man. The three ladies are neighbors on Hoff avenue, -and Mrs. Cur- tis had Mrs. Bean arrested’ on a charge of disturbing the peace of the avenue's residents as a whole and her own rest in particular. She testified that Mrs. Bean was in the habit of tippling strong waters until her reason fled and that when thus unburdened by commen sense she had a penchant for séeking the complaining witness and mdking her a target for flercely delivereq fusillades of verbal abuse. [t was further adduced by Mzrs. Curtis that, to the best of her knowledge and belief, she had never -said nor done thing to provoke these .oral casti- ons The. charge of inebriety evoked the rst screech from Mrs. Bean. It came e the proverbial bolt from a clear | | said that he did not know ler is that is to appear e board. It waselsewhere said € person is A. Fundas, who does Third street. No compl d by h ing feature of the hdaring ion by attorneys com- € the real meaning of the Wood- In the opening paragraph it discrimination upon the T property of the State San Fran- 1 _of application for I sky and its sharp crescendo involun- tarily drew its hearers to their feet with hands to ears. “Stop her!"” shouted the court. A bailiff sprang to Mary's side ‘and tried to quell the tympanum splitting vell, but the best he could do was to reduce it to prolonged diminuendo that finally lapsed in an agonizing walil When_silence was restored the "court mopped his brow, stared reprovingly at the offending Mrs. Bean and sternly WOMAN SCREECHES RESENTMENT ARMS HALL OF JUSTICE ‘Mrs. Mary Bean's Wail of Protest Against Charge |- of Inebriety Mars Eclat of Police Judge Mogan’s - Monday Morning Reception and Horrifies Hearers Police Judge Mogan's endeavor to ad- | prise at his opponent, and then, plac~ by NOPAR ROAD JEEM3 ASSURED 1l Harriman to Help Build Line Into Mining District. Pleasing News Is Given to Promoters of the En- ing his hand upon Harris’ shoulder,’ said in unmistakably threatening tone: “Don’t you tell me I lie.” The men were sepatated by a low| - terprise. rail and the hushed spectators fully , expected to see-one or other of them ———— leap the barrier and deal carnage, when a voice from the bench rang out sharply and commandingly: The long-talked-of railroad from th Tonopah mining district to a point “The. bailiffs will preserve order in |XROWN a8 Rhodes Marsh, six miles be- the court.” |1ow Sodavflle, Nev., will soon be bullt. In a moment two stalwart forms ' E. H. Harrimam through his general were between the angry lawyers and | manager, Julius Kruttscenitt, yester- the danger of collision. was averted. | day informed John Brock of Philadel- “Don’t ‘you tell me I lie,” repeated Al-| ppis president of the Tonopah Mining ford as he turned away. Harrls sald | Company, which is deeply concerned in ~.| South: Pacific Company wi &lged to the court for thelr unusual be- | zhl'letnetronthe ae;t;'prlse. Rt havior and lheFlr‘xgh:vent C1°::d it dT‘l;‘el! Brock and John Hays Hammond, examination of Fe =P contings | consulting engineer of the Tonopah | Wednesday, Mining Company, have been at the Pal-'| ' ace Hotel for several days, anxjously | awaiting the decision of the railroad | company, and when it was given to | . For a while yesterday morning the appearance of Police Judge Mogan's | tribunal was strongly suggestive of &/ scene from “The Romany Rye” or the them yesterday Brock hurriedly packed I great third act of “Carmen.” Swa.rt‘h's trunk and departed for the East| Sypey men and women jostled each | OF the evening traln. The enterprise, | behind which are Brock and other | nd corridor, and e ;;(32::;?,: S Gt | Philadelphia capitalists associated with | cos- | tumery, the.queer patois in which they | im in the Tonopah Mining*Company chattered and the expressiveness of| | originally called for a line from Tono- | . o @ pah to Sodaville, but the terminus at | B vironment in_ whien | the latter ehd was finally, changed to strange sights and sounds are not rare. | Rhodes Marsh. The gaudily attired women and side-| HARRIMAN IS INTERESTED. whiskered men were there to see what| A company was incorporated to build would become of Annie J. Mitchell and | the line, which -will be about_ sixty-two | Katherine Domingo, charged by Frank | miles long, but for reasons which the | Mitchell of the same tribe with rob- bing him of a railroad ticket for which | plans.never matured beyond a rough | he had paid $15. Mitchell testified that | survey of the route. Far some fime| he had desired to go-to Kansas City | Brock and his business associates were | and borrowed from his mother—who | negotiating with the Southern’ Pacific | stems to be theé Azucena of the camp Company with a view of having E. Hi on the San Bruno road—the money Harriman join with them in’ the con- with which to procure the means of | Struction work, but they were informed | transportation. When he returned to By General Mz'mager Kruttschnitt that | the camp the ticket was in his coat | Harriman was too busy with the work | pocket, and by some means—he could | Of completion of the Lucin cut-qff.and not tell exactly how—the two. defend- | Other improvements along the Harri- commanded her néot to do.it again, else | she would be visited with severe penal- | ties “Wasn't it awful?"” said the Judge, in awed whisper, to his clerk. “Frightful!” shudderingly replied Ju- lius Mrs. Bean confined her vocal exercis2 | to moaning and crooning until Mr Herman, called for the prosecution, in- | Gorsed Mrs. Curtis’ charge of intem- perance, ahd then again did the defend- art’s voice pierce the empyrean in wordless protest. Again did all those d Bailiff Mahony valiantly brave the > and subdue the musician. pu do that again,!” said the court, adar ng Mary, “T'll—well, I know how long I'll send you up for.” ut there was no further bidding for reproof by Mrs. Bean. Aiter the evidence was all in her case was centinued two weeks, with the distinat understanding that if she fails to com- port herself with ladylike dignity dur- ing the intefim she will be hale@ intc court and hastened to jail before she has time to shriek a defeuse. b e The spectators in Police Judge Fritz's court—and there was a big crowd of them—thought for a moment that they were to be treated to a display of fistic exercise as the. outcome of a sharp oral tiit between Attorney Alford and Assistant District Attorney Harris. And only the prompt interventian of the court and the alacrity of the bail- iffs prevented the looked for combat. It was during the preliminary exam- iration of former Policeman Joseph Feld, charged with having fatally shot | his father-in-law at the latter’s resi- dence, and the aged widow of the slain man was under a sharp cross-examin- ation by Alford when the war-cloud suddenly appeared. The attorney had asked the witness if she saw_ the de- fendant strike her husband more than one blow, and she had answered the question, when Harris jumped to his feet and accused Alford of deliberately trying to confuse the woman. Alford denied the accusation, and said Harris’ conduct was uncalled for and outrageous. “You lie!” promptly and warmly re- torted Harris. For a moment Alford glared in sur- D i B i i i B e e e e S Y Y PLANNING AN EXTENSION OF ELAMATH LAKE ROAD ‘Hervey Lindley, N;Trnddent, Says Work Will Begin in a Few Months. ; Important improvements * are being | planned on the Klamath Lake Railroad, a stretch of rail in Northern California, which connects the town of Laird, in this State, with Pokegama, Or. The road is now controlled by Hervey Lindley, for- merly of Los Angeles, but now of Kla- hon. m;te is now at the Palace Hotel, having just returned from the north, where a deal was effected last week with George Mason, former president of the railroad company, whereby the latter's interest in the corporation was transferred to Lind- ley. Thé transfer of stook was followed by a meeting of the directors of the Kla- math Railroad Company, who received the resignation of Mason as president and elected Lindiey in his stead. The company is now operating thirty miles of road between fhe points men- tioned above, but the plan is to extend the line over Klamath Lake, a distance of thirty-two miles. President Lindley stated yesterday that the route the new extension 1§ to run has already been surveyed and construction work will be inaugurated early during the coming year. He has been negotiating for the purchase of several new englies and other Tqlling stock. The road at present runs through one of the richest timber tracts lying in the two States and the extension is contemplated to tap a very rich dis- trict, as yet only partly developed. ——— License Department Shows Gain. Tax Collector Smith sdys that feeg in the License Departmént collected in November amounted to $31,524, as against the sum of $30,226 50 collected in the same month in 1%02. This gives a gain to the city’s finances over the same period last year of $1297 50. . don’t | come evasively | ent muffle their ears, and once more | ants abstracted it. When he missed | IPan System to give attention to the| - 1 | Tonopah project. - the pasteboard he openly and vigorous- ', . | Iy accused the women of having pil-| lfecemly it was reported that out-| fered it, and the accusation led to de- | %56 “Pd‘";“hafl agreed to buifld the | nial and finally developed a faction | 02d and this news apparently stirred | fight, in which the entire tribe was par- | the interest of Prestxdem :{arnman. for | z it was not long before' the Brock syn-| feipati ounted police- | .. . E :;:“e‘r‘:a;:xx'lzi)p‘;gegni:y:ezp‘:n the scgne ot | dicate people were given the hint that | strife and gathered in the three prin- cipals. Y | it would be worth their while to have | | another talk with General Manager | a i | Kruttschnitt,” an opportunity which With a saucy swish of her Carmen- | yopn Brock was quick to avail himself | esque skirts, Annle J. Mitchell took the | o¢ when he arrived in this city about witness stand and denied point blank |ty weeks ago. . 1 the charge filed against her and Kath-| i erine Domingo by Mitchell. What really | A;Ikn IS PROMISED. angered the man, she stated, was her s talk- was followed by another refusal to lend him het horse and ;CReshortly before General Manager | 3 g b5 the terry. | Kruttschnitt -left for Salt Lake to join | buggy. to haul hie “traps™ to the fersy. | , 0 0,00 o0 an inspection of -the’ Lucin After surveying the competing wit- | R l promoters have never explained their [ i A cut-off. Yesterday Brock and Krutt-{ nesses and apparently relinquishing his | so;i¢ naq ancther conference,. which | hem had | effort to ascertain which of them an assurance that the | nearest to telling the -truth, | Judge Mogan dismissed the case. “The court is of the opinion,” was his final order, “that as five attorneys.are engaged in this case the defendants have been sufficiently punished.” | resulted in | Southern Pacific .Company would aid | ! liberally in the furtherance of the plans | for the new railroad. 50 | While the Southern Pacific Company will not build the road it has agreed to | financially aid its promoters, and in the | | Louls Marmont was sentenced to-the | it gives it a ready outlet for ores of the Then there was a concerted babel of | preliminary work it will lend - its sur- harsh gutturals from the side-whisker- | vayors ;Sm the necessary rolling stock ed men and a chorus of shrill com-|for the grading and construction work. ments from the hooded women, and | Incidentally of course the agents of the curtain fell to rise next morhen!i President Harriman have carefully.- - upon a playlet in which the chardcters | bound the Brock syndicate with an neither looked nor acted out of the of- | agreement that will prevent the few dinary. 5 ~ | road ever falling into the hands of in- . | terests that are inimical to those of the For attempting to plinder the Poor | Harriman lines. box of §t. Francis Church, at Mont-| The road is practically t);e salvation gomery avenue and Vallejo street,|of the Tonopah mining district in. that Umit, six months’ imprisonment, ‘by. various rich properties and insures| Judge Fritz. Marmont is 62 years of | cheaper transportation for necessary | age. He was caught in the act of | operating material. T pilfering the contents of the box by < —_—— Father Caraher. When arrested he ve-| Federal Grand Jury Impaneled. hemently denied the charge made by{ The following named citizens - were the priest, but in court he owned up.|impaneled as a. United States. Grand that he was sullW; Jury yesterday by United States Dis- » | trict Judge de Haven for the December Isaac Chub's future appears to he|term: Henry F. Allen, foreman: Harry about as black as his skin. He is the | ¢, Wilber, secretary; William R. Sher- negro that met Mrs. Ellen Dougherty | wood, Charles L. White, Charles F. ot 409 Oak street at 6 o'clock one morn- | Williams, Julius Fink, A. Bruman, | izig last week and robbed her of het | John C. Weister, J. F.-Corriea, A. T. purse after he had poked one of his| Eggleston, A. Bergman, James West, fingers into one of her eyes and almost | George W. 8hreve, J. P. Le Count, G. biinded her. Judge Cabaniss heard the | W. Lamb, E. C. Landis, J. F. Plage- evidence against Chub yesterday morn- | mann, Rqbert A. Wise, ‘Melville W. ing and remanded him to the Superior | Herzog, J. D. Sibley, G. N. Shield, Wil Céurt,- with bail fixed at. $3000. The burn J. Wilson and Daniel Wilson. negro is in jail . | T AR Hit on Head With Bottle. Daniel Sullivan, a bartender, was ar- rested yesterday morning by Policemen Smith and Hurd and booked at the City- ‘Prison-on a charge: of assault With a deadly weapon. He is accused of strik- ihg M. E. Mayer on the head with a bottle, cuttinz open his ‘scalp. in the Oyster Loaf restaurant, on Eddy street. Mayer was taken to the Central Emer- gency Hospital. COMMITTEE IS NAMED | TO SHAPE CITY'S SHOW | Its Duty Is to Determine How San | Francisco Shall Exhibit at St. - Louis. g James D. Phelan, William H. Mills, Frank J. Symmes, E." O. McCormick and T. C. Judkins have been appointed a special committee to determine what kind of a display San Francisco shall make next year at St. Louis. A meet- ing of the commercial bodies of San Francisco was recently held and it was decided that this city should be repre- sented by an exhibition at the great Louisiana Purchase Exposition to be KODAK Printing and Developing, and my prices held in St. Louis in 1904, Tt thas 2 o, Si7s. the quaitty . 1 but o glve qu ¥ i e M A R T L Los Angeles and other cities east and west have raised money-that their ad- vantages may be made known prop- erly during the continuance of the ex- pesition. The importance of San Fran- cisco from a commercial and manu- facturing point of view, 1ts interest for tourists and globe-trotters generally, and its position in relation to the great and fruitful coumtry that. is tributary to it make it advisable that San Fran- cisco should be advertised equally wity other cities. The special committee will at once proceed to consider the details of what shall be done.: rate Kodak man. - Soldier Boy Is Halted. Philip Schneider obtained a writ of habeas corpus yesterday from United States District Judge de Haven for the release of his son Louis from the Unit- ed States army. The petition was made returnable at 11 o'clock this morning. Young Schneider is 20 years old and on April 4 of this year at Chi- cago enlisted in Company A, Twentieth Regiment Infantry, U. S. A, wikhout the consent of his parents, . PRAGERS - Doyble the ysual number of Green Trading Stamps will be given ‘with All Purchases made at, this store Do not, miss this grand opportunity to fill our stamp books and thereby secure a pre- ynlm suit:ble for Christmas gift.. i - ALWA 1238+ 019 LIASLE 1250 MARKET ST.cos | . ADVERTISEMENTS. | ABG " BEERE Guaranteed Pure. None So Good, Sold Everynbests - HILBERT MERCANTILE CO., ©* Pacific Coalt Agents. For Stomach Disorders - | Cout and Dvsoepsia | DRINK 4 Best NATURAL Alkaline Water. | A. VIGNIER CO., San Francisco. | . 8 vistr DR, JORDAN'S crear MUSEUM OF ARATOMY 1081 MARXET ST bet. GtRTi3, S.T.Gal, Azatomical Museum in the P, T S AL BR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MER The World. diseace § MARRIAGE, valuable book for DR. JORDAN & CO.. 1051 Market St. S F. MAILED FREE. (A ) E.MMMI?&: » SAN Luis THE WEEKLY CALL| ‘$1 per Year. 3 OCEAN TRAVEL. | TOYO KISEN KAISHA. (ORIENTAL STEAMSHIP CO.) Steamers will leave wharf, corner First and Brannan streets at 1 p. m., for YOKOHAMA and HONGKONG, il &t Kobe _(Hiogo), N and Shangha, and on on day 8. S, HONGKONG MARU. Thursday. ‘December 3. 1088 MARU (cailing at Manila) December 30, 1903 Monday. e Fritait sad sasags mogly ot On rates. - A m- Pany's office, 451 Markee street. corner First. W. H_AVERY. General Agent. Mare Island and Vallejo Steamers. Steamer GEN. FRISBIB or MONTICELLO— 5 and P. m., except Sunday, Montgomery st 3 \”llc Agents, 5 M tmnu.old Steamers leave San Fran- cisco as follows: Ketchikan, Wrangel, Haines, ay)—Pomona, 1:30 0, Jam 5. . 2%, Jan. 2 ort Los Angeles and Santa Barbara—San- a B 1 Altata, La Pas, Santa Ro- salia_ Guaymas (Mex.) 10 a. m., Tth of each month. S For_further information obtaim folder. Right isreserved to change steamers or sail- ing_dates. TI! OFFICES—4 New Montgom- e Hotel), 10 Marjet street and o8 . 10 Market street N, General Passenger Agent, arket street, San Francisco. eéry street (Pa N o > El s Dec. 4, ip line to PORTLAND, O nd to, all points East. . all rail or steam- ATES. Steamer e Steamer sails a. m. S F. BOOTH. 1 Montgomery st.; C. Freight Dept, 3 tickets include berth foot -of Spear st. at 11 Gen Dept.. Gen. At . AMERICAN LINE. - New York—Sonthampton—London. Phila..Dec. 5, 9:30 am| N. York. Dec.19,9:30 am 8.Louis. Dec.12,9:30 am| St Paul. Dec.26,9:30 am ATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINE. New York—Lomdon Mesaba. .. Dec. 5. 9 am| Menom'ne.Dec. 19.9 am 12, neon! Min'p’ls. Dec. Only First-class Passengers Carried. DOMINION LINE. Portland—Liverpool—Short sea passags ..Dec. 5{Canads .. Jan 2 +es.-.Dec. 9 Dominion Jan. 23 RED STAR LINE. New York—Antwerp—Paris. Fialand. Dec.5,1 am| Krn'ld. Dec.19,10:30 am am Zealnd. Dec.26,10:30 am ing Wednesdays. erpool. -Dee. 10, Jan, 14, Feb. 11 .Dec. 24, Jan. 38, Feb. 25 aples. Genoa. 5. Jan. 18 Feb. 2, Feb. 13, Mar. E 12 CANOPIC... -.Jan. 30, Mar. C. D. TAYLOR, Passenger Agent Pacific Coast, 21 n Francisco, WHITE STAR ROMANIC, Dec. 5, Jan. 16, Feb. 21, REPUBLIC (new), Jn-xu:.a lontgomery by all Railroad Tieket