The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 16, 1903, Page 7

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i « THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER. 16, 1903. JOHNSON WILL COMFORT GIVEN FIGHT UNIONS THE THIRTIETH Resigns From the Rostaumnlfllllffln".\' IKeepers’ Association and: rived From Philippines Finds‘ Will Not Sign Agreement| Model Camp a Pleasant Home e | ATING HOUSES OPEN - UP.COLONEL O'CONNELL BACK| > OIS i | Committees From Both Sides Practice With Big Guns on| to Meet and Make Effort to, the Bluff Is Prevented hy' Heavy Fog That Obscures Sea A AP, The Thirtieth A bout dring a Settlement Infantry is now com- Regiment Just Ar-| by the | fortably instalied in Model Camp at the { tion is mo | Presidio, which is unquestionably one | ¢ the eat- Of the best arranged of any of the tem- | ses ol chh ; camps in the country. It was o business, they will ion to receive the men, > ittees seemed greatly pleased It be a week or more before with the quarters assigned to them. will probabl the will be different companies of the regiment go to the different they have been as- the meantime they will be »ped with uniforms suitable » the rigorc mate into which they ing. They had a good taste of weather yesterday though. e day was one of the most cheer- f the season and everything about cam was black and drear, with a ¥ falling- to add to the gen- 1 discomfort of landing. Both of- nd men were in their khaki d theis first attention on arrival to the building of fires in nd general precautions ta men from the cold blasts —in such distinct va- the warm and balmy ecli- had just parted from. J.O’Conpnell, the command- f the Thirtieth, reports a and said his regiment was in ndition, which statement was upheld by the appearance of en. Colonel O’Connell is wn to the people of San having served here in the the old regiment of Shaf for about fourteen He is well known to the Na- 1 Guard of the State, having been for- & | years. He warm friends in San Fran- throughout California. FIRST ON CUBAN SOIL. a captain, sidio on April Cuba. San Francisco out to do the First Infantry regarded the First as a >giment, it having been sta- s city for about fourteen ral Shafter. and Market street with flowers for 1t, the oldest in the United States service pt ready to which In to MEETING IS CALLED. winter with ¥ Infantry, wa aes its inspector has many th ess avenue strewn O'Connell was the first man mpany to land in Cuba, go- famous Gu expedition. the presence of a regi- niards with his little band The object of the daring ling of the Cuban officers— sfully accomplished. His 1 drew the first Spanish blood killing the l“mmar\(lm" Spanish troops and sev- and embarked on board issie without losing a man er that action Captain O'Conneil Sl with He landed ment of Sp f fif JOHNSON n war. flicer of t bers w d in Cuba with General Shafte and on Ju of El Caney Ljeutenant O'Con- was engaged in the battle of San Lieutenant O’'Connell now aptain O'Connell of this city, and nas seen active service in the Philippine After his return from Cuba | in O'Connell was promoted to b Thirtieth Infantry. He d to be back in San Fran 2 neet his old friends of many e » . o Pty o vears’ standing. Among those i % pated in t same Gay his son who arrived from the vesterday and who are the sick list in the United General Hospital are Captain E. W. Lyle and Captain W. C. , both of the Twenty-fourth In- and James M. Lawrence, an veterinary surgeon. BASEBALL GAMES. nth Infantry crossed hats afternoon with the Nirth former winning. Score, The game was spirited and itnessed by about 1000 people, ng wh were the officers of the any enlisted men and a lot of people from town. To-day the teenth Infantry will play the teenth Infantry on the lower parade ground. To-morrow, in all probability, the Fifteenth will have a chance to w its dexterity with the crack Pre- dio team The target practice at the Presi-]in was interfered with yesterday by the hazy weather, and after a little firing from the mortar batteries it was de- cided to discontinue the work until to- day, in the hope that the might clear away sufficiently to enable the gunners to get fair aim at the tar- gets. nes Lectur School. were given E at Humboldt J. Mor n, chief en- building, gav Heating and Vent Horace F. Brown f Rebelilous Weeks on The lectures” d thoroughly body of the post, P. &uw.) Gives Dance.* Commercial High t night at the s a large | a merry time was crowd present enjoyed by B — | UNION LEAGUE CLUB ADVERTISEMENTS. *;C"“‘"‘"“" Posts Names and lssues CARVING SETS || -immidicmems, of Present Administration. _The nominating committee of the n League has posted the follow- ing nominations of club officers for the year 1904: President, George H. | ; first vice président, S, J. | second vice president, H. G. W. Dinkelspiel; secretary, J. B} Fuller; treasurer, 1. W. Hellman Jr.; direc- tors—C. H. Garoutte, F. E. Beck, C. L. Field, E. E. Gates, John Rothschild and E. D. Page. An address to members of the club | | nating committee. It sets forth that the league is enjoying an unprece- dented degree of prosperity and that | its interests are splendidly conserved. The prosperiw, which promises to continue, is credited to the excellent | administration of affairs during the | last year. In view of the situation the | committee states-that special reasons exist for the renomination of the pres- ent officers. | The report is’ signed by William Macdonald, J. W. Carmany, Joseph Simonson, D. T. Cole, J. S. Spear Jr., William Morris and"Frank W. Mars- | ton. For Christmas ve some besutiful and high-class eary-. at low prives, all at reasonable Many have sterling silver mount- n sets of three pleces in handsome #ilk boxes My prices $2.50, $3.25, $4.00 fo 56.00. T ve some specially geod lnes in holiday v;\ such as Sclssors, Pocket-Knives azore MAlL. ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED. TH AT MAN PITTS (F. W. PITTS) 1008 Market Street psad Prinditn e e et s R - Xmas trees; silver firs, spruce, cedar. . < ~00d. at McCldln's. Market.or. Larlkin.® mans OFFICERS NOMINATED | :accompaplen the report of the .nomi-| | House, where Clarke and his Wife re- | street about | Clarke, with his brother-in-law and an CLARKE'S WIFE DESPERATE MAN WITHOUT FUNDS! Clubman Calls on His Bride to Get His Clothing, but| Refuses to Give Her Any Aid ! Miss Loretta Morris Grabbed and Threatened by Prowling ranger on Van Ness Avenue T SCREAMS BRING AID —_— WOMAN IS LEFT PENNILESS g D weet Pea Girl” Declares That “Dr.” Ivan MeLaughlin Se- cured All the Money She Had | E. K. Clarke, the well-known club- man whose sensational midnight mar- riage last Saturday to Mrs. Rosalind Bower, the “Sweet Pea Girl,” who fig- ured in the trial of Durrant, the noto- rious murderer, yesterday informed his | bride of a few days that he no longer | the hands of an unknown rufflan. desired to have anythi “th| Miss Lorette Morris, 17 years of age, her. ything to do With 1, 1 o33, Brankiin street, where she had H;een engaged as a domestic, to visit The scene took place at the Lick [gome members of her family on Gough 30 o'clock. She turned into Van Ness avenue, thinking that she would be more secdre walking { alone on that thoroughfare than if she | had gone on the more lonely street. On reaching Sutter street Miss Morris noticed some one following her. ' Im- ‘mvd(alely opposite St. Dunstan's visited the rooms at the Lick | where Mrs. Clarke recelved | HER and His Frightened Vietim Alm Collapses on Street - The shrieks of a young girl and the attention of pedestrians on Van Ness avenue last night, and only the timely arrival of assistance saved a young paired after their wedding. Clarke's relatives, who succeeded in getting him away from his wife on Monday, kept him secluded at an uptown hotel until yesterday. i Shortly before noon vesterday | attorney, House, them. “We have called for the rest of Mr. turning round, Miss Morris saw that she was in the clutch of a desperate- | looking man. He murmured a few Clarke's effects,” said the attorney. words and bending over the terrified If he wants them,” replied Mrs. |girl said: “I will smash you to the rke, “let him ask me for them. I{ground.” ne to deal with you.” Miss Morris screamed for aid and said Clarke to his bride, “I|on the approach of a man who was at- want the rest of my thing: | tracted by the screams the girl's as- “Well, here they are,” answered his | sajlant ran swiftly across the street | wife, and she scornfully placed some of | and disappeared down Walnut avenue. her husband's clothes on a tabie. | Miss Morris almost collapsed and it LEAVES WIFE PENNILESS. | was some time before she regained her on account of his friendship with Mr: l | PATROLMEN MAKE Fif- | Thir- | | Commissioners held last evening Pa- weather | | street saloon-keeper, { | | Donovan, strength sufficiently to be able to pro- ceed on her way. Speaking of the outrage, committed on one of the city's most frequented streets, Miss Morris said to a repre- sentative of the- Call: “I was on my way to see some mem- | bers of ‘my family and chose Van N avenue, thinking that it was perfectly safe. 1 cannot explain the terror that seized me when the man grasped me, “I have no money whatever,” said Mrs. Clarke, and the tears glistened in her eves as she faced her husband. That is none of my business,” re- plied Clatke, “and I don't want to have anything more to do with you.” Clarke and his friends then left the apartment and proceeded uptown to an apartment-house, where every care was taken to keep him secluded from inquiry. | Through the scandal that has at- TERRIFIES GIRL, | Desperado Escapes in Darknoss2 threats of a desperate man drew the| woman from possible serious injury at | a&pk‘lures of the native huts proved a man grabbed her by the shoulder and, | | | and when h@ murmured something I| tached to Clarke’s sudden wedding to | could not make out and followed that the “Sweet Pea Girl” it has developed | up with a threat to smash me to the that “Dr.” Ivan McLaughlin, to whose | ground I feared for my life. It is well offices in the Starr-King building Mrs. { I had the presence of mind left me to | Clarke requested that her marria; cream or there is no telling what my the minister who | fate would@ have been. the very intimate certificate be sent by married the couple, friend of Mrs. Clarke. tions would indicate that he was a “Dr.” McLaughlin first met the madman. It is terrible that such an Sweet Pea Girl” when she returned |outrage should havpen in the city and from Nome with considerable means. | especially on a thoroughfare as public | McLaughlin is known to the police and | as Van Ness Avenue. detective agencies of many cities, whoe The man is described as being tall have investigated his record. and slightly built. He wore a black Mrs. Bower, or the “Sweet Pea Girl.” | suit. was warned by some friends mnot to s s have anything to do with McLaughlin, BREAKS SHOW WINDOWS but she ignored the warnings. The IN SPIRIT OF REVENGE woman’'s friends say benefited to a great Mrs. Jennie Close Accuses Woman of { Stealing Husband and Tries to Wreck Latter's Store. Mrs. Jennie Close started out last night in search of revenge and wound up at the City Hall police station af- that McLaughlin | extent financially | or Mrs. Clarke, as she now ‘T WITH McLAUGHLIN. ‘Sweet Pea Girl” McLaughlin and Bower, W In July went I the “Dr.” last t W aimed that the woman paid the | h it is ck ter gratifying her desire. The object expenses of the trip. They returned to | ¢ her wrath was Mrs, Laura Lasare, this city anl for the last few months | yeeqer of a candy store 24 Hayes she has been seen constantly with Mc- | giraet. Mrs. Close accuses Mrs. Lasare Laughlin. A f"‘; mf*]“sl ,““l;he ""{“"" of winning the affections of her spouse to a friend and told him that Mc-| .4 4y orger to get even Mrs. Close Laughlin seemed to exert a strange in- Sy used her umbrella to advantage, pok- fluence over ker and that she coyld not ing several panes of glass out of the ik i from his seeming hypnotic | ;. "indow of the candy store. PO that time she informed her friend | When Mrs. Lasare saw what was| SEf Sp o e l,atjghlin had secured ali | Bappening she hastily summoned Patrolman Durham, who locked the her money and that she was practically without means. Mrs. Clarke stated yesterday that the reason she had her marriage license sent tp McLaughlin's offices was that she did not desire that her husband should get control of the docum=nt, which he might have had if the license had been mailed to the Lick House. Mrs. Clarke was obliged to borrow a small sum of mone: sterday from a revengeful Mrs. Close up on a charge of disturbing the peace. Mrs. Lashre is the woman who was sued by gas company a short time ago acted as her own attorney. She vows that she never did desire | the friendship of Mr. Close and adds that she will make his hasty spouse pay dearly for her folly. —_— e Japanese and Germans have the same | and friend. She stated yesterday that she _ Japane : would take legs! nieps -Ste-swssagittt ProRs Mult SEEhl Clarke to support her and that she “I never saw the man before. His ac- | | the | gned F- W- | | ject of reinstating the men and if they | FILIPINO SEES GOOD IN STUDY Mrs. Maus Gives Interest- ing Aeccount of the Prog- ress of the Natives of Islands SIS R VIVID PICTURES Views of Grand Old Churches| and Quaint Little Huts Make a Strange Contrast —_— SHOV Mrs. Louis Mervin Maus, wife of Colonel Maus, delivered a most inter- esting lecture in the First Presbyterian | Church Sunday school room last night | on the Philippines, China and Japan. Mrs. Maus was aided by remarkably interesting stereopticon views consist- | ing of pictures taken by herself and | soldiers of the United States army. Many new things were told about the Philippine Islands. The material bet- terment of the Filipinos under the beneficent rule of the United States, | lhl‘ advancement in gducatipn and the ‘growth of the Presbyterian church in the Philippines and army were de- scriptively told. | Pictures of grand old churches and strong contrast and stories of the new | civilization were applauded. Mrs. Maus showed views of Peking | and of the throne room of the Empress of China and gave a most pleasant glimpse into the country of the Mikado. | At the conclusion of the lecture Mrs. laus was the recipient of hearty ap-| plause and a vote of thanks for the very fine and instructive illustrations | of the three countries. | | | | The lantern was directed by J. F.| Leicester, who made a speech in behalf of tHe Filipino children, who were, he said, eager to learn and took | advantage of the opportunities offered | them. He therefore asked the con- tinued support of members of the Pres- byterfan church for a cause which he| sald would in after years prove a bless- ing to the recipients of its bounty. AT P e MAY SOON HAVE RESIGN OFFICE IN New Law Is Passed Requiring That | Every Officer Be a Working Mem- ber of His Organization. <> A new law has been recently passed by the International Brotherhood of Teamsters requiring that every man that holds an office in any branch of the Teamsters’ Union must be a work- ing member. This means that if the | pew law is put into effect in this city Michael Casey, president of the local | teamsters’ crganization, will have to resign, as he is no longer a working teamster, but a political office holder. The local teamsters are opposed to this new law and all of them are loyal | to Casey and want him to remain as| head of the organization. They will de- | fer action till. next July, when the in- | ternational brctherhood holds another | session. Five delegates will be .sent | from the union in this city and they will endeavor to have the new law re- pealed. The Iron Trades Council of this city has received advices from Stockton to | the effect that thirty-five union black- smiths of that city have been locked | out by prominent firms. The council | will confer with the firms with the ob- CASEY TO UNION | cannot accomplish the result in this way a strike may result. ———————— Pay for Violating Game Laws. Chief Deputy Charles Vogelsang of the Fish Commission reports that Po- lice Judge Mortimer Smith of Oakland Diehl $25 yesterday for violating ‘the bag limit law on ducks and F/ W. Searing $25 for selling quail. —————————— If a person is bitten by a supposedly mad dog, let him call a physician and ap- lemon juice to the wound. This is ice of Dr. Lagorio of the Pasteur Institute. | Nellie Jones on the ground of | son just WOES ASSAIL BOY HUSBAND Harry E. Noland, Cross-Complaint, Hurled Footwear at in Divoree Him | el L MARRIE AT EIGHTEEN g Other Unhappy Spouses Seek Disunion, and Some Are Made Happy With Deerees e Harry E. Noland, defendant in a suit for divorce brought by Hattie A. No-/ land, hag led a very strenuous exist- ence for the last three years, if the allegations made by him in his cross- complaint are to be believed. He says that from the unlucky day in Febru- ary, succumbed to Hattie, who, he says, his senior, and consented to become her husband, his peaceful moments have been few and far between. It was all her fault, too, standing that his wife, plaint, alleges that he has been a cruel and brutal spouse. He denies all her charges and says that at various times during the last three years she has amused herself at his expense by pull- ing his whiskers, punching him in the the blandishmen eve, cursing him, hurling beer bottles| in a pain him and otherwise behaving SOrTOW, at manner that gave him and a feeling of disappointment and | Her principal amusement, he says, was throwing her footwear at him. He charges that when he least expected it she would pull from her feet her shoe or slipper and hurl it at him with great violence and “deadly accurac He winds up his tale by asking for a divorce and the custody of their two children, a boy and a girl. Hugh S. Carpenter, manager of the Alameda branch offices of the Pacific States and Sunset Telephone Com- panies, is being sued for divorce by Ruth F. Carpenter, to whom he was martied at Alameda in 1894. She charges that since 1896 he has been a misery. brutal husband, alleging that he has| frequently, struck her and cursed her and that he once flourished a pistol in her face. She also says that he has maliciou lied about her. Mrs. Car- penter's maiden name is Seymour and she asks for a divorce, permission to resume it and $50 a month alimony. Robert Jones wants a divorce from deser- tion, alleging in his complaint that she left him without any cause or rea- three months after came his wifé. They were married in September of last year. Desertion is also alleged in the suit for divorce brought by Meta Lages against C. Lages. Infidenity is the ground upon which David Truffelli is suing Jennie Truffelli. John F. Brigman, better known as J. W. Critesp the jockey, is the defendant in the divoree suit brought by Hattie M. Brigman, to whom he was married at San Rafael in November of last year. neglect. Ethel'J. Robinson, who was married to Oliver P. Robinsen at Reno in April, 1802, is seeking a divorce for cruelty. Interlocutory decrees of divorce “flre | granted to Marguerite Hunt from Ar- chibald Hunt for desertion, Maria Trol- ler from Herman Troller for cruelty, ! Elias Lubronz from Annie Lubronz for desertion, Myrtle B. Powers from Henry D. Powers for cruelty and Daisy 2. Moore from Harry J. Moaore for de- sertion. e s Will Test Dental Law. The Supreme Court will hear argu- ments as to the validity of the dental law this morning. Chas. H. Whitley is under arrest for practicing dentistry without a license and wants to prove | - the act creating a Dental Exam Board unconstitutional. analogous to that of the physicians who are attempting to have the court | do away with the Board of Medical ! Examiners would find the means to get competent legal aid. e ANSWER TO VARIOUS ACCUSATIONS e | Board of Police Commissioners Holds | a Busy Session at the Hall | of Justice. { meeting of the Board of Po]h‘e‘ At a trolman Joseph E. Feld, who shot and | kl]]ed his father-in-law, Fritz Dirking, i on November 2, was dismissed from the department. There were but two itnesses examined and the manslayer | offered no defense. The case of Pa-| trolman Bennett, who is charged with | being implicated with Sergeant Wolf | in extorting money from a Mission- | went over until | Friday afternoon for decision, the | Commissioners beifig unable to agree ! upon a penalty. Patrolman Patrick J. Parrell was fined $25 for permitting a | prisonen to escape, and the case of Po- liceman Fogarty, charged with having} made an unlawful arrest, went over | until Friday. Charges brought against Patrolman Charles B. Wedekind by Max Foehr were dismissed, it being proven that| the officer. acted,\sholly within hls[ duty. Philip Brady was appmnted a pa- trolman in the place of Jeremiah who resigned rather than | face charges preferred against him. The resignation of Mrs. L. G. Fa- bian as matron of the City Prison was accepted. Mrs. Fabian's engagement to Frank Schmitz, brother of the Mayor, was announced some time ago and she now leaves the position she has so long filled with credit to the city and to herself to become his wife. Mrs. Condon was appointed in her. stead. R 5 2t Ll B Are Admitted to Practice. The Supreme Court yesterday ad- mitted the following named appli- cants: Roy L. Alexander, James S. Smith, S. C. Weil, Guy W. Smith, Frank C. Drew, Willilam G. Snyder, George W. Mordecai Jr., Munroe Thomas, J. Nelson Watt and Wallace ‘W. Wideman. P. B. Hall also passed the examination and will be admitted to the bar when he shall become of age. ADVERTISEMENTS. $ & Campbell largest in the on the Coast, make, and our obtain from plan to _you. $165. Easy Terms. Kohler & Chase, Sole_Agents for the Punola. Cor, POst and Kearny Streets, Established 155 mu—uwnmmm-n‘flmmmmmcmmmfleu establishment west of Chicago, During the holidays we are offering an exceptionally large number of fine pia- nos at greatly reduced prices. instruments are those secured from the Palge Piano Company, which we are offer- ing at little over half price, and the balance are several carloads of pianos secured at low prices by our buyers. our regular stock of “Knabe, Fischer, Ho- bart M. Cable, Kohler & Chase and Kohler leaders in their respective grades. are the instruments with which Kohler'& Chase have built up the largest piano trade hold more than our share of the public’s patron- age. We charge no more for a good piano than sensational firms would ask you for an unknown best yet devised. We were the originators of the monthly installment business and no other house can offer the advantages which the customer can udeAsk our clerks to explain the Part of these Added to this, pianos”is by long odds the West, and the pianos are the They and which have enabled us to famods easy-payment plan is the the new Uprights at $145 and Says Wife, 1900, when he, a mere lad of 18, | of | is many years| says Harry, notwith- | in her com-| she be-| She charges | ng | The case is| DO NOT WEAR A LONG FACE. == It Is a Great Handicap in All Busi- ness and Social Relations. ‘The man who looks as if he had lost { his last friend is in no danger of being crushed by the jam of new ones un- less he “cheers up.” People are not going out of their way nowadays to | associate \\nh the man of mournful and melanchely appearance. They are | afraid "a will tell them his troubles | and they steer clear of him, as they all have plenty of their own. | The most universal cause of the for- | lorn and hopeless appearance to-day is | dyspepsia. - It unfits a man for every | duty of life and causes him to become despondent and gloomy and necessarily | his looks do not belie his feelings. He | appears. cast down and dejected and becomes a burden to himself and hu- manity in general. | Stuart's Dyspepsta Tablets are the dyspeptic’'s certain relief. They do the work that his stomdch is unable to do and by relieving that organ of its | burdens permit it to regain its health and strength and again become active and useful In its functions. They con- tain all the esséntial ingredients that enter into the digestive fluids and se- cretions of the stomach and they act- | ually take up the work and do it just | as a healthy, sound stomach would. By this means a man can go right ahead with his work and eat enough to keep him in proper working condi- tion. His system is not deprived of its necessary nourishment as it is the case of the “starvation cure” the employment of some of the first class chicken foods now on the market. Starvation, even if it were a good thing, could not be continued long enough to effect a cure: for a discrdered and worn out stomach is not going to be- come strong and healthy in two or three davs. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets act nat- urally because they contain natural di- gestives. The principal component | parts are aseptic pepsin, malt diastase and other ingredients with like proper- ties that do the wecrk regardless of the condition of the stomach. There is no unnatural or violent disturbance of the digestive organs as the result of their action. In fact, the existence of the stomach is entirely forgotten as soon as they have had time to begin thefr operations. They also possess very curative and healing properties and as- sist the stomach in getting well, while relieving it of its work. They perform the duties of both nurse and physician. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets are for sale by all druggists at 50 cents a box and there is very little danger of a druggist trying to sell you something else in its place that is “just as good.” | They are so well established and have done so much gocd in the world that their name has become a household word; so the usual warning, “Accept no substitute.” is unnecessary in the case of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. in or ,g:umzt-:a 3 OCBLN TRAVEL. Steamers Jeave San Fran- cisco as_follows For Ketchikan, | Wrangel, reau, Haines, Skagu Alaska—11 a Jan Alaska and G. Ry.; at Vancouver 1:30 30 p. Bay)—Pomona, imbolde K Ju For Los Angeles (via Port Los Angeles and Redondo) n Diego and Santa Barbara— undays, 9 a. m California, Thursdays. 9 3. m. Angeles (via San Pedro and East s Oru 1 nada. Magdalena Bay Altata, La Pu (Mex.), 10 a. m. folder. Right is reserved to change steamers or sail- For further information obtain | ! ing_dates | TICKET OFFICES—¢ New Montgom- | ery street (Palace Hotel), 10 Market street and Broadway wharves. Freight office, C.\D. DUNAN 10 Market street, San O. R. & N. CO. “Columbia’™ salls Dec. 19, 29, Jan. 8, 18, 28, Feb. yand 17. “George W. Elder” sails Dee. 14, #4, Jan. 3, 13, 23, Feb. 2 and 12, Only steamship line to PORTLAND, OR.. and short - rail line from Portiand to all points East. Through tickets to all points, all rall or steamship and rgil, at LOWEST RATES Stéamer tickets include berth and meal Steamer safls foot of Spear st., at 11 a. m. S, F. BOOTH, Gen. Ast. Pass Dept.. 1 Mont- gomery st.; C. CLIFFORD, Gen. Agt. Freight Dept.. 3 Montgomery st. T0YQ KISEN KAISHA, STEAMSHIP €O.) corner First and for YOKOHAMA Kobe (Hicgo). 10 Market street. calling at | Nagasaki and Shanghai, Hobgkong with steamers cargo nc-«vpd on board on day of . 8. NIPP T (calling at M: Via Howelulu. Round- rated. -For- freight and passage apply at Comw pany’'s office, 42] Market street, cormer “?‘- AVERY. General Agent. Occanics.$.Co. il ALAMEDA. for HnmluIlL Dec.19.11 a.m. SIERRA. . for_Honolulu,_ Samoa, Auck-, 5 jana an; Sytar. Thursday. Dee. 31, 2 p..m. ARIPOSA, for: Tahiti, Jan, ‘6, 1904, DIRECT LINE TO. HAVRE-PA Salling every Thursday instead | saturday, at 10 a. m.. Prer 42, Narth River, foot of Morton street. First class to Havre. $70 and upward. See- ond ciuss fo Havre. $45 and upward. GEN- ERAL AGENCY FOR UNITED STATES AND CANADA, 32 Broadway (Hudson Butlding) New Ycrk. J. F. FUGAZI & CO.. Pacific cm ‘Agents, 5 Montgemery avenue, San Francisco, Tickets sold by all- Railroad Ticket Agemts. ‘Mare Island and Vallejo Steamers. Steamer ulh’ Fmsg: or uouflcmo- ». re, Missfon-st. dock. WEEKLY CALL 16 Pages. $1 per Year . T a. ‘.Aubn Pler 2,

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