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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WED SDAY, MARCH 30, 1904 I r I D i AQUARICM OR THE PARK That Will 4 l’rnmim-m Contribute spect Citizens DR. TEVIS IS LIBERAL Commissioners Ave Look- ing Toward a Lwallnll‘ vear the Duteh Windmill - t that enter- of San 50.000 for Park. It Park Commis session held wing con ent Par s T tizens s rprise Tevis 0,000 and ch was president of by “omm! nd secrecy Was oners w Iy thwar ers in sur nmissic B. Spri and Com- L 1 fear that the case, will atirely ticular f not ¢ f the plan the sum of $300,- FESTATE TRANSACTIONS, t on N Buchana. Cragi 110 witt W of Leale ¢ Richmond n W line th street N line of hirty-fiftth Frederick T rner of For 100, W 45 ¥ to John ird avenue corge W J street and 52:6 0.000 to Establish One| URY CENSURES | { | { | Finds hmlt With System | That Permitted Hugh Spil- lane to Suffer Alone {THEA\T ) . i Dr. Pawlicki Admits He Did Not Examine the Patient Till He Was Near Death SRS | A Coroner's jury yesterday { vestigated the case of Hugh Spil- 4ane, who died of a fractured skull at the Central Emergency Hospital on March 17. Spillane, while intoxicated, | { fell heavily to the ground and frac- tured his skull after alighting from a streetcar at the intersection of urth and Howard streets on the evening of March 16. He died in the on the 17th, and his death was reported to the Coroner as hav- caused by pneumonia. The hospital ing been autops skull had been the eause of death. The inquest was held yesterday morning by Coroner Leland, and the matter was pretty thoroughly investi- ated. When the jury presented the verdict exonerating Dr. Boscowitz, the Coroner suggested that it conveyed the inference that the ‘other doctors con- nected with the hospital were to blame know The jury, he said, could not this, b Dr. Charies F. Millar had not been examined as to his con- nection with the case. He adwised the jury to reconmsider its verdict, which it did triking out the paragraph exonerating Dr. Boscowitz and allow- ing the remainder to stand. It exon- erates Motorman W. Mansfleld, and concludes: *““We' recommend the re- visal of the system of entering and recording Agnoses in the said Emergency Hospital, in order that when disputes arise in the treatment of cases the blame can be propexly placed upon the person or persons in fauit.” SPILLANE AT HOSPITAL. Dr. Boscowitz testified that Spillane was brought in on his watch, and that after having made a careful and thor- ough examination of the patient, as was his usual practice in all cases, he to the conclusion that Spillane’s was fractured at the base. He skull informed Steward O'Day of this f ( HOSPITAL \L RULE Liner Arrives From Honolulu With a Full Cargo and. More Than Two Hundred Passengers,Among Whom FOR PNEUMONIA in- | y showed that a fracture of the | act, and ordered him to put Spillane to bev! in one of the small rooms *“on the other side,” where he would not be likely to be dieturbed by the other pa- tients, and to put an ice cap on his head, The witness then entered in the record book opposite the name of Spillane the words “Held for observa- tion.” He then reported off watch. It is the custom at that hospital, he said, when a doctor comes on duty to look at the register and note the num- ber and kind of cases in the hospital, and then personally examine each case after receiving' whatever information the steward on watch may have had. Steward James O'Day corroborated the evidence of Dr. Boscowitz in every particular. When the witness went off duty he turned over the case Steward Barry, and informed him that Spillane was suffering from a fracture of the skull. Dr. George F. Brackett testified that it was his habit to refer to the regis- ter, and then to make the rounds of the hospital. When he examined Spil- lane he diagnosed the case as a-pos- sible fracture of the skull. The stew- ard did not tell him about the diagno- sis of Dr. Boscowitz. The witness con- sidered that Dr. Boscowitz had made the same diagnosis, or he would not have prescribed the ice cap. All the doctors connected with the hospital are expected to make the rounds. At 10:30 o'clock Dr. Pawlicki telephoned the witness that a grave case of pneu- monia was at the hospital. He did not mention Spillane’s name, and the wit- ness had no idea that he was the patient mentioned, therefore he tele- phoned back to Pawlicki to treat the case for pneumonia. Dr. C. F. Pawlicki testified that he did not see Spillane at all until 10:20 at night, when Steward Manville call- ed him and said that a patient in the juvenile department was very sick. The witness thereupon to be taken out into a light€r room for examination, and when the wiiness examined Spillane he found him to be dying. PNEUOMNIA IS NAMED. i He found a slight abrasion on his head, a dullness in both lungs and a temperature of 102}2 degrees. In his opinion the patient died of hypostatic pneumonia, caused by a weak action of the heart. There was no ice bag on the patient's head at that time. The witness ordered an ice bag and ‘s(rychnlne to arouse the heart. “I don’t feel that I am responsible for not knowing that the man was in ! the hospital,” continued Dr. Pawlicki. “The steward has the key of the in- sane department, and he alone can open it. I never go into the insane ward. T asked where this man held for observation was, but nobody seem- ed to know. He was secreted over in "I the juvenile department.” Adeibeid Schrader to Alexander | - M ssion and | $10. | omer, William 100. lot 26, bioc man tracte: $16. agee (by Willlam A. and trustees) to Adelph T. same: $600. D. Lapk and wife, Builders' Contracts. Josenh V. th William Plant (contracter), s J. Welsh ement brick, tile, ry. Joining, hardware. glazing @ thre artificial tinning. plastering and | -#tory frame 192:6 E ; by E 27:6; S8600 H J. Looney (eontractor), rewering, nlumHn‘l 504 work for of Height strest. ¢ 137:6 with Rervice for same on same; $1504. lrmu-eiu). for same with Paintin Foley ete., D. Construction Company (owners) Worke (contractors). ln:hl ton Iron nry A Schulze—Structural steel for a n\( story and basement hrl K er of Hel W X All work for alter- to canvert a two-story | and Francie 1. Cos- | —~Excavating, grad- ; |ers yesterday filed a statement with In reply to a question by the Cor- the witness admitted that he did - | not make the rounds when he went on watch so far as the insane portion of | the hospital was concerned. Dr. Boscowitz, on being recalled, tes- | tified that the docter on watch was, during that time, the sole master of the hospital, and that it was his duty :| to examine into the condition of each ynd every patient there. ———————— Money for Voting Machines. The Board of Election Commission- the Board of Supervisors that the sum of $259,056 will be reguired to run the Department of Elections dur- ing the fiext fiscal year, Included in | this amount is the sum of $130,000 for votln‘ machines and $28,456 for sal- aries of election officers at the pri- mary election to be held on August 9 and the general election November 8, 1904. to . CLEAR SKIES FAVOR ALAM Are Many Pro AND SOUTHERLY WINDS EDA THROUGHOUT PASSAGE minent People---Brings 82 Japanese | | | | - PL The Oceanfc. Steamship Company's liner Alameda, Captain Dowdell, ar- rived yesterday from Honolulu with | 1763 tons of cargo and 240 passengers. Southwest winds and clear vored the liner all the way from the island port. and twenty-one hours. Among her pas- sengers were eighty-two ananos:?\\'hn have been living the islands and on have come here in search of wider op-| portunitie Count E. Bonzi, who recently mar- ried Miss Spaulding of Kauai, passenger on the Alameda. His visit to the mainland will be booked to return on the Alamed which sails Saturday morning. Mr. and | . H. Boardman of this city, who | have been passing their honeymoon in the Hawaiian Islands, returned on the liner. Alexander Young, one of Hono- lulu’s oldest and wealthiest residents and proprietor of the Young Hotel, came up on the Alameda. The Alameda docked * about 11 o'clock. She left for the sugar refinery about 4 moved she liquid fuel she will require for her next voyage. The oil lighter was alongside the liner almost as soon as she was made fast to the wharf, and the opera- tien of taking fuel was completed al- most in less time than the gear for loading coal could have been rigged andrtaken down. And when the liner's tanks were supplied there was no coal dust to be washed from the decks and cabins. The Alameda’s passengers included the following named: D. E. Allison and wife, C. R. Bailey, B. L. Barr, Miss A. Beguilin, C. E. Bently wi & H. Boardman and wife, C. Boite, Count Bonzi, W. W. Bruner, Mrs. W. W. Brune: two children and maid, H, F. Buckley, J. Burn y. Candy and wife, C. M. Cook: 3. J §. Davis, F. H. Do; ¥ zlaff, M. W. Flournoy M . J. Frye, H. A. Guyer, udmpe Miss G, Harvey, H. H. Heywood, Mrs, M. Heywood, H, W. Holling, Mrs. P, Holly- wood, B. G. Holt, Mrs. Guy Howard, Miss Howard, Mrs. B. C. Judd, Catherine and Pauahi Judd, H, Lenehan, Mrs. J. H. han and J. 'T. McCrosson and servant, [ Miss M. J. McMillan, Miss Manchester, W. P. ordered Spillane | | satlors, | | R, tiss, T. A and Mrs. Pendergast, F. F. Proctor, Sam Reggel and wife, and Miss Richardson, F. A. and Mrs. F. Roeder, M. Rosenberg, M. Senni, R. Sher- W, £nider, Dr. H. Stetson, L. Suydam, F. M. Bwanzy, wife and two e Tetly and U.8. G L J. . Mrs, Wil Hasley and A. Young. son,"H - Bringing the Mongolia's Crew. In order to avold the camplications that ai- tended the trensfer to the liners Siberia and Korea of their Chinese crews, the Pacific Mail Company has arranged for the Mongolia to ship her erew at Salina Cruz, The Oriental firemen, coal-passers, cooks and waliters, who will man the decks, gine-room, kitcheas and saloon, are coming across the Pacific as passengers on the China Commercial Campany’s steamer. Ching Wo, which wili land them at Salina Cruz, where the Mongolfa will call for them on the way here, The Mongolia s expected to arrive re about April 5. — Loses a Man Overboard. The American ship Edward Sewall, Captain Quick, arrived yesterday from Philadelphia after a smart passage of 127 days. She brought 4885 tons of coal. She rounded Cape Horn ffty-four days after leaving Philadelphia and encountered some very heavy weather between | the cape and latitude 50 south in the Pacific. ptain Quick reports that February 2 Thomas Patton, a seaman, fell overboard from the fore upper topsail yard and was drowned. Patton wes & native of Philadelphia, 21 years of age. — Big Freighter Alaskan Arrives. The American-Hawaiian Steamsh(p Com; pany's freighter Alaskan, Captain Nichols, ar- rived yesterdey from New York with about 11,000 toms of general merchendise, part of which is for Seattle and Tacoma. The Alas- kan wax seventy-one days coming from New York. She called at Coronel for coal and dis- (,h.r'ed about 2000 tons of cargo at San Diego. Fine weather was encountered almost tlwoughout the passage. The freighter was obliged to come to anchor several times the Straits of Magellan owing to the thick weather, which usually prevails in that region. Mlthough she arrived before noon it was nearly 1 oclock before the Alaskan went to her berth. Stowaway on the Curacao. | When the steamship Curacao safls from here she will take back to Mexico a l4-year-old stowed uu%' nll Ensenada. The t Captain Paulsen's permission to Fouery €5 Cerials, fusioes prvenen At the latter port he made use of the knowi- edge he hed acquired of the vessel's ,u.,“. the-way corners to hide himselt, has money, no friends and speaks only'lmuh ud (he lu\m‘mllnn uthorities have refused him ——— Collision at Port Said. The Norwegian steamer Alf, from New York MAAluuutwwnw the Oceanic Steamship m ummlhvlmgmhmm skies fa-| She came up in five days | was a brief, as he is| o'clock, but long before" she | had taken on board all the | i i 'l' the city front (Mission-street_wharf) about 25 ! minutes later than at Fort Point; the h!!lhli of tide is lhr same at both nll(": “l-DNl‘hr!AY MARCH 30. AMERICAN CLIPPE | SHIP ED- WARD SEWALL, WHICH AR- o & S e SR RIVED FROM PHILADELPHIA. JTE~—1n the above exposition of the tides | . e s, the early morning- tides are given in the left L —* | hand column and the successive tides of the day in the fourth time column gives the last tide of the day, except when there are but three tides. as | sometimes occurs. The heights given arc in | addition to the soundings of the United States Coast Survey charts, except when a minus (- sign precedes the height, and then the number given Is subtracted from the depth given by the charts. The plane of reference is the mean of the lowergiow wat B e when selected to fill this important position. as hud wide experience as @ caterer both on land and sea. He was held in high esteem | in the service of the Toyo Kisen Kaisha and | later was entrusted with important duties in the Southern Pacific’s commissary department. PR Will Try to Save the Fulton. The steam schooner Dispatch, Captain Levin- son, sailed yesterday for Port Orford to try Time Ball and pull the stranded steamer Fulton from N o ! Branch Hydrographic Office, U. §. N., Mer- the bech. The Fulton went ashore last Feb- chants’ | Exchange, . Sho" Pransiony.’ oo ¥ March 29, 1904, i A e 2 i v The Time Ball on the tower of the i Loses Her Foretopmast. bullding was dropped exactly at noon to-. The schooner Joseph Russ, Captaln Garaki, | % Tipmoon o€ the 120th meridtan, or at 8 | which arrived vesterday, twenty-five days Licutenant, U. 8. N., in charge. | from Santa Rosalia, lost her foretopmast March during a heavy gale. s G R I FRP Movement of Steamers. | Water Front Notes. TO ARRIVE. The Japanese steamer Aki Maru has ar- <5 s Aay rived at Port Hamiiton leaking, as the result | o oomer- | oy of having struck a rock. Wyefield. Nanaimo The rate of relnsurance on the British ship Tacoma Lamorna was reduced yesterday to 85 per cent Coquille as the result of the heavy local play on her Foaoent - Oy Mo 40 | “to arffve.” Portiand & |ar The schooner Advance, which arrived yes- - Humboldt . i terday at Coos Bay, went up from here in San Pedro i Portland & steamboat San Diego & Way Pts. three days. The eteamer Curacao went to Selby’s yi terdgy mumlnx and discharged at the smelter ber ‘cargo of ore and. concentrates, She re- turned to Broadway wharf about 3 o'clock in time, completing the passage in San Pedro Coos Bay & Pt the afternoon. Puget Soun The schooner Shasta, which was being' Humboldt . towed, ran into the ‘ship Falls of Halledale a San Pedro day o two ako and broke one of the salling Nexport & Way Porsl Ape vessel's Diates, 1 s, The cod-fishing boats Uranus, Harriet G Seattlo & Tacoma . or. and Stanley are getting ready for a_cruise. Coos Bay & Pt Orford. Apr. They will all leave within a few days. San Dicgo & Way Pts. Apr. The army transport DIx, Captain Geo | salled early yesterday morning for Capiain Dan Farley, who died on Monday, B S Y PP RS was once one of the best-known masters sail | Jongola ing out of this port. For the last few yeurs sc‘::“‘fiz‘,'hm g S cape. he hag acted as ‘waichman at one of the dry- | Gy Dcrar J h.,, Padto L"‘“:,',"‘,;',‘: £ Pat Sullivan, a longshoreman, residing at | K078 -: ! China & Japan 814 Folsom street, was seriously’ | yes- i Leday At Dealeoxirost whart. T \was steuck bl ; a bucket that baj sed S a1 Peil P Battiet and In adaition to bumerous Abrasions | _oeoamer: | Destnation. | Baiis.| Fier. , sustained internal hurts that may prove fatal. | March 30. | =2 SR sy ATy Coos: Bay dirsct...[10 am|Pier 13 | NEWS OF THE OCEAN, Coos Bay direct...| § pm|Pier 8 2 Centennial. | Seatde & Tacoma.| 3 pm Pler 20 ¥ Centralia.. | Gra: arl K] Pl Matters of Interest to Mariners and e[ e P, o g w| ¥ lizabet > b Shipping Merchants. Blis Pusbia | Foge: Bound Poctalii amibies 5 | The bark Roderick Dhu returns to Hilo with | State of Cal | San Diego & Way.| 0 am Pier 11 general cargo. G. Lindauer | Grays Harbor 4 pm|Pler 10 | ————— = hArfll 1. ) Spokane. umboldt ... .J1:80 piPier 9 | A Cargo for Hilo. 8 Cruz.....| San Pedro & Way.| o am Pler 11 | The steamer Enterprise sailed on Monduy for A 2. | Hilo with an assorted merchandise cargo, val- | Argo. .. Eel River Ports...|4 pmPler 2| ued at £48,422, and including the following: | Alameda. .. | Honolulu 11 am(Pler T | 275 hbls flour,. 112,570 Ibs rice, 1110 bales hay, | Coptie. na & Japan 1 pm/Pier 40 64 ctis wheat, 3703 ctls barley, lun ibs | City Sydnev| N. Y. via Panama. |12 m|Pler 40 | bran, 28,015 1bs middlings, 3633 Ibs sugar, 5427 | G, W. Elder| Astorla & Portland|11 am Pler 24 Ibs ires’: ‘meat, 335 Ibs 4 cs dressed poultry, Al 3 | 126 Ibs 1 cs fresh fish, 8 bxs frozen oysters, Humboldt 9 am|Pler 13 61 ctls corn. 620 pkgs fresh fruits, 61 pkgs San Diego & Way. /11 am/Pler 8 {resn vegetables, 00 pkes potatoes. 71 pices Aprl 4. | onjons, €S CAanns Iw be. E g;‘l‘? =g L"“ m’g* o w;::, lhl c:‘:::; Humbo 3 :30 p/Pler 9 am and bacon, s codfish, 1609 ita. ue-w & \\-y 9 am|Pi | ibe griea Rih 00 gaie’ D:.l:_-’:! 2:; %, whiskey, | Uinatiia. | Puget E:und Porti |11 am bler 3 | L ) Isions, g i { b u")u hll:l'dlum"& &d.’{ | 124 pisgis vim i Coronado. ny-‘ lrbo,r 4 pm Pler 10 3500 1bs salt, ri ruit, 2184 1bs 3 o8 vioo| Astoria & th ¥ cands. 10 vige (able preparations. ok’ 1hs e R Tty i Eler 3¢ | on mineral v w;;elr, fsl' afiwg. Tortilier: mofio Jean's: ‘| PRl g Staama 1 5 siree 20 im) s lime, c8_coal oll, > 10 044 1bs lead, T Newport...{ N. ¥, via Panama/12 m| o .:f”c":. jois bb.:g"'n‘é,hh’x ibs vig dron fm. | Newburs...| Grays Harbor - .. 4 pm|bier 10 | ctured tobaceo, XS soap, 18 S and sundries, 17 pkgs plows and pqrt.'.l, Senator... ‘{!“_'_"_ ound Ports. 11 am|Pler 9 3 rolls leather, 12 colls Tone, 39 s boo shoes, 3 os matehes, 42 pices wagan material 28 pkes dry goods, 10 bbls 12 cs olls, 64 pi Sails. nails and spikes 34 piss paints, 3 hales el e 24 bdls 125 ves and fron, 5 bales twine. Ports..|Apr. 1 ———o—d— slugw-y & Way l;on :’pt 1 y Ports. [Apr. 4 Notice to Mariners, D ] Erer & Wy P e, 8 The following affects the Llu Ot Lights and | J. Dollar..... l’:« & Seward . Fog Signals, Plclfie Coast, Dirigo. Ihnf' & Way Ports. Anr 10 RGO Valdez & Way Ports..|Apr. 10 Siatsop Bplt Gas'} ToDSEs 28, siter No. 8F | G — 2P (List of Beacons ans acific Coast, 1 pare iy T rua. ‘conical buoy: eataplished b Shipping Intelligence. Do%mm ng — 28, 1 Alameda, Dowdell, § days 3 , 19 hours Stmr 50 min. from Homoluly, s, f e b Alaskan, York via Cororiel 31 daye, v hosrs. Stmr Maggie, Corning, 4 hours from Half- moon Bay, l'd':‘m Sewall, Quick, 127 days from Schr Laura Madsen, Cook, 10 days from As- 'QN hmwzm-m Santa The followi lflwfi the Lllt of Beacol Buoys, Paciic Coast, 1004: o 0!\‘00" Tillamook Rock Mooring Buoy, page 42—A white, first-class nun, reported miesing March oy wwnmnm T3 Inner buoy, Grays Harbor Entrance, page a PS. first-class nun, r ed mi incea. Mareh 21 o m“&m"fl'..“ nt, NE. ly E. Nc' 1’. bidecd e (it (inalag sha” "' 3 ¥; t{! uxuumu”n le't K15 ortes of the Lighthouse Board N, Lo CALKaNg, | 8ok Jeonie Gritin, Gibson, 2 hours from Commander, U. i lnmew CLEARED. % . Tuesday, March 20, Moo _and Tide. Stme Pomona, Swanson, Eureka, P C S 8 (o, Stmr a.nlur. Hensen, a-me, Pollard § § mu-' Nevadan, Greene, Honolulu, Williams, s o Fond. | Sun, Unil Ium Coast ‘#.; et o?nug“ -5"{4-'3::.: and low vm occur at BANK STOCKS. 1Am Nu Bk — IL P & A...152% — Anglo-Cal .. 85 Mer Trust.... 223 Bank-of Cal. 420 — |Merch Ex - - | Cal Safe Dp.145 150 [b F Nationl. — — First Natlonl — — sA\'l\ms Banks. Ger 8 & 12210 — [Sav & L So. — 100 s — — |Sec Sav Bk. — 450 100 — |Unlon T Co.. — "— | Honokaa § C | Cal | bence n.r 23, | Celticburn, “for Part m&.l’mm. mwmu—vm. COMMERCIAL NEWS " Continued l-‘rmn hge ’l‘welvc. lus at the end of the past eight months was .00 ax compared with $77.062 @ year a decréase of $47,400. The gross carnings of the North Shere Railtoad for February show a decrease of 062 74, and net decreased $18,56G 89, as com pared ' with the previous - year. The road showed a deficit for the month of $30.643 46 penses and fixed charges. ‘or the two months to February 20 the deficit amounted to $54,842 11, or $32,623 64 more than last year. The Lopez Canyon Oil Company has levied an assessment of 2}, delinquent April 14. STOCK AND BOND EXCHANGE. TUESDAY, March 20—2 p. m. UNITED STATES BONDS. Bid. Ask. | Bid. Ask. 4s qr coup..108 105% is qr cp new. — lxig 4s qr reg...107 107%3s qr coup...100% — MISCELLANEOUS EONDS. IOnk T Co 6s.119% — Doty «oodll T — ETREET RAILROADS. 200 |Presidio 80 | POWDER. 6015 61%] Vigorit SUGAR. - 50c |Kilauea S C.. :2 (Makaweli C. 131/ Onomea £ C. Huten'8 B ¢ 810 | rouhau & ¢ MISCELLANEOUS. Alaska P A l{’ 1Oceanic 8§ Co. 100 [Pac Aux FA. & C Borx.166 Caltfornia Giant 4% Hana P Co. Hawaiian C 3 2% 24 131 — ! A Cal Wine A' 813 MV& MtTm.100 Morning Session. Board— S F Gas & Electric. F Gas & Blectrie. -1 .59 . 50 Contra Costa Water F Gas & Blect Afternoon Session. 10 Ca) Fruit mers’ Assn...... ¢ 20 California Wine Association... 91 54 60 Hawaiian Coml S50 | 140 Hutchinson S P RSTY | 10 Kilauea Sugar Pl . 300 | 75 § F Gas & Electri S92 25 8 F Gas & Electric, s % 00 60 § F Gas & Electric.... S5000 | Streel H 50 Spring Val .a000 | $1.000 § P of C 6s (1906, Beries 105 00 | $2/000 Spring Valley 6 per cent ‘104 75 — - SAILED. Tuesday, March 29. U S stmr Dix, Ankers, Manila * Stmr Eureka, Jessen. Eureka. Stmr Pemona. Swanson, Eureka. Stmr Despaich, Levingon, Port Orford. Stmr Gypsy,- Leland, Santa Cru: Stmr Rainier, Hansen, Seattle. Stmr Maggie Corning, Halfmoon Bay. Bktn Newsboy, Peterson, Portiand. Schr Western Home, Lembke, Bandon, Schr Ida A, Campbell, Point Reyes. TELEGRAPHIC. i POINT LOBOS. March 20, 10 p. m.—Weather cloudy; wind NW,; veloelity mil per hour. SPOKEN. | Mar 11—In lat 4 N, long 32 W, Fr bark| Vincennes, hence Nov 30, for Queenstown. | Mar 25 In lat 30.24 N, long 140.57 W, stmr Siberia, from San Francisco, for China. DOMESTIC PORTS. | SEATTLE—Sailed Mar 29—Stmr Montara, for San ¥i neisco. Salled Mar 20—Stmr Umatilla, for San Fran- | cisco. Arrived Mar 20—Stmr Senator, 8 hence Mar | DON—Arrievd Mar 20—Schr Advance, DemesVitar TACOMA—Salled Mar 20—Br stmr 'nuum-l = ham, for China. C 005 BAY—Arrived Mar 20—Schr Advenl.é hence Mar 26. REDONDO—Arrived Mar 29—Stmr Scotia, from Bowens Landing. FATRHAVEN—Sailed Mar 20—Schr Wllllum Renton, for Ean Francisco. FATOOSH ISLAND - Passed Mar 20 Ship | Charles E. Moody, hence Mar 16, for Ana- | cortes; Nor stmr Hero, hemce Mar 26, Ladysmith; stmr Jegnie, hence Mar 25, Seattte. Passed in Mar 20—8chr Wililam Notting- | bam, from San Pedro. for Port Townsend. Passed out—Stmr Montara, from Seattle, Iur’ San Francisco. Passed In Mar 20—Nor stmr Titania, hence | Mar 26, for Nanaimo; stmr Edith, hence )lnrl for | for | 26, for Tacoma. PORT HARFORD—Sailed Mar 29, 1 p m— | Sumr Santa Cruz, for San Franelsco; 7 p m— Stmr_Bonita, for San Pedro. PORT GAMBLE—Arrived Mar 20—Schr Spo- kane, frer GRAYS HARBOR—!MIE(‘ Mar 29—Schr Ex- pansion, for n Pedro. Arrived Mar 29—Stmr Newburg, hence Mar VENTURA—Arrived Mar 20—Stmr Asun- cion, from Redondo, and sailed for Port Har- ford. ISLAND PORTS, MANILA—Salled Mar 11 — Schr Snow & s Burgess, for Port Townsend. HONOLULL'—Arrived Mar 29—Stmr Siberia, EASTERN PORTS. NEW YORK—Arrived Mar 20—Stmr Yuca- tan, from Colon. FOREIGN PORTS. YOKOH. mA—-Arrlvod Mar 27—Br stmr Athenian, from Vancouver. VALPA RAISO Arrived Mar 14—Ger ship A’}"A"fina'?:"flvu "Mer 13—Stmr San Jose, IP!WICK—Amvld Mar 25—Bark Rene, TN R ROSALTA—Satled Mar 0—Br. ship led ‘Cl’ 9—Sehr Com- ! hence Feb CRUZ—8ail peer, for Port Townsend. DUNNET HEAD—Passed Mar 28—Br ship Mulverton, from Leith, for —, GENOA—Sailed Mar 14—Ger stmr Dende- for San Franeisco. T hUTTSalled” Mer 20—Ger bark Nomid, for C. ‘A ENA—In Feb 25—Br ba: ASidEirih tor Ban Francisco. Bz CALCUTTA—Salled Mar 28-Stmr M. S. Dollar. for Singarore. MELBOUR! N'J—AH’IV.(’ .-I' ”—’! ship Clan Galbraitk, mm aon e Br'shp Gevers o on, P e RPOOL T Dort Mar 18—Br ship, Falk- w!fi“ RS r 16—Br I(-P Calchas, for Japan Arrived Mar 28—Br bark Maelgwyn, from Puget Sound. IOIHVID’D-CI“ lu 11—Ger .-, Nicaria, for Hamburg. Mar 13—Ger A”wai‘rb—hutnlhl Mar 20—8chr Gen. ming, for Francisco. 0 BT PH . Arrived ved Mar Z—Fr berk La hence Oct mfl-u"—‘rfl‘fl ml' Mar 20— Br_ship Osborne, Rosalia. B Tt By e Wastale, ufi'f? 21, for London, ., s SEA—Safled Mar 26—Br ship Dum. HOHCIKONO—AH'NH Mar 26—Stmr China, pence Feb 27 OCEAN STEAMERS. YORK—Arrived Mar 20—St: Pala- 1o o Navies: s UTH- Ilr from New York. MPTQN—Sailed Star” .—lt-a for rrived prior to Mar e via. Honoturs, for Ross estate. Bid Ask, 100 Cal Cot Miis 86 Nev Nat Bk. N C Jockey C1. 99 R R Co Cal Powder.125 N Cal P C Cal Ship Co. 15 Oak Bk Sav CAlTI & T — Oak T Con Cen Bk. Oak Lfl’l TOOF Hall A Chutes :) 1 Orpheum Co. 1. City & C Bk — {Pac S Tel - Bast Dynm:130 350 | bacat Fapa - DpntPwd pfd 75 - 18 F Drydock Oh -— o cong 40 SF&SJ Coal. 20 > FN Bk, Qak 120 — |8 J Wat Co 108 Flscher Thtr 11 1%/80 & MTsbt 155 Froch-A Bk.105 - Swiss- A Bk 113 - Gas Con A. 19% 21 | Truck EI 13 Hon P Co. 11y - UR InC - Lon& SF Bk 60 | Do com [ - Morning Session Board— $7.000 Unfted R R of 8 ¥ 4 per cent.. S0 00 Teot— $5,000 U nllrd R R of F T cent S0 00 California Stockand Oil Exchange Ofl Stocks— 14 Bid Asked 45 Aima 3 T J 04 R 58 — Apollo . Do b .... Wi S a s.vvuus!s.uu Associated Trust Cert = Hon R T 0s.106%, 6s. 15 | Aztec X L A Elee 5s. — ribou 260 L Y, 5s.113% - ntral Puint Con L Ce — 108% fcago Crude 2 s remont . 08% 105 | Four z, & 1% Fulton 6 Glant Do lcm 5s. — % | Hanford MV& MtTSe.104 — | Home 180 i Nl‘{)}::'t cu‘Jlo:‘\:lms stmpd.. N‘ o Tmperial 18 00 B — | Independer.ce 1 1 N P CR 5s.103 105 | Junction 135 % N C Ry s, — — — | Kemn 5 00 N CPC b9 :m';z Lion o NSRR 5. — 100 Monarch of Avizona k1 O G L&H 5s.106 108 " | Monte Cristo b %0 O W gtd 5s. — Oceidental of W Va .. 10 12 WATER STOC KS Ot City Petroleum 36 Contra Costa 37% 40 Peeriess 14 00 Marin Co. 62 Reed Crude Senater A Sovereign @ Cent L & P. 3 nz 26 Mutual E L. sz 9% :f,i;,"f:,‘,,, *% Pac L C Thirty-three 800 | Toltee 4 Twenty-eight West Shore Miscellaneous Abby Land & Improvement Fischer's Theater Northern Cal Power SALES. Morning 500 Monte Cristo Oil . ™4 400 Home Ofl 150 500 Occidental O ” Afterncon Session. 1600 Home Of1, s 147% 300 Home O8 150 100 Sterling, s 30 2 50 Mining Stocks. SAN. FRANCISCO STOCK EXCHANGE Following were the sales on the San Frane cisco Stock and Exchange Board yesterday: Morning Se 100 Andes 19| 100 Savage ...... [ t & Belch.2 60 10¢ L aledonia , ...1 46| 200 Sex Belc 1 m o 90 200 Sterra Nev it ould & Cur. 100 Unton Con “ Mexican 100 Union Con 8 29 Cphir 7 Afternoon Session. 160 Andes 49| 700 Potosi ....... 4 100 Belcher . 26, 0 Savage ad 200 500 Seg Belcher... 10 50 100 Sterra Nev e 100 0 Stiver Hil 50 460 Mexican %6 Union Con 87 100 Occidental 99 200 Union Con 58 300 Ophir PACT STC EXCHANGE. Following were the sales on the Pacifio Stock Exchange yesterday: Morning Session p Beleher 29| 100 Ophir . ) Caledonia 500 Ophir . 0 Caledonia 200 Sierra { 200 Stiver 500 Mexican | 109 Union 200 Mexican %0 Union Con .. %9 400 Mextcan 100 Utah b oan Session b 106 Mexican hir age } Seg Belcher. . . 0 Sterra Nev Slerra Nev 19 Union Con 1% Cerfide 800 Hale & 20 Mexican . - sT TONOPAH MI) Following were the sal cises XCHANGE. o and Tonopah Mining Exc Morning Session. 500 Cent Eureka 200 Evelyn 0 MacNama 0 Ton Midway.. Afterncon Sessiom 331 200 Mont 5 Ton 100 Ton Midway.. 38 )0 Ton Midway.. 35 QUOTATIONS. . March 20—4 p. m. Bld.Ask. 08 Justice. ...... 03 c! 2 2 607 Mexican 22 10 Occidental £ ‘1 25 1 30| Ophir %5 Chatienge Con 34 Overma: 28 | Chollar 21| Potosi 26 Confiderce . L] 87 10 b 58 East Sterra s 10 Eureka Com.. — - 04 chequer .. 15 18/Union Con .. 87 id & Cur. 43 44/ Utah . 19 Hale & Norc. 85 92 Yellow Jacket 32 Julia . .. 03 00 TONOPAH MINES. Bid. Ask. Colehan . — 15| Rescue Esperanza —. 01/Ton Belm: Gold Anchor. 15° —{Ton & C: Hannapah — 10{Ton Exten MacNamara "l 'zx Tnn of Nev..T '.1?‘3 o FLET - ————— PARTICULARLY PLEASING PROGRAMME IS ARRANGED Beautiful Office of Tenebrae Will Be Rendered This Evening at Old St. Mary’s Charch. A particularly fine musical pro- gramme has been arranged for ser- vices in old 8t. Mary's Church for to- night and the evenings of Holy Thurs- day and Good Friday. A part of the Tenebrae will be sung at each service. This beautiful office signifies the grief of the Catholic ehurch at the death of the Savior and commemo- rates the last events in his earthly life. After the singing portions of the psalms and the lamentations of Jere- mias over the destruction of Jerusalem will be chanted in Gregorian tones. The last antiphon, “Christ Was Made Obedient for Us Unto Death,” will also be made a part of the service. This programme is rendered at the present time in response to Pope Plus” last allocution in regard to sacred music. - Father Henry Wyman will preach to-night on a pertinent subject. Father Stark will preach to-mérrow evening on “The Holy Eucharist” and Father Carey will preach Friday evening on ‘““The Passion.” This programme was stwr | prepared under the direction of Father Carey. ——————— Ross Property to Be Sold. Consent to the partition of prop- erty on Gough street, near MecAllis- ter, which has been in the possession of Harriet Babson, was given by Miss Babson yesterday by stipulation in Judge Kerrigan's court and A. J. Rich was appointed referee. The action is the result of a suit in partition brought by Ethel Ross, the young girl who by a recent decision of the Su- preme Court was declared to be the owner of a one-third interest in the estate of the late Joseph Ross. The property in question is part of the