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THE N FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1904 FORESTERS O NEW Companions of ACT \ncient Or- der Discuss Many Amend- | ‘me vn~ to 1114- 1nu~muumll {ETAR \‘Hll‘ ]"]h'”'l' -Oflicers and Delegates Ten- | der Reception and Golden Gate Hall the were ap- nions Mur- ashington f Wunderlic n state show ending Janu- Pitcairn Island Overdue. Steward Hurt. £ the pilot Pilot-Boat bs broken Saturday WOMEN SAVED FROM OPERATIONS. | MRS. STELLA CERNY, | Np. 2264 Bush St, San Prancisco. CERNY SAYS: “After years of suf- nd Arugging and_after two unsuccess- stions, 1 bave been promptly y cured by the Electro-Chemic nt &t & very reasonable exp 1t ne great pleasure 1o recommend this | L - W ful pew treatment to suffering am sure that there is mo treat- world equal to it for the serious | cases of our wex.” MRE. STELLA CERNY, Bush st., San Prancisco gne 2264 | Miss Brad ELECTRO-CHEMIC SPECIALTIES: | Electro-Chemistry cures guickly, pain- lessly and chesply Cancers, Tumors, 0ld | TUicers, Eczema, Rheumatism, Neuraigia, ' * Locomotor Ataxia, Paralysis, Deafness, Head Noises, Insomuiz, Goitre, Bright's Diseake, Disbetes. Dyspepsia. Piles, all ‘Diseases of the Stomach. Liver, Kidneys, Eladder and Bowels. all Nervous Diseases ‘and Special Diseases of Men and Women. Free examination. diaguosis, advice and trial trestment. ‘ EOME TREATMENT—Patients are ‘ toms, vromptly forwarded for home examina- | tion and treatment, free of charge. ELECTRO-GHEMIC INSTITUTE. 118 GRANT AVE. Cor. Post St. | . SAN FRANCISCO. | Officy, howrs—% 5. m. to 6 p. m. and 7 to 8§ | 8 Sundays—10 &. m. to 1 p. m. | and gentlemen. p. m. dally Separate aparuments for ladles | Alex Brown, C. | | R. M. Simpson, H. F. Butcher, BRINGS MANY PROMINENT COLONIALS FROM AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND '‘Oceanic Steamship Company’s Liner Sonoma Arrives Bright and Early From the Antipodes With More Than Three Hundred Passengers and Large Cargo eamship Company’s ain Herriman, ay from the Antip- She brought more ar- . ¢ and a full rgo. ssengers were many Fine weather \ | throughout the passage, ay night at a festive cele- | i llowing dinner resolutions re passed thanking Captain Herri- | urser Hodson for the had given the good big army of | der their care. P Redwood of Wellington, | accompanied by Dean Smythe, arrived 8o here in a Green, H. E n, promin Zealand, we Among those > men of on the liner. i on the Sonoma were many bound for t St. Louis Expo- Bert Levy, an artist-writer, in the Australian journael- sition. prominent stic world and a passenger on the So- ma, is g e eXpos ing to St jon nd | Louis to write up llustrate his arti- | pumps on cles for a syndicate of Australian news- papers A small but important member of the | company that arrived on the Sonoma a E. the champion light- eight jocke of the Antipodes. In| Australia every man and boy is a spor and to most of the ¢ on the Sonoma ‘““Teddy” Turner was | the liner's star passenger. He rides at ninety-four pounds, and although he is | ars of age has never weighed more | than ninety-eight pounds. He is on his way to London, few races in the Eastern States. Peter Hughes, wh has been associated with J. C. William- son, Australia’s theatrical king, was a passenger on the Sonoma. He is a New Yorker by birth and inclination, and is | going East to freshen up his ideas of 3roadway. Frank Coffee, a Sydney publisher, was another passenger. Mr. Coffee is accompanied by his wife and | is going to visit Kentucky, where he was born. Whil¢ the Sonoma was at Sydney John Hopkins, a sailor, slipped -while climbing over a working winch. leg was caught in the eccentrics and 50 injured that the limb had to be am- putated. Hopkins had been on the So- noma for two years and was popular with his shipmat but expects to ride a | 0 for twenty years | | | His | He helped to take | a cargo of horses to South~Africa frorf | New Orleans and fought on the British | side during the latter part of the Boer | war. He accompanied the mustered out | colonial troops to Sydney and there first joined the Sonoma. The Sonoma’s passengers included the following named: From Sydney —M. Ddwning, Mrs. Jane Btitt, | Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Broadb T. Robert- | son, E. T. Turner. M Catvert o Mackel, Miss G. W. S, Mr apd Mrs. Hughes, Captain and Mrs. Miss' McKellar, Commeford, Bert Levy, Miss O'Brien, Mr. and Mrs. Sutton, Mr. and Mrs | William Seagrave, Miss Belson, Mr. and Mrs E. W. Farpsworth, F. A. McFariand, Mrs. Howatson, R. W. Duryea, F. apd Mrs.’ Frank Coffee, Pilis, Miss Howatson, Mrs. T. C. Calvert, Mr. V. Green, J. H. Cock, Duncan, R. L. Henaby, Mr. and Mrs, J. M. Smith, G. E. Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. ¥. A. Mayer, Miss Osborne, G P. Chapman. !¥. M. Burt and nurse, J. A. Duthil, John Wyllle, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Goodson, Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Mackie, E. H. Littiejohn, Miss Wallace, Miss , Mrs. Risley, Dean Smythe, William Franzen, E. D. Benjamin, Dr. §. A. Gibbs, Thomas Keenan, M. Denton, Dr. A. A. Hudson, Miss Bimpson, Miss Morton, H. E. Tyser, E._S. Watt, A. L. Unthank, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Jpflelon Arch- bishop Redwood, Lester Harrl and Mrs Jehn Duncan, Mrs. Hellaby, Mr. Md Mrs. A J. Stonewigg. and Mrs. G. G. Holme: Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Legg, N. 8 L. H. Myers, Mrs. A. Foster, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Duncan, John, Hellaby, John Colquhoun, J. J. Bourke, Miss Holmes, F. Harraway, Mre. and Miss Minogue, Mr. and Mre. ¥. H. Shanks and son, H L Iker. From ago Pago—Fritz Krone, 0. Andres, R. Williams, A. Haidlen. ¥From Honolulu—Miss Cralg, Mre. Hadley, A. Morrison, P. Ehlers, J. Michaels, Mrs. Dulot, Mrs. Parker, Mrs. C. 8. Martin and infant, Mr. Moffit, Miss Larned, F. Wissbrun, Mr. 3 o % ] Mrs. Ross and infant, Mr. . Miss Larned, ¥. Bissborne, R. Hutton, Kennedy, G. F. Wright, J. Gomes, Mr. and Mrs. L. E, Damon, Miss rhill, Mrs. C. A Davies, Mrs. Water- house, Miss Heitman, G. C. Munroe, Mrs. A. N. Castle, Miss Castle, A. K. Jomes, J. W. .Hlu slur'efm R ‘W. Shingl Mr. BO“UBI]?’ | and Mrs. John Coilins. From Auckland—&. and Mrs. A D. Clalr Mal Miss Betheil, Raising Barge Melrose a Record. When the men who make a specialty of raie- m; sunken ships saw the big coal barge Mel- rose last Thursday morning, full of water and with the fide washing over her decks. they agreed that the barge's career was over and that raising her would be an impossibility. Her keel was imbedded in the mud and her open seams seemed to preclude all possibility of pumping out the water. The Spreckels Tow. boat Company is nmmna with a wrecking plant, wuut wuu..- Manning udeflul to the regular | BARGE MELROSE WHICH COAL SAN. | K AND WAS RAISED IN JRD TIME. | — — % wreckers pronounced was impossible. Diver h was sent » piace canvas patches where the leal greatest, and three big = Alert and Relief were taken to the sce The Melrose was on_ the mud with twenty feet of water in her hold at 8 ock Thursday morning. By 2:40 on Satur- the patching was complete and the pumps weré started. Within an hour and twenty min- utes the stevedores were able to commence coal out of her. They worked under rection of Manager Fred Mills of the Western ¥ y and by 8 o'clock had taken out 440 1 coal. The Melrose was x hours after the begin- beyond the need for ex- the worse for her eub- caulking is none - PR OF THE OCEAN. Matters of Interest to Mariners and Shipping Merchants. artered for lum- at 3 from e or Adelaide at 31s urne 325 6d, or Fremantle h_chartered prior to arrival The bark len loads coal here for Port . Alaska, and the bark Annie Johnson returns to Honolulu with general cargo, The French bark Marguerite Dollfus (on Puget Sound) proceeds to Newcastle in ballast. Lt Wheat for Europe. The Itallan ship Caterina Accame cleared yesterday for Queenstown, f 5 tls wheat with 5 20,000 £t lumber as a valued Exports for British Columbia. The steumer City of Puebla sailed on Satur- day for Victoria with an assorted merchandise cargo consigned to the port of destination and other British Columbian ports, valued at $23,- and including the following: 499 pi fresh fruits, 56 pkge fresh vegetables, 162 pkgs onions, 45.660 lbs malt, 46,875 Ibs dried fruit, 998 1bs cheese, $20 pkgs paste, 93 pkgs tabie prev ons, cs canned goods, 15,626 1bs coffee, 1590 Tbs meals, G357 Ibs beans, 14 bbls vinegar, 193 gals wine, 2558 Ibs lar chocolate, 6 vkgs groceries and provi pkes drugs, 7 pkgs electrical suppli leather, 86 pkgs machinery, 2000 Ib lead, 20 bxs sozp, 10 pkes acid, 12 cs arms and ammu- nition, 24,251 1bs bluestone, 610 tins matches, 67 pkgs paper, 62 pkgs paints and ofls, 56 boiler tubes, 553 lbs leal tobacco, 67,732 lbs | bone black, 56 bdls 31 pes steel, 17 pes iron, 200 rolls roofing. In addition to the foregoing the steamer carried 41,475 1Ibs dried fruft, valued at $1904, en route to Winnipeg, Mani- toba. e e The Alameda’s Cargo. The steamer Alameda salled on Saturday for Honolulu with a general merchandise cargo valued at $121,018 and including the following: 5 1bs flour, 46,620 lbs malt, 25,830 Ibs lard, 9223 1bs buiter, 5003 Ibs beans, €349 1bs 13 cs bread, 13,600 lbs codfish, 13 mwheat, 4541 ibs che 544 1bs candy, 258 ibs 3 cs chooola cs eggs, 1528 pkgs fresh fruits, 180 pkgs Py vegetables, 661 pkgs potatoes, 101 pkgs onlons, 2303 lbs fresh fish, a00 1bs 9 dressed 6035 gals wine, 1260 42 75 kale 8 cs liquors, 7 cs Ein, 3 casks ginger ale, 27 cs champagne, 9 cs mineral water, 16 pkgs oysters, 4752 lbs sugar, 600 Ibs coffee, 102 pkgs druge and sundries, 1954 Ibs glucose, 5 cs honey, 9203 lbs dried fish, 300 groceries and provisions, 768 cc canned lrun 10 pkgs table m o 20 pkgs manufactured work, 55 pkgs paint: 11 cs arms -na ammunition, 62 es s brooms, 325 boiler coils cordage, 9 pkee eléotrical goods, ts, 66 bdls 27 pos iron, 50 bdls 70 pes k. 1201 cs jars, ® pkgs leather, 32,776 rt lumber, 32 pkgs machinery, 76 cs matches, 25 kegs maile, 1004 gals 18cs oils, 205 pked paper, 19 balés paper bags, 1866 pes pipe, pkgs rubber goods, 52 pkgs soap, 15 pkgs ship Chandlery, 81 pkes saddiery, 280 Tba shot, 30 Pkes tar, 16 bales twine, 27 pkgs wire, 40 D material, 8815 Ibs Duts, 46 bbis plckied salmon, 1070 Ibs raisins. — . Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. Monday, May 186. U 8§ stmr Sherman, Grugulere, 31 days 15 hours 20 min from Manila, via Nagasaki 23 days 8 hours and 28 min, and Honolulu 8 days 1 hour and 8 min, Stmr Sonoma, Herriman, 20 days 8 hours 6 from Sydney, via Honolulu 5 days 13 ours and 15 min. P tmr Umatills, Patterson, 58 hours from Victoria_and Puget Sound ports. Stmr . A. Kilburn, Jahnsen, 9 hours from Port Rodgers. Stmr Whitesboro, Olsen, 68 hours from Port Los Angeles. sunr.shm- Hansen, 39 hours 5150 lbs fresh meat, poult from San Pedro. Stmr Gipsy, Lre"l-nd 40 hours from Monte- Stmr Portland, Hotkens, 6 uy- from Se- attle, via Ladysmith 3 days 21 hours. Stmr North Fork, Nelson, 23 hours from Cu- reka. o3 from San Diego and way ports. Stmr Peru, Mackinnon, and way ports. mr Nome City Portland, 26 days from Pan- Daniels, 60 hours from via Astoria 53 hours. r bark Belen, Boridrot, Swansea, via Brest 139 days. Bark Carrollton, castle, Aus Schr Sequola, dad. Schr Ida A, Reyes. Schr_ Willlam trom 145 days from Hutman, 85 days from Navi- Campbell, 8 hours from Point 99 3owden, Newcastle, Aus. cL Peterson, days ARED. Monday, May Portland; 18. Stmr Whittier, Union ot Co. Stmr Pomona, Swansen, Eureka; P CS S Stmr Columbia, Doran, Astoria; O R k Ital ship Caterina Accame, Rocea, Queens- town:; J. J. Moore & Co. Schr Corintpian, Lutjens, c el Lutjens. Dickson, Unalaska; SAILED. Monday, May 16. U 8 stmr Marblehead, Phelps, Honolulu, U 8 stmr Concord, Perkins, Honolulu, Stmr Whiteshoro, ‘Olsen, Mendoeino, Stmr Shasta, Hansen, Bellingham. Stmr Pomona, Swansen, Sureka. Etmr Whittier, Dickson, Portland. Ship Henry Falling, Graham, Puget Sound. Sehir Ruth E. Godfrey, Johnson, Ballard. Tug Dauntless, Shea, Port Rodgers. TELEGRAPHIC. POINT LOBOS, May 16, 10 p. m—wuthe'r hazy; wind west, velocity 8 miles per hour. SPOKEN. Apr 28—1In lat 1 N, long 31 W, Fr bark MacMahon, hence Ji for Queenstown. May 1—In lat 16 long 25 W, Ger bark N, Pallas, from Hamburg, for Santa Rosalia. May 1—In lat 15 N, long 26 W, Br lhlp Poltalloch, from Antwerp, for San Franclsco, MEMORANDUM. Per stmr fonoma—May 15, midnight, passed | transport, probably U S stmr Sherman, from Manila, for San Franc.sco. DOMESTIC PORTS, COOS BAY—Salled May 15—Stmr Signal, for San Francisco; schr Esther Buhne, 'for San Francisco. . Adn'l\'ed May 16—Stmr Alliance, ang SOUTH BEND—Arrived May 15—Bktn Ar- ago, hence May 3; schr Alumna, from Hono- | lulu; schr Advent, hence Apr 80. Arrived May 16—Stmr Sequoia, hence May 12. BANDON—Arrived May 16—Schr Home, hence Apr 30. SANTA BARBARA—Arrived May 15—Stmr State of California, and salled for San Fran. cisco. Safled May 16—Stmr Santa Rosa, Diego. PORT GAMBLE—Arrived May 16—Br bark Ivanhoe, from Port Townsend; Br ship Simila, from Port Blakeley, PORTLAND—Stmr Hotkens, 6 days from Seattle, via Ladysmith 8 days 21 hours, TATOOSH—Passed in May 16—Schr Wat- son A, West, from Grays Harbor, for Port Townsend. Passed out—Bktn Lahaina, from Port Blakeley, for San Diego. RFDONDO—-Arrived May 16—Stmr George Loomis, hence May 1 Safled May 16—Stmr George Loomis, for San Francisco. BELLINGHAM —Sailed May 16—Ger stmr Hermonthis, for San Francisco, SEATTLE—Sailed May 16—sStmr Seattlc for Skagway. EUREKA—Arrived May 15—Stmr Bureka, hence May 13; echr Bertha Dolbeer, from San | Diego. May 16—Stmr San Pedro, hence May 14; stmr Phoenix, hence May 14. Safled May 15—8chr Lottie Carson, for San Diego: stmr Bureka, for San Franeisco, Safled May 16—Stmr Spokane, for San Fran- ctsco. Western for San| City . of ASTORIA—Arrived May 16—Stmr Asuncion, | hence May 13. Failed May 16—8tmr Despatch, for San Fran- clsco PORT LUDLOW—Arrived May 16—Br ship Pass of Leny, from Papama. SAN PEDRO—Sailed May 16—Schr Balboa, for Port Blnkeley; stmr laqua, for San Fran- clsco, PORT HARFORD—Sailed May 16—Stmr Bo- nita, for San Pedro. CRATS HARBOR—Sailed May 15—Schrs Charles R. Wilson and Henry Wilson, for San Francisco; schr Watson A. West, for Puget May 16— Schr A. M. Baxter, hence May 6; schr J. M. Weatherwax, hence May 4; schr Expansion, from San Pedro; stmr G. C. Kindauer, hence May 12; stmr Newburg, hence May 12. ISLAND PORTS. HONOLULU—Arrived May 16—U § stmr Adams, hence Apr 24. EAHULUL. Safled May 14—Stmr Nevadan, for San Francisco. EASTERN PORTE. PHILADELPHIA—Arrived Oregonian, from Honolulu. FOREIGN PORTS. HIOGO—Arrived Apr 30—Ger stmr Nicome- dia, from Hongkong, for Oregon. HARWICH--Arrived Moy 13—Fr bark Ba- bin cn.v-y- hence Jan 5. YOKOHAMA—Arrived prior May 14—Br stmr Cllvcfln., from Hongkong, for Oregon; Br stmr Jesserlc, from New York. hence stmr Gaelic, Apr 26, POOL—In port May 4—Fr bark Gen- eral Daidberbe, for ——. GLASGOW—Satled May 14—Fr bark Bidart, for Sen Francisco. LEITH—Arrived May 15—Fr bark La Tour de Auvergne, from Falmouth. NEWCASTLE, AUS.—Salled Apr 21—Ship Great Admiral, for Honolulu. Abr 22-Br ship Bracadale, for San Francieco; Br bark Inver- cauld, for San Francleco: bhin Kohala, for Honolulu; Ger bark k. for San Fran- cisco. Arrived Apr 9—Br ship Lady Wentworth, hence Feb 25. SYDNEY—In port Apr 22—Br ship Arracan, 14—Stmr for San via Newcastle, Aus.; Br ship Eskasoni, for San Diego, via Ncwfll(l'. Aus. ADELAIDE—Arrived Apr 18—Ger bark Gertrude, from Guaymas. CALLAO—Arrived I." 16—Br bark Lurlei, from Port Stanley. TAKU—Arrived 14—Bktn Georgina, HONGKONG—Arrived May 16—8tmr Korea, hence Apr 16. May Stmr State & California, Thorons, 42 hours | mr Bureka, Jessen, 24 hours from Eureka. | Gordon, 114 days from New. | from Port- | SOUTH OPPOSES [NTERFERENCE New Governor of the State of Lounisiana Speaks of the Solution of Race Question INAUGURATION ADDRESS DR Negro Must Occupy His Special Sphere and Be | Natisfied With Proteetion ———— BATON ROUGE, La., May 16—In the presence of a muiltitude gathered in the grounds of the State Capitol to- day, Newton C. Blanchard was inaug- urated as Governor. In hi8 inaugural address Governor Blanchard said: ““Mob law in contravention and de- filance of law will not be tolerated. | Lynchings will not be permitted under any circumstances. The negro is here. He is a man and a citizen. He is use- ful and valuable in his sphere. Within that sphere he must be guaranteed the equal protection of the law and his education and proper lines—mainly agricultural and industrial—is at once protected in his right to live peace- ably and quietly, in his right to labor and enjoy the fruits of his labor. He must be encouraged to industry and taught habits of thrift. “No approach toward social equality or social recognition will be ever ioler- ated in Louisiana. Separate schools, arate places of entertainment will be en- forced. rity must be preserved. But there is room enough in this broad southland, with proper lines of limitation and de- marcation, for the two races to live on terms of mutual trust, mutual help, good understanding and concord. The , South asserts its ability to handle and solve the negro questioneon humani- tarian lines—those of justice and of right. We brook no interference from without.” [ MONTEVIDEO—Arrived Apr 20—Br stmr Ellerfe, from Caleta Buena. | OCEAN STEAMERS. NEW YORK—Arrived May 16—Stmr Bovic, from Liverpool; stmr dam; stmr Zeeland, from Antwerp. PLYMOUTH—Sailed May 16—Stmr Pretoria, from New York. COPENHAGEN—Arrived May Island, from New York. HAVRE—Arrived May 18—Stmr La Gas- York. rrived May 16—Stmr Barba- 1 Yorl | S oo I 16—Stmr R. Dollar. | 17 | Arizonan. 17 | Wellington ... Oyster Harbor 17 . Barbara. ... Seattle & Olympia ..... May 17 | Pomo. .. - Point Arena & Albion..|{May 17 Spokane. Humboldt Titania. Nanaimo laqua. San Pedroe. ;- San Juan New York via Panama |May Centennial Seattle & Tacoma . Alliance Portland & Way i | | Eel River Portland & Astoria .... May -|Coos Bay & Pt Orford |May Mendocino & Pt. Arena. May San Diego & Grays Harbor |Portland & Astoria. | Humboldt - Newport & Way Ports. xM‘Y Puget Sound Ports . Humboldt ... | Grays Harbor . . San Diego & Way Pts.|May |San Pedro & Way Poris.| May | “Steamer. l 110 -mer 2 24 May 17. Los Angeles Ports. May 18. ¥ Astoria & Portland 11 am/Pier a duty and a necessity. He must be | separate churches, separate cars, sep- | Racial distinction and integ- | Ryndam, from Rotter- | 15 FACES DANGER T0 SAVE LIFE Railroad Agent Wounded by Robber Succored by Brave Wife of Section Foreman WIRES THE NEWS AHEAD !Woman Relieves Injured | Man and Her Work Re- sults in Arrest of Suspect ST. PAUL, Minn.,, May 16.—Reports offices from division headquarters in the West tell how Mrs. A. J. Barlow, | wife of a section foreman in the State | of Washington, saved the life of a tel- egraph operator, who was shot by | bandit, and then telegraphed the news | ture of the outlaw. C. J. Ingraham, station agent at Snoqualamie, Wash., was about to lock up the safe and leave the office for the night, when a bandit thrust a | heavy revolver through a pane of glass | and shot him. He then entered and de- | manded Ingraham’'s keys, but the | agent refused to deliver them. The bandit shot him again and then rifled the safe and money drawers and es- caped, leaving the agent lying in a pool of blood on the floor desperately ‘wounded. Mrs. Barlow, wife of the section fore- man, heard the shots, and, although alone and unarmed, rushed from the section-house to the station, and, instantly realizing that Ingraham must have medical aid, sat down at the telegraph key and sent an account | | recelved here at the Northern Pacific | a | to headquarters, resulting in the cap- | 0 | | | of the shooting to an adjacent station | ! and to division headquarters. She then carried the wounded man to a bench, and, tearing her skirt into bandages, dressed his wounds. When help came she had stopped the blood and rendered {all the skill first aid could have ac- complished. Ingraham was put under | | a surgeon’s care and then sent to a hospital. The man under arrest has been | identified as one Bridges, and is on i his way to jail at Seattle. b “ the charts. The plane of reference is the mean | of the lower low waters. 1 e | Time Ball. { Branch Hydrographic Office, U. 8. N., Mer- | chants’ Bxchange, San Francisco, Cal., | May 16, 1904 The Time Ball on the tower of the Ferry bullding was dropped exactly at noon to-day— L e. at noon of the 120th meridian. or st 8 [r. . Greenwich tim C. BURNETT, Dieutenamt, U8 in charge. ———— Peru Brings Many Passengers. The Pacific Mail Steamship Company’s liner Peru, which arrived yesterday from Panama, was detained sixteen days at the isthmus by the gtrike and as a consequence gathered an unustally large number of passengers. She brought 56 people in the cabin and 43 In the steerage. Most of the passengers were from New York, and among them were many tour- st The Peru brought 1874 tons of cargo and treasure valued at $45.468. - Alfred A. Winslow, United States Consul General at Guatemala and John Jenkins, Con- sul to Salvador, came up on the Peru. The Peru's passengers included the following named: E. Bamberg, Carlos Vierra, G. E. Fuller and wife, H. E. Reeves, Miss N. Greenlan, Stanley Greenland, T. Hart and wife, E. Workman, G. Wendling, A. Latchell and ‘wife, R, C. Rogers, Miss Anita Rogers, Josephine P. Lecouvreur Arthur Hind, W. Brock, Otto Kohepace, Ph“lv Rourke, Miss Gladys Rourk A. S. Scott and wife, C. L. Nicoll, Mrs. E. Kruppers and family, T. A. Helen, Henry Lincoln, E. E. Mordaunt, G. A. Williams, Mrs. A. Williams and family, Mrs. Mary Hildebrand, Julius Hlldehr‘nd. Mrs. Mary Eggers, Mrs. E.’ Schaub, Mata, Um- Derio Math A Mata. J, Jemkina, ‘A. E. Wins- low, Mrs, A. Winslow, Mrs. M. Perrin, Mey Con'terez, H. R. Roberts, L. C. Queen, E. D. Sachs, Mrs. K. Wettig, Leo Bolanard, James Frier, Hans Taak. o AP PLEN T Passengers Land From Serapis. | The Kosmos liner Serapls, which arrived from Hamburg Sunday night too late for quarantine inspection, was ordered to Angel Isiang yesterday for fumigation. The cabin passengers were brought from the limer om the tug Alert and landed at Union-street | wharf. The Serapis brought twenty-six cabin | and five steerage passengers In addition to a | large cargo. Among the passengers was Carlos { E. Wessel, who has been commissioned by the Chilean Government to visit the St. Louls Fuir and gather such ideas from the exhibits as be thinks might prove of value to Chile. Miss Lyda Leidb also came up from Chile on the Humboldt 10 am|Pier 2 Serapis. She has been visiting her brother-in- e H— ;3 law, Professor Wright of the Lick Observatory Nome via 5 pm|Pler 16 | astronomical exvedition. {Humbolat ... 9 am/Pler 2| s g T May 19. verdue Carrollton Arrives. Los Angeles Ports.|12 m|Pier :’ Cbgiss ot San Pedro & 1 The schooner William Bowden and the over- 9 | due bark Carrollton arrived yesterday from 40 Newcastle, Australia. Fifteen per cent re- 11 insurance was paid on the Carroliton, which State of Cal./Sun Diego & Way.| 9 amiPler 1] | was 113 days making the trip. =The Bawden. | {Pt. Arena & Alblon| 6 pm|Pler 2 | whose voyage occupied ninety-nine days, was [Evreka & Coos Bay 16 | gelayed by light winds. She reached port 1 | 20. ahead of the Carrollton, Which came into May 20. Los Angeles Ports. Puget Sound Ports. | Chehalis. | Arcata | Argo wp’?‘o‘-»w SELEEERE N 2 | ] o p..,.,,..k Ndme & St.Michael| May 23, | Pomeoa. 1:30 p| 9 am/Pler 11 G \V Elder Astoria & Por(llnd 11 am|Pler 24 § pm|Pler 20 9 am Pler 11 5 pmimer 20 Sequola..... Willapa Harbor....[12 m!Pler 20 i Hermonmw Hamburg & Way. | 2 pm|Pler 18 .../ Puget Sound Ports./11 am Pier 9 Sonoma.... .s!ydney Way Pts.| 2 pm/Pler 7 - FROM SEATTLE. For. City Beattle. Cottage City. Farallon. . Sun, Moon and Tide. United States Coast and Geodetic Survey— Height of High and Low Waters T ors dootats entrance to San_ Francisco Bay. Published by official authority of the ntendent. igh and low waters occur at the same at TUESDAY, MAY 17. of tide is L 1321 2. 17 z i3 g EHEY 20 30| 4. = q3 8 = s & 23 o 14 212 1. NOTE—In the l.bove exposition of the tides the early morning tides are given in the left hand column ind the ve tides of the Pler 9 | collision with the anchored schoomer when rounding to off Angel Island. Neither boat was seriously damaged. Ligl the cause of the Carrofiton’s slow salling. You can learn all about the city— all its points of interest—from the San Francisco Official Street Railway Directory Up-to-date information. Price 50e. Get a Velt Pocke( )(lp of the i’i& \ | . 75¢. 81.00 Clllfor‘nln Sollvunlr Pllyln‘ Cards, per pack -.81.00 Mail orders promptly nll.d_ THAT MAN PITTS F. W. PITTS, The Stationer, 1008 MARKET ST., Above Powell. ht winds were | | ADVERTISEMENTS. UCTIO EXTRAORDINARY CREDIT SALE HIBERNIA BANK We will offer a choice list of Investment, Residence and Un- improved Properties At our salesroom Monday, May 23rd, 1904 at 12 o’clock noon Terms: Only l / 5 Cash further parties Iy G. H. Umssen & Co. 20 Montgomery Street OCEAN TRAVEL. Steamers leave Broadway wharves, piers 9 and 11, San Franetsco. For Ketchikan, Juneau, Haines, Skagway, ete., Alaska—11 a. m., May 5 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, June 4 Change to Company's steam- ers at Seattle. For Vietoria, Vancouver, Port Townsend, Seattls, Tacoma, Everett. Bei- lingham—11 a.' m., May 5, 10, 15, 20, 2530, June 4. Change ot Seatts to'this Company's steamers for Alaska and : at Seattle e 6 Mo PRy, st Vaocsaver 1o C. P. Ry. For Eureka (Humboldt Bay)—Pomona, 1:30 p. m, May 4 10, 16 23 28: Spokane. 1:30 p. m. May 1, 7, 13 19; Corona, May 35, 3L For Los Angeles (via Port Los Angeles and Redondo), San Diego and Santa Barbara— Santa Rosa_Sundays, 9 a. m. State of California, Thursdays, 9 a. m. For Los Angeles ivia San Pedro and East San Pedro), Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz, Mont- terey, San Simeon, Cayucos, Port Harford (Sam Louis Obispo), Ventura and Huememe Bonita, 9 a. m., May 7, 15, June 8. Santa Cruz, # a. m. (freight only), May 19, 27. For Magdaiena Bay, San Jose del Cabo, Mazatlan, Altata_La Paz, salia’ Guaymas (Mex.). 10 a. m., Tth of each month. For further information obtain folder Right is reserved to change steamers or sailing dates. TICKET OFFICES—4 New Montgom- ery st. (Palace Hotel), 10 Market st. and Broat way wharves. Freight Office, 10 Market st. C. D. DUNANN, General Passenger Agent, 10 Market st., San Francisco. The Pacific Transfer Co.. 20 Sutter st., will call for and check baggage from hotels and resi Teiephone Exchange 312. Wrangel, | Vaderlana | Kroonland. Only first-class passengers carried. DOMINION LINE. Montreal—Liverpool—Short sea June 4/Southwark fune 11/Canada. June 13 June 25 HOLLAND-AMERICA LINE. New Twin-Screw Steamers of 12,500 Tons. New York—Rotterdam. Via Boulogne. Safting Twestuyy &t 10 & = May 31/Potsdam June 7/Rotterdam New York—An From New York Saturda: June_4(Zeeland June 11/Finland New Y IAIHM ‘Wednesdays. Oceanic.June 1, 8 a.m. |Cedric..June 18, Inn. Teutontc. June 8, 10 am|Majestic.June Ceitic. .June 10, 3 p.m.|Arabic..June 4, -June 2, June 30, July 28 Twin-Screw Of 11.400 to 15.000 tons. BOSTON DIRECT TO THE GIBRALTAR. ROMANIC. CANOPIC NAPLES, ENOA. Jume 18, July 3 Sepe. 17 -July 2, Aul n, ass, C. D. TAYLOR, Passenger 21 Post st., Mrg-fimrm Afl Pldlcm i Service FOR n.n-ou-m rmmrvm HAMBURG THE GREAT OCEAN FLYER, S. S_Fl)eul_scman& May Idersee Jui -En lfln room and tgymnastum on board. and 37 Broadway. New Yorl HERZOG & CO., 401 CALIFORNIA ST. k O. R. & N. CO. sails May 18, 27. June 8, 16, and ELDER sails May 2. June 1, potnits tickets to all pob Steamer Toot of Spesr st. st 11. ‘& m 8. F. , Gen. Agt. Pass. Dept., 1 Mont- st.; C. CLI Gen. Agent Freight Si;'.f’: Montgomery ccanics.s.Co. E svonEY. o TANITh L I. SONOMA, for Honolulu, m Aauci ney, Thurs., May 26, 2 p. m. s l IAI.‘%GA. for Tahiti, May 29, 11 a. m. §. 8. ALAMEDA, for Honolulu, June 4, 11 am, 1.D.SPRECKELS & BROS. 00., Agts., Ticket Ofics 643 Mar- Xet., Freight Ofice 329 Mar«aist, Piar 7, Pacife r T0 HA'.I—PA“ DIRECT LINE ‘Thursday instead of First class ivre, §70 and upward. Slass ta_Ha and e Yo AE% Soid by wil Faiiroad Ticket Aguats