The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 23, 1904, Page 2

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THE.'S AN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JUNE 23 1904. MANT DRUIDS SEEK HONORS Choosing the Officers En- Jivens the Session of the| Grand Grove at Santa Cruz | “CHOKE HIN” SATS COURT Portland Jurist Adminis- ters Salutary Treatment for a Brutal Husband | CANDIDATES NUMEROU PRSI, E Rivalry Enters Contest for | Supreme Representative to | Attend Next Convention | S B s CRI —The nomi- | f w life to to- | s Grand Grove of rivalry was evinced meeting. were nominated: ockton, noble onvich, dep’ Martinoni Frank T for grand marshal . he £ —Past Arch M. Pozzi of San F D. Dorn of i P ¥ sentinel want ns whe and H. A el Giov eye Dan [ for wer public Third over ba Arti le, San Francisco; Mollinari of Laurel Forni of 8 Christ McMannus of Co- Francisco: Mary Grand _organist, el Circle, San Fran- —e—— RADIUM IS DISCOVERED IN A TARRYTOWN QUARRY Scientific Department of Columbia University Will Send Some of the Ore to World's Fair. ORK, June —According | t of Pro; or L. V. Case, cher zeologist at NEW tific t Washington Irving High School in , radium has been discov- e spar quarry there. It is ned by J. F. Merrill, State ho reported finding uran- i uranolite. The scientif « of Columbia University twenty-five pounds of the World's Fair to be placed A. Clark Jr., son of United § ORDER WELL EXECUTED | Judge Sends Man to Jail After the First Sample of Corporal Punishment e IERR. | Special Dispatch to The Call | PORTLAND, Or., June 22.—Officer| 1tz in the municipal court this morn- ing, by direction of Judge Hogue, choked Gus Danguisse in order that Danguisse should know what treatment he might expect in the Police Court if he further tormented his wife, Marie Danguisse. Yesterday Danguisse, who had been on a spree for some time, went to a grading camp at Alberta street and Rodney avenue, where his wife cooks for the ders, and choked her several times, telling her that he intended to kill her. She begged him to spare her for the sake of their children. The hus- band allowed her to go, but a short time afterward he secured a tent stake and tried to hit her on the head. He Id her to say her prayers as her time i come. The woman ran and hid in woods close to the camp, and finally told her story to Officer Adams, who took the husband to jail. Judge Hogue sentenced Danguisse to thirty days in the City Jail, and then 1d him that if he again abused his wife he would be choked by the police. Officer Goltz then gave him an example of what he might expect. —_———— LETTER CARRIERS AND DRUG CLERKS TO HAVE OUTINGS Former Will Picnic at Shell Mound Park and the Latter Will Have a Trolley Car Ride. Sunday, July has been set’ aside by the letter carriers for their annual outing at Shell Mound Park. The fol- lowing members have been appointed a committee of arrangements: President, H. M. Lo treasurer Harry e; “Recretary, C. Logan; James Haed- James H. Smith, T. arty, P. J. Buckley, Richards, Wiil scher, P. W. 3 Oakland—1. J. Hallahan an Alameda—F. H. Spink and The Drug Clerks' Association will take a run down to San Mateo by the trolley car line on July 24, and again on July 29, during which evenings dancing will be the attraction in the big pa- vilion. Officers for unions elected at last meetings Steam Laun . Robert Wald harles examin- Miss Rose t6 Labor Coun ' Dw e Lowney delegate: , George Mack- , Daniel F. n Miiler; recording ohn A 1; guide ; Qelegate to Labor Council, John A. Holland | —_—————— Reliable gas ranges $16 regular price $20, this week only at S. F. Gas & Electric Co., 415 Post st. . —_——— William A. Clark Jr. Seriously 11l DENVER, Colo., June 22.—William ates Sen- ator William A. Clark of Montana, is seriously ill at the Sylvania, 305 W Colfax avenue, in this city. He is suf- fering from a complete nervous col- lapse brought on by an attack of heart trouble. VER DICT OF f gas on June 11, ccidental death. A the effect tht the AR AP NS AN AANANA We are showing an immense line of the very latest pat- terns at prices that cannot fail Carpet Department is fitted tc and efficiently, no matter whether it is a cottage or a hotel. We guarantee you careful and be pleased to show the goods whether you purchase or not. The few items mentioned will saving effects. Wool Velvels Some very to walk on, peryard....... Lowell Rigelow Body Rrussels good old weave is too well known to require further descri tion. No carpet made as durable. Peryard..... Digelow Axminstcrs tern is a chef-d’oeuvre of the carpet designer’s art. Per yard Best ground cork and linseed oil. Some effec- tive patterns. Per square yard Bigelow Axminsters osc.ctfic. Linolevm Sanitary and moth , reversi- ble. Each side a Poeyand,...cominioninienivinn Our own importations. Good fresh fiber, Modern desi to draw your attention. Qur > handle your order promptly | courteous attention, and will { give you an idea of the money- SLI5 Oriental and floral designs. This $1.2 Choice colorings. $1.45 35¢ 25¢ 12:¢ effective colorings. patterns. Ready { | | | | designs. Each pat- pattern. Atistic colors. Per yard 1 | medical corps, U. | been at the Presidio General | THIEVES SHIPS DELAY CATSES WORRY ipping Men Fear Experi- ence of Li Year Has Been Repeated to Portland OREGON HAS RETURNED Vessel Brings Half a Mil- lion Dollars in Bullion From Goldfields of Nome A S Special Dispatch to The Call, SEATTLE, June After bucking heavy ice floes in Bering Sea that for a time threatened to drive the vessel back | to Dutch Harbor, the steamer Oregon | reached port early this morning from Nome, establishing a record for being the first vessel back from the gold-, flelds this season and making a quick! round trip. The Oregon brought four passengers and $500,000 in bullion. The steamer Corwin, which sailed from Seattle May 17, was the first ves- | sel to reach Nome. The evening of; June 8 the Corwin arrived in sight of that place. Fears are felt for the Alaska Com- mercial Company's steamship Port-| land. It was the general opinion at] Nome when the Oregon sailed that the] vessel had been caught in the ice and carried far into the Arctic Ocean. Last | season the Portland was imprisoned in the ice for fourteen days. The vessel was one of the first to reach Dutch Harbor, and should have been in Nome ahead of the Corwin. Nothing was seen of the Northern Commercial Company's steamship Sa- | die. The Roanoke was reported as hav- ing reached St. Michael. The steam-| ship Tacoma reached Nome the morn- | ing of June 13, and the steamships Vic- toria and Senator followed the same afternoon. | The steamships Garonne and Olympia were not sighted. Conservative esti- | mates place -the winter clean-up ,at Nome and vicinity at $1,000,000. James Wood is reported as having taken out more than $150,000, which will be, shipped to Seattle‘on one of the next boats out. The steamship Roanoke, due to sail from Nome for Seattle about June will have another large gold shipment, and it is thought that the steamers Senator and Victoria will also have gold cargoes. Marshall Rich- ards has twelve prisoners for McNeils Island. The men were to be sent out on the Oregon, but were delayed. Residents of Nome reported to the officers of the Oregon that the winter had been extremely mild, with very little snow. The place was remarkably free from sickness. Notwithstanding that heretofore Nome has not been | ‘lassified as a winter digging district | T ng. of the Nome Nugget, is authority for the statement that the dumps fhken. out last winter have to| date produced a sum in excess of | $1,000,000, and the work now remains| incomplete on account of a shortage! of water. ! PREFERS DETAIL 0N THIS COAST i In the proposed changes of the heads| of the different army divisions General MacArthur will probably not figure. That is, not if the question is left to him to decide. In speaking of the possi- bility of his being relieved of his com- mand here and sent to Governors Isl- and, when Major General Corbin goes | to the Philippines in October, he said: “If the command of the Atlantic di- vision is offered to me 1 would express a preference for the Pacific division.” Further than this General MacAr- thur had nothing to say. { As to whether, as was rumored, he had received a personal intimation from General Chaffee that the Atlantic | was open to him he was non- 1 | i divis! MacArthur's desire to re- | in this department, from what is based on two rea- sons. He thinks this division of more importance than that of the Eastern side, and he also has become greatly attached to this coast and its people. | Furthermore, Ceneral MacArthur has nothing to gain by the change. Ac- cording to the general routine of army promotion, General Chaffee will retire on April 14, 1908, and will be succeeded by General Corbin, who will retire on tember 15 of the same year. Gen- eral MacArthur, beihg next in rank, will then become chief off staff, retiring | June 2, 1909. Lieutenant Cary A. oddy, medical department, ([ A., will be married on June 28 to Miss Hayes of Vallejo. With his bride he will_ sail* on the ransport Sherman on July 1 for Ma- nila, where he will be stationed for ' two years. . The patients of the General Hospital will hereafter be enlivened every Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock with a | main can be learned, | concert by the Twenty-eighgh Infantry band Lieutenant | D. Shortlidge, 8. A, has been or- dered to report for duty at Fort Miley. Lieutenant W. T. Davidson, who ar- rived from Manila on the Buford, will take his place at the General Hospital. Major W. E. Birkhimer, who has lospital for the past two months and has un- dergone two serious operations, is now rapidly on the road to recovery. The regular monthly field exercises of the post will take place to-day, be- ginning at 9 o’clock this morning. —_———— CARRY AWAY SEVEN VALUABLE CANARY BIRDS Edmund Shop on Octavia Street Looted in Broad Daylight and Watch and Songsters Taken. 3 A burglary of a particularly daring character, perpetrated in one of the most thickly settled sections of the city yesterday, is engaging the atten- | tion of the detectives. As a result of ' the operations of the thieves Robert | F. Howe, a shoemaker and dealer in imported canaries at 508 Octavia street, suffered the loss of a gold watch and chain and seven valuable | songsters. The crime was committed yesterday morning during the brief absence of Howe from his place of business. The crooks worked in a skillful and quick manner, as the attention of none of { the adjacent storekeepers was attract~ ed. The seven canaries were taken from their cages and the timepiece from a drawer. Howe had left his shop for a mo- ment to discuss a business matter with ' a friend who resides but half a block | distant. He did not think it necessary to lock the door. Upon his return he was astonished to find several of the bird cages open and the birds gone. Subsequent search revealed the loss of ; the watch and chain, % | joyed a wedding breakfast at the St. ! things from the forest, the most allur- | July-18, will prove of vast Interest to | BOARD OF PRETTY WEDDING AT THE MISSION DOLORES CHURCH ——— - WHO BECOME THE BRIDE OF MISS JULIA HAS PAUL FRATE > Sl Miss Julia Glennon and Paul F. Fratessa Joined in Matrimony. i M. GLENNON, SA. Mission Dolores Church was the scene of a pretty wedding on Tuesday evening, when Miss Julia M. Glennon | and Paul Fratessa were made man | and wife, The ceremony was quite a social évent in Mission society and the church was thronged with friends and relatives of the popular young couple. The bride was attended ,by her cousin, Miss Lillian Glennon. Edward Glennon, a brother of the bride, acted as best man. The*bride was hand- somely gowned and carried a bouquet | of white roses. Mrs. Fratessa is well known in the | Mission district, where she has resided for years. Her spouse is a popular busfness man and -a prominent mem- | ber of the Young Men's Institute. After a wedding tour in the southern | part of the State Mr. and Mrs. Fra- | a will take up their residence in | city. 1 } | tes this g WEDDINGS SAVE SOCIETY FROM | STAGNATION| SRl D Another union of love ’twixt the | East and the West! Yesterday morn- | ing Miss Laura Janet White, a fair | Milwaukee maid, the daughter of Mr and Mrs. James S. White, became thet bride of Willlam H. Pabst, the man-{ ager of the Pacific Improvement Com- pany at Del Monte. » The ceremony was performed at St. | Mary's Cathedral by the Rev. Father Hannigan during the celebration of a | nuptial mass, beginning at 9 o'clock. | The bride, a maid of distinguished | bearing, was gowned in a smart teav- | eling frock, with a white picture hat. | She was attended by her sister, Miss | Marion White, while the groom was served by Edgar J. White, a brother of the bride. The service over, the bridal party en- Francis, after which the happy pair departed for Southern California, where they will travel about leisurely for several weeks. After their return they will reside at the Del Monte. Although but two seasons in Califor- nia, the young bride and her sister have won hosts of friends among the younger set in society. A To-night, the wedding of Miss Doro- thy Goodsell and Charles William | Camm will be celebrated by the Rev. Mr. McBurney of Oakland at the home of the bride on Van Ness avenue. The ceremony will be witnessed only by the relatives of the bride and groom, but a large reception will fol- 1ow. The bride will be attended by her sis- ter, Miss Virginia Goodsell, while the groom will be served by Frank Booth, the popular young broker. The home of the bride is already a bower of pink blossoms and green ing spot, of coursé, being the nook in the reception hall. ‘The mother of the bride will give her into the keeping of the groom. . e iR nuptial Mrs, John D. Spreckels and Miss Lily Spreckels left yesterday for an extend- ed trip to Europe. . P On the 27th Miss Constance Lawrence will become the bride of Robert P. Dean, the well-known young clubman. Miss Lawrence comes of a clever family and is herself a young woman of fine attainments and a charming personality. L . The Steele-Shorb wedding, to oeccur Sacramentans, of whom the groom is one, and to Southern Californians, to whom the Shorbs are well known, hav- ing in the old days owned vast estates in the southland. ————————— TRADE FIXES DATES FOR EXCURSIONS ‘Will Visit Big Basin Park in July and St. Louis Exposition in October. Governor Pardee, the Yosemite Commissioners and the Commissioners of the Big Basin Park in Santa Cruz County will be invited.to go with the California State Board of Trade ex- cursion party to the Big Basin next month. The date for starting from this city ‘will be July 22. The excur- sionists will stop in Boulder Creek Friday night, to which place they will journey by special train. On Sat- urday morning they will proceed to the Big Basin, where they will pass the day. The special train will re- | dictment and that otner | Attorney Peter F. Dunne outlined the | “We will contend,” he said “that Jaccb FULLY OUTLINE THE DEFENSE Eppinger’s Attorneys (laim That He Did Not Handle the Warehouse Receipts \ RED PILLS INTERVENE | TR May Have as Little Bearing on Case as Flowers That Bloom in the Springtime S it According to the statement of Attor- ney Shortridge, one of the counsel for the defense of Jacob Eppinger, a vital point in the case revolves around a lit- tle box of red pills sold in Indiana | some years ago. The prosecution on the other hand contends that the In- diana Superior Court took unwarranted liberties inasmuch as it reversed a United States Supreme Court decision when it rendered its decision regarding the sale of nostrums guaranteed to al- leviate all ills of womankind. The question raised 1s a vital one, and the entire day was occupied in arguing, the jury being excused until | | a decision shall be rendered. The pros- | | ecution wishes to introduce evidence to show that Jacob Eppinger was guilty of fraud not only in the cases on which he was indicted, but also on | numerous occasions immediately pre- ceding the alleged fraudulent transac- tion. The defense, on the other hand, contends that the accused can only be tried on the offenses charged in the in- transactions may not be used to influence the minds of the jurors. Many authorities were quoted on both contentions and the opinions of courts of sovereign States | were pitted against each other to such“ an extent that the words “sovereign States’” became the signal for laughter. LINE OF DEFENSE. During the course of the argument defense, which, according to his state- ment, will be conducted on different lines than those previously suggested. Eppinger did not send tne warehouse receipts to Colonel Beck of the Inter- national Banking Corporation and did not make any false representations re- garding the wheat in the warehouse. This will be our defense and it will | makes offenses similar to that with which the defendant is charged inad- missible.” Attorney Shortridge followed in the same strain. After quoting the case of the man who fraudulently sold one box of red pills, he stated that the defense would not claim that Jacob Eppinger made representations recklessly or in- advertently, but that he had never made them at all. “The point at issue,” | he said, “is, Did Eppinger make these representations? We claim he did not and leave it to the defense to prove | otherwise. Any acts of the defendant prior to April 14, or any transaction with parties aside from Colonel Beck, are not admissible in evidence.” | | State Hospital. FOUTHS TAUGHT SELF-SUPPORT Boys’ and Girls’ Aid Society Combines Recreation With Hard Work in Orchards g B R REPORTS SHOW R ULT! Juvenile Fruit Pickers and Prune Curers Amass Tidy Sums While on Vaecation e o S and Tuesday, annual meeting of the Boys' Girls' Ald Society was held on when the board listened to the annual report of Superintendent Herbert W, Lewis, which especially set forth the year's work with the boys. He told of the wonderful benefits of the gummer outing given the boys of the lustitution this summer. They were sent to ranches last summer, where they were em- ployed in ‘berry picking and cur- ing prunes and hop picking. One section of the lads alone earned $438, while another party picked over 290 tons of prunes and brought back over $500 in money as the proceeds of their healthful and manly labor. has adopted a plan of de- ducting from the earnings of each boy a sum per day sufficient in the aggre- | gate to cover the cost of the expedition. An accurate account is kept of each boy's earnings, and this amount, less the upon his discharge from the institu- tion or is expended for his benefit or paid to his legal guardian. Fifty-four per cent of the gross earnings of the boys was paid to them and 46 per cent absorbed in expenses. In this manner, says Mr. Lewis, the society intends to teach the value of good, honest work. S Mrs. Landbeck Found Insane. Mrs. Ernestine Landbeck, who has been under medical observation at the Detention Hospital for the insane dur- ing the jast week, was finally declared by Dr. McGettigan yesterday to be of unsound mind and a fit subject for the The woman attempt- ed to drown herself and her baby in the ocean near the CUff House a few months ago. She was committed to the asylum at Stockton yesterday by i Judge Graham. e —e— VS. SCIENCE.—Rabbl Louis Reynolds of Sal City will deliver a mon on Saturday._ June 25 at the Bush-street ynagogue on ‘‘The Conflict Between Religion and Science.” — e ———— RELIGION F ITION FOR BANKRUPTCY.—M. F. Goldsmith, a clerk residing in this city, filed a petition in bankrustcy yesterday. His lia- bilitles are $510, with no assets. — o leled the Eppinger case in the hypothe- cation of warehouse receipts. CRIMES SIMILAR. The District Attorney also claimed that the crimes of forgery and embez- | zlement were under the same category as obtaining money under false pre- tenses, and was about to quote author- ities when Attorney Shortridge inter- The , prosecution. then had an|rupted him, saying: “We concede inning ‘and " District Attormey By- jithat.” ington began reading from United; Attorney Dunne evidently thought States Supreme Court decisfons to|Shortridge had made a bad break and offset, the red pill case. Among|came to his rescue, saying: “I do not other points he showed that ’in|think Mr. Shortridge intended to make tice of “passing the queer”” might be in- | troduced to influence the jury. This, | argued the District Attorney, paral-, the case of a man accused of passing | that remark. We concede nothing of | counterfeit coin the testimony need not | the sort.”” Shortridge did not attempt be confined to the particular coin, but | to clear himself, however, and his evidence showing that he made a prac- | statement stands. The arguments will be concluded this morning and the examination of wit- nesses resumed. The happiness of ha go easily and quickly. Borax doubles the soap and water, see how much easier the water. turn to this city Saturday evening. This is the plan as now outlined. Sec- retary L. M. Fletcher will go to Boul- der Creek to-day.to make arrange- ments in behalf of the State Board of Trade. v The date for the special excursion of the California State Board of Trade to the St. Louis Exposition_has been, set. The start will be made on Oc- tober 2. The excursionists will pro- ceed directly to St. Louils by special train, in charge of Secretary Fletcher, making record time for the trip. The party to visit St. Louis and the to Boulder Creek will be limited to 400 persons each. .. « -20-MULE-TEAM ADVERTISEMENTS. BORAXOLOGY life isn’t all in the . patlor—it isn’t all in the pretty part of life— there’s another, a hom ely happiness—the ppiness of having the clothes white, or the dishes washed clean, or the housework Dozens of the things you do in everyday home work make up a large part in life’s happiness. Borax has a very close relation to happiness, because it has a very close relation to housework. power of You'll be astonished to and quicker you can wash things by adding a little Borax to Get purest and best Borax, BRAND. . For sale by druggists and grocers in %, %5 and 1-Ib. packages. : ‘The famous “ AMERICAN 20-Mule-Team Borax. At stores or Pacific Coast Borax Co., New York, m"flmm&:md sent for LB. BOX TOP aad stamps. Chicago, Francisco. , Saa ’-uulo-Tnln—Ow Trade Mark deduction named, is paid to him | ADVERTISEMENTS. | | | | | SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. | They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, | Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi. aess, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small P, Small Dose. Small Price. . b for Developing Kodak FILLMS"~ Up to and including 4% 5 £1iC8 GUL S€N £eX Lews Ul 0Ll Films for All Kodaks. ARGO DEVELOPING TUBES, For Argo or other gaslght pa Weak Mefi and Womez; | §HOULD USE DAMIANA | S Great Mexican Remedy: | strength to sexual organs. | leave Broadway plers 9 and 11, -11 . m. Change Victor Townsend, Seattle, { Port | 11 | Bellingham to this company's steamers for Alaska N. Ry.; at Seattle or Ta coma to N at Vancouver to C. P. Ry Pomona, 1:30 1:30 p. m.. Bay) 3. Corona, For Eureka m., June 21 e 18, 24, 30 r Los Angele Redondo), Santa Rosa. State of Califor: For Los Angeles (vi San Pedro), Santa Barbara. uz, cos, Port Harford P Ju via Port Los Angeles and o and Santa Barbara— rsdays. 9 a. m. Pedro_and East Santa ( M ! terey, San Simeon, Cay (San | Luis Obispo), V 4 Hueneme. Bonita, 9 a. m.. 16,24, July 2. | Coos Hay, 9 a- m e 20, 28, July 6 | For Ensenada, Magdalena Bay. San Jose del | Cabo, Mazatian, Altata, La Paz Santa Ro- salia, Guaymas (Mex.). 10 a. m,, 7th each mo ALASKA EXCURSIONS, Season 1904—The palatial excursion steamship Spokane will leave Tacoma, Seattle and Victoria June 21 July 5, 19. Aus. 2. folder. Right sailing dates. New Montgom- ery st. (Palace Hotel), 10 Market st., way wharves. Preight Office, 10 Market st C. D. DUNANN, General Passenger Agent, 10 Market st.. San Francisco. For further inform: ! AMERICAN LINE. Plymonth—Cherbourg—Southampton. From New York, Saturdays, 9:30 a. m. Germanie ......July 2 «.July 18 St. Paul.. July 9'St. Louis July 23 ATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINE. New York—London Direct. Minnetonka. . cerrsrnee--July 2,0 2 m Minnehaha p- m Minneapol a m uly 2 & m Only first-class passengers carried. DOMINION LINE. Montreal—Liverpool—Short sea passag- Fancouver July 2[Dominion July 16 Kensington _...July 9 Southwark July 23 HOLLAND-AMERICA LINE. New Twin-Screw Steamers of 12,500 Tons. New York—Rotterdam. Via Boulogne. Sailing Tuesdays at 10 a. m Noordam .... 5 m Statendam . From New York Vaderland .....July Kroonland Saturdays. 2{Zeeland land WHITE STAR LINE. New York—Ouesnstown—Liverpool. S: s Sailing Wednesdays. Teutonic.July 6. 10 am|M; i} Celtic. ... . July §, X 1 pm! ¢ Baltic...July 13, 5 pm O Bo: Republic (ne: 3 Cymric. July 14 Cretic. .. ......July 28, Aug. 25, Sept NEW SERVICES FROM BOSTON. Past Twin-Screw Steamers Of 11.400 to 15.000 Tous. BOSTON DIRECT TO THE MEDITERRANEAN, VIA AZORES. & CANOPIC. ... July 2. Aug. 27, Oct. 8 ROMANIC... -....Sept. 17, Oct. 29, Dee. 3 First class_ $65 upward, depending on da C. D. TAYLOR. Passenger Agent Pacific Coast 21 Post st San Francisco. fiamburg-a“"fl;;fiM‘ 1 Semi-Weekly Twin-Screw Serviee | FOR PLYMOUTH. CHERBOURG, HAMBURG | stMoltke . June 30)tPretoria - July | tPatricia tHamburg ... .July 21 *Deutsehla: y T {Walderses ... July 3 Beigravia _....July ® #*Moitke S July 28 “Tas grili room and fgymnasium on board $ Wil call at Dover only. S rond New York o . 35 and 37 Broadway. New Yo Hé“ere('wr: & CO., 401 CALIFORNIA ST O. R. N. CO. TMBIA sails June 16, 26, July & 16 and nc%li}o W. ELDER safls June 21, July 1 11, 21 and 31. Only steamship line to PORT LAND, OR., and short rail line from Portland to all points East Through tickets to al ints. ¥ Steamer tickets include Dberth and meals. Steamer sails foot of Spear st. at 1! s m. 8. F. BOOTH, Gen. Agt. Pass. Dept Montgomery st.; C. CLIFFORD, Gen. Agent Freight Dept., 3 Montgomery st. TEALAND ame STONEY .ceflts.s‘c ;m [C R 8. ALAMEDA. for Honolulu, June 25, 11 am ANWAT, SAMOA, NEW s & MARIPOSA, for Tahiti, July 2, 11 a. m 8. SIERRA, for_Honolulw, Samea, Auck e a ast cisco. n icket s “lana and Sydney, Thursday, July 7. 2 P 1.D.SPRECKELS & BROS. C0., Agts., Tickat 02543 Hxr ket Freight Omea3ad Marqatst, Pur /. 21 COMPAGNIE GENERALS TRANSATLANTIQUZ DIRECT LINE TO HAVRE-PARIS. Salling every Thursday instead "".' Saturday, at 10 a. m., from Pler 42, North River, foot of Morton st. First class to Havre, $70 and upward. Second class to Havre, $45 and upward. ERAL AGENCY FOR UNITED STATES AX CANADA, . 32 Broadway (Hudson build! New York. J. F. FUGAZI & CO., Pacific ¢ Agents, 5 Montgomery avenue, Tickets sold by Rafiroad T To U. 5. Navy Yard and Vallejo. STMRS. GEN. FRISBIE, MONTICELL ir‘jl ARROW-—9:45 A. M., 12:30 noom, 8:15 M., 8:30 P. M. (ex. Sunday): nd: - . M., 8:30 P. M. Leave Val- lejo 7:00 A. M., 9:00 A. M. 12:30 NOON 4 . M., 6 . M. (ex. Sunday): Sun- days 7:00 A. M., 4:15 P. M. Landing and Pler 2, foot Mission st. Phone Main HATCH BROS. To U. S. Navy Yard and Vallejo. toot of M., 8 P. M a 6:50 A, M., 12:20 and P M. Fare_ 25c each way. Sundavs to Vallejo. Glen Cove and Ma 50c round trip. PIPER, ADEN GOOL CO . phone Main 641 *Saturday WEEKLY CALL, $1.00 PER YEAR. ALL pted

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