The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 26, 1904, Page 7

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1904. SICK HEADAGHE Positi "-lvc-nl by digestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect rem- edy for Dizziness, Nausea, regulste the Bowels. Purely Vegetabls. SMALLPILL. SMALL DOSE. SIILLHEE. CARTER S CURE SICK HEADACHE. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature ITTLE (AMERA PRICES CUT TO PIECES Peco and Kerona Cameras At Great Reductions KORONA PETIT CAMERAS Sine. 34% A% - Regular price, $ .50 Our price onty $06.35 Kodok Films Developed 15¢ Doz. we to ond includng ¥ X5 SUNSET BAZAAR 42 Third St.+ San Francisco Wn vieir DR. JORDAN’S anear (IUSEUI OF RRATOMY 1061 XARKET 67. bet. GrbATE, 8.7.Cal, The Largest Avetomical Museum in the Worid W o auy costraeted dincaee pui cwred hy the eldest eciaist on the Coast Est. 36 years. DR. JORDAN—D'SEASES OF MEN onsultation free and strictly private. rescment personally of by letter. A e e e oo - Bock. PHILOSOPRY of MARRIAGE, MAILAD FRER: (A valueble beok for men DE. JORDAN & ©O.. 1051 Market &t 8. F. B DVOUOT 0 e H S. BRIDGE & CO., 622 Market Street. Up Stairs. Opp. Palace Hotel. i Novelties in Imported Wear. 3 MERCHANT TAILORS, § SAN_FRANCISCO. STATEMENT or THE— CONDITION AND AFFAIRS —OF THE— NEWENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANGE COMPANY OF MAS- December, that ATE O . Owned $2,400,642 50 ans secured by 10,020,275 00 i 320,940 00 $208,640 00 31,940,483 212,647 Deductions during the Amount of mnotes and ! “ther premium obliga- i tions used in payment of ljosses and laim Amount _of ndtes other premium obliga tions used in purch of surrendered p Amount of me er pr s used of dividends holers Amount us ...... 2% i of mnotes other premium obliga- tions voided by lapse of policies .- e Amcunt of motes and other premium obliga- tions _reds maker in cash Total reduction of Premium Note Ac- count ... i Balance pote assets at end of the year.. $196,659 36 BEXJ, F. STEVENE, rr-unn. ¥. TRULL, s\n-mu g ey this 17ta @ay of February, 1904 JACOB A. BARBEY, Notary Publis, a3 | b———— | Tahoe the place for a.fine SUPERVISORS ADOPT REPORT ‘Du'ect Auditor Not to. Pay the Salaries of Non-Civil Service Health Officials BOABD FILES ITS REPLY gClaims Right to Conduct Its Own Affairs Without Any Outside Interference The Board of Supervisors yesterday by a vote of 11 to 6 adopted the report of the Finance Committee to the ef- | fect that the Health Board is violating | the ctvil service restrictions and ex- | ceeding the salary allewances con- tained in the municipal budget and also directing the Auditer and Treas- | urer not to pay the salary demands of certain Health Department employes. The Health Board filed its answer to | the charges. It defends its course and incidentally indulges in caustic com- ment regarding the motives actuating the Finance Committee in filing its re- port and particularly. scering D'An- | cone, who prepared tre document. | Deputy Heaith Officer Levy stated that the Health Board had held a spe- cial meeting in the morning and had adopted the reply to the report of the Finance Committee. Levy then read the report, which is in part as fol- lows: fied to judge of réqu: of their department, whether it n of mew positions Gr abolisbing xisting, than any one - with s technical knowledge of the necessities. We concede to the Finance Committee the right to know of the honest expenditure of funds, but we oppose the unwarranted interference with internal management of our commiasion unnecessary and obnoxions disregard imitations RESENTS CENSORSHIP. The assumed censorship over the vital man- agement of the Health Commiseion by the letter of this report will emasculate all the determuned good of the laboratory department, matter how efficient its policy. It strikes at che integrity of purpose of the Health Com- mission, the very kmowledge of existing re- | quirements in our department and places the lioard of Health beneath the dictation of the tyrannical member of the Health Committee of your board, who confesses that he acts as a Supervisor only and is not guided in his cal- culations as a physician. If his judgment is that of a laymdn, he acts under the guise of a physician he cer- tainly has shown such unwarranted incom- petency as to make his statements of forgetful regard The Health Board will resist having their commission made the prémeditated and. spe- unced to us by the sponsors of this which our attention has been called. ry strange, and we believe with r the remaining members of mmitiee to disclaim any knowledge rt before presentation, and yet urge its passage. commentary on the health mat- city that por charter rights of the Health Comnm:issi ugh the agency of an usurped power of a member of the Health Committee. Where, legal proof shall disclose error in our here the courts declare our actions on _civil although they may be based on our part for acquirement ent_heip we ehall promptly ply. With the same dete: 1 resist w from any other source. BRANDENSTEIN REPLIES. Brandenstein characterized the re- ply of the Health Board as a “jumble of rhetoric bordering on a declaration of rights and of independence, but it interference 4somee | to be retired at his own request. he is out of place and if | the | | tleground on which the doubtful prob- | Civii service are (o be worked out | REAR ADMIRAL COOPER COMES HOME TO RETIRE Former Squadron Is esting Passengers g Commander- One of the Many Inter- Snperv1sors Pass Ordinances ive Proposi- | in-Chief of Asiatic on the Liner China OF WHOM RETURNED FROM THE e Among the passengers who arrived here yesterday on the ~er China was Rear Admiral P. H. Cooper, who suc- ceeded Admiral Evans in command of the Asiatic squadron. Admiral Cooper is in poor health and has come home He was accompanied by his flag lleuten- ant, Victor Blue; his secretary, Ensign | H. L. Wyman, and Surgeon F. E. Mc- Cullough of the navy. Lieutenant Blue's wife, who is Admiral Cooper's niece, was also of the party. Lieutenant Blue rendered conspicu- ous service during the Spanish-Ameri- can war and is one of the heroes of | that unpleasantness whose realization of the eternal fitness of modesty, even in a matter of dashing heroism, has prevented any subsequent marring of the impre: n his gallantry made upon his home-staying fellow citizens. Not that Bilue cares about the im- pression any act of his might have given. He is devoted to his duty as he finds it and, for all the sign he i gives, has long ago forgotten all about how he took his life in his hands as the lone volunteer on as forlorn a hope as sailor or soldier ever undertook. Blue has been ordered to the Buffalo, probably as navigating officer. His brother, Dr. Rupert Blue of the marine | hospital service, met him in quarantine did not remove the charge of the Finance Committee that the civil ser- vice regulations had been violated and | the salary allowances of the budget had been exceeded by the Health De- partmer “There is much that is contemptible in the.reply,” said Brandenstein. Con- | tinuing, he said: “It should be con-| signed to the waste basket, but I will move that it be placed on file.” His motion prevailed. D’Ancona stated that his report was not designed to impugn the motives of the Health Board and that he would decline to answer the personalities contained in the reply of the board named. When the question of adopting the Finance Committee’'s report wads put, Boxton questioned the right of the Finance Committee to fix salaries. D’Ancona replied that there was no cuch intention, but that a specific ap- propriation was made for the salaries | of each department, had been exceeded. MAYOR QUOTES CHARTER. Mayor Schmitz quoted from charter, showing that the Board has sole jurisdiction over the disposition of its appropriation and the fixing of salaries. Health Officer Ragan explained - the course of the Health Board in merging the labora- tory and food department funds and urged the board not to adopt the re- port. Braunhart referred to the alleged attempt that is being made to over- throw civil service. The Mayor thought the Supervisors should in their solicitude for civil service, which he said was commendable, ‘'set the ex- which, he alleged, the ample by taking their clerks .from the | eligible list. Braunhart replied that if the Mayor would submit a request\to SENGE S e A B SR AT LAKE TAHOE. The Southern Pacific Offérs Reduced Rate Tickets. Fishing, hunting and euperb sceriery make vacation. Southern Pacific is selling tickets at low rates with stopovers from two to nimety days. Ask VACATION for a Tahoe folder deseribing the country and | | full information regarding rates at 613 Mar- ket street R ADVERTISEMENTS. EXAMINE YOUR DENTIFRICE Acid and grit, deadliest enemies of the teeth, abound in cheap dentifrices. Fine per- fumes do not make fine dentifrices. Ypur teeth deserve better of you than to be offered up & sacrifice to your pocketbook. SOZODONT is of proven value. Sixty years is a pretty M. No acid, no grit in Sozodont. mmlhelmhmlnd ‘owder gives a bright udndludae-. g nvon- LIQUID, POWDER, PASTE. The | | returned on the liner. | the Associated Health | yesterday. WAS AT SAMOA. Major C. M. Perkins, who command- ed the marine guard of the Philadel- phia at Samoa in 1899 when the Amer- ican and British forces were ambushed and officers and men of the allied party killed, was also a passenger on the China. He has been on duty at Manila. Paul Cowles, manager of the West- ern division of the Associated Press, He went to the Orient to organize the war service of Press. He turned the organization over to Martin J. Egan, who is now in charge, with headquar- ters at Tokio. The Associated Press has a dozen staff correspondents, cov- ering as many important points of the vast war operations, and emplovs an army of interpreters and messengers. Cowles says that the correspondents e DISTINGUISHED NAVAL OFFICER, WHO 1§ TO RETIRE FROM THE SERVICE ON ACCOUNT OF ILLNESS, AND AN ASSOCIATED PRESS MANAGER, BOTH ORIENT ON THE CHINA. 3 of American newspapers feel that they have a grievance against the Japa- nese war department. They recognize Japan’s right to shut out the news- | paper men, but object to the Japanese method of asserting it. Instead of | treating frankly with the press rep- resentatives, the Japanese have held them in suspense with smoothly | worded excuses and {indefinite prom- ises. Hope deferred is making nervous wrecks of many of the correspondents, says Cowles, and in all probability most of the special men will be ordered | home. | Cowles visited Chefu, Tientsin, Peking, Shanhaikwan and New-, chwang. MYSTERY OF EXCHANGE. The man that can handle any amount of money in the Orient and balance his cash has gifts the gods | might envy, according to Cowles’ story | of the exchange troubles that beset his path as financial agent for a dozen correspondents. The money changes in every district. In each district only the district’s kind of money circulates, and every time the traveler visits the banker an appalling percentage of; one’'s funds is dropped into the ‘‘ex- change” Kitty. Cowles, with $3000 in American gold, which is at a premium in Japan, wished to purchase Japanese yen. It seemed easy and promised a profit. At the bank, however, his gold was first exchanged into taels and for this op- eration a substantial commission was | charged. With a few more strokes of the pen the banker converted the taels into yen and again deducted ‘‘ex- change.” “If T had been a man of indecision,” says Cowles, “apd had changed my mind once or twice as to the kind of money I wanted, I probably would have used up my $3000 in exchange and owed something to the banker before 1 left the counter.” G. A. Goss, another passenger, is a former member of Yale's football team. He has been in Borneo hunting ento- mological specimens. He has presented the result of his labors to the Smith- sonian Institution. E. Carlson, a Russian banker, was a passenger on the China. | | | | | \ \ | pervisors’ office under civil service it would receive his support. The Mayor said it was his opinion that the report was not made in good faith, and the committee was. taking snap judgment, since there is a suit in court to determine the tenure of Health Department employes. The Mayor charged that the Supervisors stood sponsors for some laborers in | Chinatown and asked Brandenstein if { employed there. he had not asked that one O'Neill be Brandenstein replied that he had after O'Neill had been dis- charged and was told to go and see Abe Ruef. Boxton created amusement when he said that “civil service was all right for those who had the machinery of government, and that he had helped civil service employes to get their po- sitions by bringing his political pull to bear.” The vote on the adoption of the re- port was: Ayes—Booth, Brandenstein, Braun- hart, Comte, Connor, D'Ancona, Eg- gers, Hocks, McClellan, ‘Payot, Rock—11. Noes—Alpers, Bent, Finn, Boxton, Lunstedt, Sanderson—6. e S e WSt Photography and Art. 'W. E. Dassonville, the artist-photog- rapher, will deliver a lecture before the Camera Club on Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock at 819 Market street. The subject of the lecture will be “The Ap- plication of Artistic Principles to Photography.” An interesting exhibi- tion of prints by E. N. Sewell now in progress at the clubrooms is well ‘worth going to see. o MANY EMPLOYES WILL HAVE TO STAY AT HOME Transcontinental Roads Adopt a Rule That Will Spoil Contemplated Trips to Exposition. The transcontinental railroad com- panies have agreed by a joint resolu- tion to extend no free transportation to the St. Louis Exposition to em- ployes of their lines after August 15. This action is attributed to the heavy passenger movement which is expect- ed to materially increase after the date mentionad, and the transporta- tion companies figure that the carry- ing capacity of all their rolling stock will be needed to meet the require- ments of the traveling public. The official notice that the issuance of free transportation would be limited to the period prior to August 15 was given out yesterday and caused no little dis- appointment among local railroad employes who had been planning to g0 to the exposition after abatement of the hot spell in St. Louis. Under this new and unexpected ruiing many employes will. have to forego their trip unless they decide to pay their fares. ——— ‘Will Lecture on the War. The Rev. B. M. Kaplan of Sacra- mento, who occupied the pulpit of the Congregation Ohabai Shalome last Saturday morning, will preach at the Bush-street Synagogue on Wednesday | also requesting him to SEEK T0 AMEND CITY CIARTER Submitting tions to Municipal Voters| NO SPECIAL ATTORNEYS Proposed Regulations for| Dairies Again Referred to the Health Committee The Board of Supervisors yesterday passed to print ordinances providing for the submission to a vote of the people five proposed amendments to | the charter. The amendments follow: Providing that in levylng the tax rate on the las; Monday In June that 55 cents thereof shall be used to pay the running expenses of | | the municipal Government and 15 cents for public improvements and repair of bufldings, streets and sewers. Pro of Supervisors shall have the power to appropriate from time to time the income and revenue from any pub- lic_utility. Creating a district within which it fs pro- hibited to quarry or crush rock, Providing that no permit shall be lssued by the Board of Public Works to blast for grad- ing purposes, unless the same is approved by the Board of, Supervisor: Providing for progress contracts. The City Attorney was requested to give an early opinion on another amendment proposed to be submitted that city property may be leased for fifty years providing that the building erected thereon shall equal in cost the value of the lot so leased. The amend- payments on public | ment is designed to permit of an ad- vantageous lease of the Lincoln School lots on Market street. . Brandenstein submitted a resolution which was adopted that the commit- tees on charter amendments and finance examine and report on the | question of the advisability of amend- ing the charter so as to eliminate the provigions thereof permitting certain officials to employ legal counsel at the expense of the city and of adding to the charter a section providing that the functions heretofore discharged by such counsel be intrusted to the City At- torney. The ordinance fixing the width of the ' sidewalks on both sides of Fourth street at fifteen feet instead of nine- teen as at present was finally passed. This action is preparatory to the wid- ening of Fourth street by four feet to relieve congested teaming traffic. Ordinances were finally passed changing the name of Condon street in Precita Valley Lands to Cannon street; fixing grades on Uri street and ordering street work on Church, Army, | Clipper and Jersey streets. Ordinances were passed to print pro- viding for the full acceptance of Eleventh avenue between streets; ordering street work on Twen- ty-sixth avenue, Duboce avenue, North Point street, Hoffman avenue and Ash- bury street. Permits were granted for amateur | boxing exhibitions to the Lincoln Club for August 5 and to the Bay City Club for August 12. The City Treasurer was authorized to accept the sum of $21,649 56 as the per- centage due by the United Railroads on receipts from several of its lines. The West of Castro Street Improve- | ment Club filed a protest against the proposed intent of the Board of Edu- cation and Fire Commission to submit to the voters a charter amendment pro- | viding for special tax levies for each of the departments. The club will use its best endeavors to defeat the propo- sitions. Resolutions were adopted ratifying the course of Tax Collector E. J. Smith in bringing suit against Wells, Fargo | & Co. to recover delinquent taxes and institute new proceedings for the recovery of the taxes, as the real estate owned by the corporation is not sufficient to satlsfy the delinquency. Fire Commissioner Parry, Police Commissioner Hutton, Commissioner df Works Casey and Supervisors and Finn were directed by resolution to furnish new official bonds owing to the inadequacy of their present security. The hoard took up the proposed or- dinance containing rules and regula- tions for the sanitary conduct of dairies and the handling of milk. After | several sections had been agreed upon the matter was again referred to the Health Committee to hear the objec- tions of the dairymen next Wednesday at 10:30 a. m. ADV ERTISEHEVTS. Pears’ was the first maker of sticks of soap for shaving. Sticks in 3 sizes; shaving cakes in 3 sizes. Pears’ Soap established over 100 years. Hundreds of high-grade grocers sell Your grocer is one of them— ask him. Sold on Merit. No prizes. No coupons. Dr. Glbbon’b Dispensary, 629 KEA! evening at 8 o'clock. Rabbi Kaplan will speak on “The Russo-Japanese ‘War.” The musical programme will be conducted by Cantor Salomon. . Try him. Charges low. aranteed. Cuilor write. » San , Cal H and I| Bent | ADVERTISEMENTS. 818-820 Market St. DOUBLE DAY TO-MORROW LACE COLLARS. Just received a beautiful line of new Berthas— 81 00 Yoke Collars . $1.25 Yoke Collars . 5 Yoke Collars . .00 Yoke Collars . HAMMOCKS W'l Not many of a kind left, but a few of nearly all styles and prices, cut an- other notch lower in price this week to close them out before the season's over. GO-CARTS, 82.705. Folding Go-Carts have been ad- vanced in price by the various factories. We had the information in advance and ordered a carload, and will sell them at cut prices while they last. 60 styles to se- lect from. The best of flve dif- ferent makers. A substantial hard- wood frame, ve- neered back Fold- | ing Go-Cart, with enameled steel gear, light weight and light run- 7 s S A R e $2.75 rom TRAVELEES. A gobd, strong. flat-top Trunk, canvas covered and painted, rein- forced with four hardwood slats on top and two all around body. strong steel trim- mings and bump- ers; good lock and bolts and iron bottom. 28-in. 30-1n. 32-in. $4.00 £4.50 £5.00 34-in - 36-in. Higher ately low prices. {f you want them. Chamois Skin Window Cleaners And cheaper ones i Gas Tapers . Egg Beaters Will*FinckCo KNIVES, RAZORS AND SHEARS GROUND AND REPAIRED PICTUE FRAMES OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS MADE 70 PRPER San Francisco FREE %5 snllomry 20c¢ or more. Postage Stamps purchases In our p't to amount .of CLEARANCE SALE OF CORSETS, UNDERWEAR AND PETTICOATS. Girdles . -29¢ Corsets Corsets Vests Vests Vests . Petticoats Petticoats Petticoats Petticoats, > Petticoats, c Petticoats, Petticoats, sateen .... 5 Petticoats, sateen . SCHOOL SUPPLIES. We carry the larg- 50c $1.00 31.50 15¢ 25¢ 75¢ (white) (white) (white) . sateen . sateen . sateen est variety of School Bags in the ecity, from 10¢ to $2.00 each. Our assortment Perfei] Boxes. all furnished, is a vast one, and prices defy com- petition .. Each . B¢ to T8¢ Slates and Pencils at lowest prices. 20¢ Crayons. Pencils Per doz. Be. 10e. 15¢. 25e. P»m» 1 Tablets, ruleq or pmm Sach Se. 10e Per box Se. 10e. Ink l'\hlotq each ..Be. 10e. 15¢. 20e. -5(‘ B0e Colored Penci Per box. e lOc. i5e. 25¢ Rulers.2 for e: each Be. lOe 15¢ Blank Books .. Each Se. 10¢ 151' 25¢ Assorted Erasers .. ..Each Se Penholders ....Doz. Be Penholders. .2 for Se: each e, 10e School Fountain Pen, xuar.—mu»d .................. 1.00 Drawing Sets, from...35e¢ to sfl 00 Small Blotters. . Per pkg. 10e White and Colored Chalk. SCHOOL BOOXS. A complete line for Grammar, Poly- technic and High Schools at right prices, with our usual special in- ducement. | | OLD J. Cu SHERWOOD sxo SHERWOOD 212-214 MARKET ST SAN FRANCISCO 216 N MAIN ST. LOS ANGELES. OCEAN TRAVEL. AMERICAN LINE. Plymouth—Cherbouryr—=Southampton. From New York Saturdays at 9:30 a. m. St. Paul. x Philadelphia . .Aug. 13 ) s ATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINE. New York—London nlnut. Minnehaha. . Minneapolis. Mesaba. . Minnetonka N _LINE. Montreal—Livernool_Short sea pgssage. ‘Vancouver. vg. 6 Dominion Au Kensington Aug. 13 Vancouver HKOLLAND-AMERICA LINE. New Twin-Screw Steamers of 12,500 Tons. New York—Rotterdam, Via Boulogne. | Rotterdam Ryndam .. Noordam 9 Potsdam . Aug. 13 Rotterdam RED STAR LINE. New York—Antwerp—London—Paris. Calling_at Dover for London and Paris. From New York Saturd t 10:30 a. Kroonland......Aug. 8 Finla Zeeland Aug. 13' Vaderland vg. 17,10 am ug. 19 noon | Aug. 24, 5 pm vervool. Oct. Teutonic. Aug. +..Aug. 5, noon|Cedric Alll .5 er! ERVICE FROM BOSTON. | ers Fast Twin-Screw Steam: 2 Of 11,400 to 15.000 Tons. BOSTON D'IRECI' TO THE MED: VIA AZORES, | TBRABTAR, nArx.): . GENOA. | ROMAN 20, Dec. 1 | CANOPIC. Oct 8, Nov. 19 | First Class, $65 upward. depending on date. C. D. TAYLOR, Passenger Agent Pacific Coast, | 21 Post st., San Francisco. T0YO KISEN KAISHA (ORIENTAL STEAMSHIP CO.) Steamers will leave Greenwich-street whart (Pler No. 25) at 1 p. m., for YOKOHAMA and HONGKONG, calling at Kobe (Hiogo), Naga- saki and Shanghal and connecting at Hong- kong with steamers for India, etc. No cargo received on board on day of sailing. 8. S. AMERICA MARU lay, August 1, 1904 Via Honolulu. Round-trip tickets at reduced | ates, For freight and passaze apply at Com- | Pany's office, 421 Market street, corner First. | W. H. AVERY, General Agent. Jeamburg- -American, -Weekly Twin | FOR PLYMOUTH, CBERBDURG Hn(mmu, *tMoltke .July 28|fPatricia -Aug. 13 | Bulgaria July 30 Hamburg .....Aug. 18 | *Deutschland...Aug. 4 Phoenicia .Aug. §Pennsylvania..Aug. 6 *tBluecher .Aug. 25 *Has grill room and f‘mn-llll!m on board. IWiIL call at Dover for London and Paris, —_— Weekly Call, $1 per Year «| Redondo), | The palatial excursion steamship Spokane | way wharves. _OCEAN TRAVEL. _ Steamers leave Broadway harves (plers 9% and 11), Francisco: ‘or Ketchikan, »Humbelll Bav)— Aug. 2 Corona, 1:30 p. m., Aug 5. cs Angeles (via Port Los Angeles and San Diego and Santa Barbara— Santa Rosa, Sundays, % a. m. State of Californta, Thursdays, 9 a. m. For Los Angeles (via San Pedro and East San Pedro), Santa Bar - terey, San Simeon, Cayucos, Port H Luis ‘Obispo). Ventura and Huenem Bonita, 9 a. m., July 18 Coos say, 9 a. m.. July For For Ensenada, Magdalena Bay, San Jose de} Cabo, Mazatlan, Altata, La Paz_ Santa Ro- salia, Guaymas (Mex.). 10 a. m.. Tth cach m ALASKA EXCURSIONS, Season leave Tacoma. Seattle and Victorla Aug. 2 For further Information obtain folder. Right is rrexservnd to change steamers or sailing dat (33 D. DUNANN, General Passenger Ag 10 Mzrket ., AATAD, SAVOA, EW CCa c ZEALMNC uxs 8YONEV. e 3 DIRECT LN 10 7T S, S, Somoma. for Honolulu, Samos, Auck- Jana and Sydney. Thursday. July 38 2 . M. §.5. ALAMEDA, for Honolulu, Aug. 6, 11 A.M, | 8. 8. MARIPOSA, for Tahiti, August 9, 11 A M. { 1.D.SPRECKELS & BROS.CO., Agts., Tickst 0ffcs 643 { ket. Freight Ofice 329 Market SL., Pier 7, Pacic St. COMPAGNIE GENERALE TRANSATLANTIQUE DIRECT LINE TO HAVRE-PARIS. Sailing every Thursday instead of .m . from Pler 42, North River. foot of Morton st. First class to Havre, $70 and up'lrd Second class 1o Havre, $45 and upward. NE NCY FOR UNITED STAT 32 Broadway (Hudson bullding), J. F. FUGAZI & Pacific Coast 5 Montgomery avem Francisco, sold by all Railroad ! To U. S. Navy Yard and Vallejo. Stmr, H. J. Corcoran—Leaves S. F., foot of .. north end ferry bld —Week days. 5 Excursion rates Glen Cove and Martimes. S fldl 'S w allejo. l'-xc ruyund trip. PIPER, ADEN, GOODALL CO., phone Main 641. °*Saturday excepted. To U. S. Navy Yard and Vallejo. Stmrs. General Prhbl Monticello and Arrow, 730, 315, & 8:50 p. m. (exSum i sy 5 30 b m. _Leave Vailess 7. 9%a m., 6 p. m. (ex. Sun.); Sun. Pler 2, foot Mis- T by o streat b HATCH BROS. sion street; ph 15 p. m. one Main 1508.

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