The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 12, 1904, Page 9

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 190 1 WILL RECEIVE THE ENGINEERS Citizens of Interior Given - Time in Which to Prepare | - for the Board’s Coming! LARGE STORAGE |LITTLE SCHOONER MONTEREY MEETS BASIN NEEDED Be Supplied With Water | by Natural Flow of Rners ‘ JJTINERARY ARRANGED |RAINFALL IS ERRATIC! Party Will Leave Sa«r;-‘\pruw Valley Is Plannmv‘? mento Next Tuesday to! to Cope With Conditions | View Inundated District! on Fifty-Year Estimate]| Califorr e~ m and hos Herman Schussler, chisf eng‘lneer of ! throt the Spring Valley Water Works, again occupied the stand yesterday in the proceedings brought against the city to have the water rate fixed by the Super- | visors set aside. The hearing promises to occupy a great length of time, as ex- perts will testify on both sides. Com- loner Heacock is merely taking the testimony, and no time is wasted in arguments over disputed points of law. Schussler’s testimony yesterday was a continuation of that of Tuesday, con- sisting chiefly of a description of the water works, their capacity and the presentation of maps showing the av- erage rainfall during the last fifteen tour Joaq enginee until r following voirs and the wastage by overflows and evaporation. Attorney Partridge for the city objected to the introduction of this map, also to a great deal of Schuss- I testimony Upon questioning by Attorney Kel- pany the witness gave pin rding the establishment water tem to be supplied by rivers and mountain streams, such has been suggested for a municipal “Owing to the vagaries of the * he said, "it makes no differ- who supplies the water to the city logg for the c his « of a the or from what source it is drawn; a e storage reservoir is an absolute o g necessity. The rivers all have their W I high and low seasons, the low season 2 . lm g about the end of sum- : l-nl s reason the natural flow et cannot be relied upon. s 4 s have few lakes or and the slope is so artificial catch-basins ALLBGED GAMBLING the water rapidly runs off SUBJECT OF DERT A LAWSUIT is lost. The witness then referred to the plans Judge Daniells Hears Evidence Rel- | for increasing the resources of the ative to Money Lent During Spring Valley Company, among these a Poker Game. being the enlargement of the Alameda Creek system. If these plans are car- d out, he said, the resources on the peninsula, plus the Alameda Creek sys- will yield 110,000,000 gallons a day, which, according to careful calcula- will be sufficient to supply the of the city fifty years hence. little water has been wasted by mpany in the last fifteen years. one very rainy season there was a big loss owing to an overflow of the then uncompleted Crystal Springs dam. » water has been lost from the Pilar- citas Creek system except by evapora- The hearing will be continued to-day. e the 1 that mx—mg v nd that the !n.m ed the obligation, the to him the progr at w in T ested p s ng the stat- RIGHT OF WAY IN 1861. ¢ ed that Loiaden, & ould r cause the |Spring Valley Company Defends was t gambling debt Course of Lake Honda Flume. B are was not countenanced by | The Spring Valley Water Company LT R A resterday filed an answer to the suit ¢ ¥ MAHLEr YN~ hegun last March by Emma L. Mer- S — ;SA. as executrix of the estate of Sues for Loss of Trunk. Adolph Sutro, to prevent the company 1 - | from running flumes from Lake Honda strator Hyr lands belonging to the Sutro . between the coursing park and Corbett avenue. After alleging that the water company had begun the construction of a flume over the prop- erty without right, Mrs. Merritt al- leged that the Sutro estate had been damaged in the sum of $3000. The Spring Valley Company answers that its right of way was granted over the lands by F. L. A. Pioche, Levi Par- | #ons and ‘John B. Felton | fore the property was transferred by | them to Sutro. It says, too, that the | lumes have been maintained by the company along the line in question for i trunk and hn Leland 1e train running Leland has laint alleges thirty years and the construction com- plained of was merely in the way of rebu g the waterway. After such a long possession it is pleaded that the action is barred by statute of limita- ticns, and furthermore it is asserted that the flume is a public utility in a third of the inhabitants of San receive their water supply ‘frwm the Lake Honda reservoir. | SIS e e i | COMMISSION PETITIONS FOR CHARTER AMENDMENTS P LL | > | | MUK CONDENSIN 0 AR BICINAT o SEORATED Asks Supervisors to bmit Changes Designed to Better Administra- tion of Police Department. The Police Commissioners yester- | day Supervis rs to submit several charter |tion of the Police Department to a | vote of the people. were in the main suggested by Chief of Police Wittman and provide that | the age limit of eligible police officers 1~h all be instead of 21 years as at | present; that policemen be graded in Brand Evaporated Gream always bears the above cap. service and the third class $90 upon label. It means the same ‘.flvpmmmenL The third amewdment provides that all promotions from pa- as telling you that we | trolman to corporal be made from the L s . . first class. The fourth amendment back up its purity with a provides for an increase in the pay of $5,000 guarantee. | lieuteriants from $140 to $160. The | fifth amendment provides for the ap- Made by the largest pro- ducers of Evaporated | pointment of an inspector of police, Cream in the world. | $100 monthly after five vears’ servi | the second class $95 after three yea ! who shall act in the Chief’s absence, | at a salary of $3300 per annum. The | sixth amendment provides for an in- spector for every 500 police officers. The seventh amendment is for the | purpose - of giving the commission more specific power to reprimand, | fine, suspend, dismiss or disrate any member of the department for violat- ing rules. The Federation of Mission Improve- ment Clubs petitioned the Supervisors to submit a charter amendment rela- visit DR. JORDAN’S crear HUSEUN OF AHATOMY 1051 MAZZEY 5T. bet. GrhaTeR, £.7.0al, <] | : The Asatomical Museur in e tive to the method of putting in side Worid ‘cakuesses o contracted sewers. cisense positively curad by the oldest ————— Government Positions Vacant, The United States Civil Service Commission anhounces examinations at San Francisco, August 31, for the following: Wireman, office of the Secretary of the Treasury, salary $720 per i num, minimum age limit 20 years; agricultural clerk, either sex, salary $720 per unnum, age limit 20 years or over. Apply to the United States Civil Service Commission, ‘Washington, D. C., or to the secretary of the Board of Civil Service Ex- aminers, Postoffice, San Francisco, for forms, which should be filled with the commission at Washington, D. C. Applications for civil service exami- nation will be received for the next thirty days at the office of the United States Lighthouse Inspector, 404 Safe Deposit building, for assistant engineer for San Francisco light vessel No. 70, at $800 per annum. Applicants must be licensed engineers and citizens. ———— Ye Olde English Inn, “.l-ln.'. Mwh-&md Specialis: on the Comt. Est. 36 years. DR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN for Bouk. PRILOSGFRY of MARRIAGE, MAILED FREE. (A waiuabie book for mes ) DR JORDAN 1051 Market 8t.. I.: " DR.PIERCES I the amount caught in the reser- | in 1861 be-| | amendments affecting the administra- | The amendments | \hree classes, the first class to receive | WITH GOOD LUCK ON WHALING TRIP | Schussler Savs C'l.f) Cannot With the Arctic Ocean Still Before Her the Gasoline 'Engined Blubber-Hunter Has Four Mammals to Her Credit Which Insures a Good Profit for the Cruise WAS oUT "OMMISSION, WHICH R F NEEDS WERE SATISFIED, 1200 MILES EAST OF HONOLULU, LOST, SHORT OF PRO- BY THE NAVY TRANSPORT SOLACE, FROM schooner Mumnr hunters, is northern The whaling smallest of the meeting with succes waters, and if Captain Foley harpoons not another whale between now and the end of the cruise, he still will be a goodly pile of dollars ahead of his venture. Word was received yesterday from Dutch Harbor that the Monterey was there and that she had taken four big whales. The Monterey reached 'he‘ | Alaska port July 24 and three days later was to leave for a hunt in the Arctic before bringing her bone and blubber to market. The Monterey was the first whalers auxiliary shook their Captain Fole take. The line engine's would stampede to use a gasoline engine as motive heads power. Whalemen and declared that s making a sad mis- “choo-chooing” of a exhaust, they dec the most conservative whale that ever chewed up a boat or similated the bombs, harpoons and other deadly weapons and hardware with which whalemen sometimes fail to kill their monster quarry. If the Montere exhaust did mak a noise, Captain Foley did not follow its examp ahead installing the engine. The ma- chinery behaved badly on last r cruise, which was the first cru the gasoline engine. In spite of break downs, however, Foley satisfied him- self that there was nothing the matter with his idea, and before starting 'on his present vovage he equipped the | Monterey with a new engine. The little schooner Abbie F. Morris, from Seattle, for whose safety some anxiety was felt, arrived at Dutch Har- bor July The enue cutters Thetis and Perry were also there on July 24. - ! ¥ar Out of Her Coursé. Shipping men are wondering what the Brit- ish ship Brodick Castle, which was supplied | with provisions by the navy transport Solace, | filed a petition with the Board of | was doing nearly 1200 m! es to the westward of Honolulu. She was bound from Iquique for | { the Hawaiian port. Insurance men are won- dering why there was only one chronometer on board, and saflormen declare that even with- out a chrorometer the skipper of the windjam- mer should not have strayed course. According to_the cab from Honolulu, the Brodick ( . short of provisions and with her chronometér broken, was spoken and relieved by the Solace in 2 | north, 178:35 west. The officers of the Solace also told the skipper of the Brodick Castle e: actly where he was. s R New Steamer Launched. The steamer Harold Dollar, the latest addl. tion to_the Dollar line, was launched yester- day at Eureka. She will be towed to this port | to receive her engines. R 2T e Here for Overhauling. The tug Ranger, from Eureka, arrived here yesterday for her annual overhauling. She | came down from the Humboldt port in twenty- | four hours. ECES R Sty Siberia at Honolulu. The Pacific Mail Company’s liner Siberia, homeward bound, arrived yesterday at Hono- lulu. The Korea is safe at Hongkong. R S Liner Sierra Leaves Sydney. The Oceanic Steamship Company’s liner Si- erra left Sydney August 8. s The Overdue List. The rates of reinsurance on the two vessels on the overdue list were quoted yesterday follows: Pionler, 85 per cent; Earnmount, 20 per cent. e NS NEWS OF THE OCEAN. Matters of Interest to Mariners and Shipping Merchants. The British ship Oranasia, on Puget Sound, is chartered for Wheat, thence to Europe. s e iads Exports for Honolulu. The bark Santiago salled yesterday for Hono- tulu with an assorted cargo, valued at $47,728, and including the following: 225 bbls flour, 450 ctls wheat. 1900 ctls barley, 10,000 Ibs rice, bs beans. 1218 Ibs peas, Ibs sal 551 fhe. middlings, 22,651 Ibe bras, 1 ctig oats, 66 ctls corn, 6688 ibs meals, 2800 Ibs feed, 1704 bales hay, 33 pkes paste, 73 cs canned goods, 25 pkgs groceries and provisions, 50 bbls 450 c§ salmon, $148 Ibs bread, 4850 Ibs lard, 5245 guls ine, 100 casks beer, 10 pkgs liquors, 27 bbls 540,202 1o femuur. %0 1bs ahot, & ¢ léather, ?:fm e 7RO iy, Bistillgte s ami’:x nnllm. m bdls paper, 190 pes hard: atohes 10 chinery, 50 bxs cand 26 bals 90 bars. ir bls 22 bars steel. 116 pkgs wagon mater! 9 pkgs dry goods, 11 bdls bags, boxes 80aD. Time Ball.. Branch Hydrographic Office, U. 8. Monterey, | of the | He said nothing, but we nt | Al 0 miles off his | chants' Ex August 11 San Francisco, Cal., iall on the tower of the Uerry opped exaetly at noon to-day— of the 120th meridian, or at J. C. BURNETT, , U8 in charge. N Movements of Steamers. | | | TO ARRIVE. | | Pomon Humboldt . Columbia. ... | Portland & North Fork..| Humboldt . | Coos Bay....| San Pedro | Chico. Portland & Astoria. Arcata... Cops Bay & Pt. Orf Aug. St. Paul. Nome & St. Michael... Aug. 8. Monica. Grays Harbor IAug. Tellus. . Oyster Harbor . |Aus. ug. San Pedro ... New York via Ancon Humboldt .. Coquille River . Humboldt . Puget Sound Ports . Graye Harbor . Willapa Harbor . San Diego & Way Seattle & Olympia Humboldt . ay Ports.|Aug. Point Arena & Albion..|Aug. Grays Harbor ... Aug. Portland & Way Ports.|Aug. Portland & Astoria Aug, New York via Ancon..|Aug. Mendocino & Pt. Arena|Auz. San Diego & Way Pts.|Aus. China & Japan ... |Aug. Puget Sound Port Hamburg & Way Po; Honolulu & Kahulut. ot 1ttt 1t bt B S R PR R 355 0 5 500wt i i i o 63 60 6316 B9 58 43 49 b3 R0 194 |Aug. Seattle & Tacoma.....|Aug. 22 TO SAIL. Steamer. Destination, | Salls.| Pler. August 12. Breakwater.|Coos Bay . .| 5 pm|Per Newburg. .. |Grays Harbor ....| 4 pm|Pler 1 Ramses.....| Hamburg & Way..|12 m|Pler 1 Rainier. Seattle & Bellnghm| 4 pm|Pler 1 San Pedro. Grays Harbor 4 pm|Pler | 3. Higgins..|Los Angeles Forts. |11 unl'Pm- A k-1 J Humboldt .. ./ Point Arena . Y. via Ancon. Puget Sound Ports| Astoria & Portland| 5 pm|Pier . Monica...|Los Angeles Ports.| 4 pm|Pier Argo.. | Eel River Ports...| 4 pm Pler Angust 4. | Pomona. ... | Humboldt .. 1:30 p|Pler |'S. Rosa. Sln Diego & Way.[ ' am|Pler A S. Barbara. . Los Augeles Ports.| 4 pm|Pler North Fork. | Humboldt ......... 5 pm|Pier | Columbta.. .| Astorfa -& Portlarid|11 am|Pier Arcata......|Coos B, & Pt. Orfd|12 ~‘m|Pler EEEBe Fe wulobee wi:553x Coos Bay. San Pedro & Way.| 9 am|Pier A Elizabeth...| Coquille River 5 pml/Pler 20 Eureka., Humboldt .. 9 am|Pier 13 Al 17. Arctic. Humbaldt 9 am|Pler 2 Corona ‘Humboldt 30 p/Pler 8 Alliance Eureka & Coos B 5 pm/Pler 16 A 3 Sequola. ‘Willapa Harbor ...| 4 pm|Pler 20 Sydney & Way «| 2 pmPler 7 China & Japan....| 1 pm|Pler 40 | Puget Sound Ports/1l am|Pier 9 5 Pt. Arena & Albion| 6 pm|Pier 2 Sllle of Cal Sln‘Dlz[n & \’\IY 19 lmlPlll‘ u Coronado 4 pm‘lfler 10 Bonts 5 9 am|Pler 11 G. W, Fider | Astori & Portiand/11 am|Pler 24, City Peking.[N. Y. via Ancon.|12 m|Pier 40’ August 23, 1 Manchuria../China- & Japan....| 1 pm|Pler 40 FROM SEATTLE. Steamer. Destination. Salls. Dolphin. way & Way Ports. AIII'. 12 ez & Seward ... Aug. 12 Skagway & Way FortsAug. 13 Skagway & Wi Skagway & Way Port Skazway & Way Ports. Seldovia & Way Ports.. ' Sum, Moon and Tide. United States Coast and Geodetic Survey— Time and Helght of High and Low Waters at Fort Point, entrance to San Francisco Bay. Published by official authority of the Superintendent, NOTE--The high and low waters occur at the city front (Mission-street wharf) about 23 minutes later than at ‘on Polm the height ©of tide is the same at Both FRIDAY, AUOLS’A‘ 12. Au. Aug. the early morning tides are given in the lert and hand column and the successive tides of the | day In the order of occurrence as to time; fourth time column gives the last tide of mg. day, except when there are but three tides, sometimes occurs. The heights given are <+ as in | addition to the soundings of the United States | Coast Survey Charts_except when a minus (—) | sign precedes the height. the charts. of the lower low waters. e Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. Thursday, Stmr Whitesboro, Olsen, 1% Greenwood. Stmr Centralia, Erickson, 41 Hueneme. Stmr F A Kilburn, Thompson, 7 hours Port Rodzers, Stmr San Mateo, Ross, Los Angeles. August hours fr hours Stmr Samoa, Madsen, 16 hours from Caspar; | bound south; called in for passengers, Stmr Point Arena, Miller, 12 hours Point Arena. Stmr Signal, Bendegard, 46 Coos Bay. Stmr Santa Rosa, Alexander, 40 hours San Diego. Bark Hesper, Gamble. BRtn Chehalis, hours Svenson, 8 davs from Simpson, 6 eays from Buhne, Olsen, 7 days Marion, Tooter, 6 aays from Grays Harbor. Schr Jernle Griffin, Gibson, 3 hours from | Bolinas. and then the number | given is subtracted from the depth given by | The plane of reference is the mean | 1L om from | trom | 40 hours from Port from from | Schr Jessie Minor, Jorgenson, 6 dayd from G Harbor. 'hr Ida A, Campbell, Reyes. Schr R W Bartlett, Port Ludlow. Jocnr Soquel, Neilson, 'nx; Ranger, Carlson, 24 hours from Eurel CLEARED. 4 hours from Point 12 days from Bennett, 9 days from Port Had- ka. Thursday, August 11. Stmr Corona, Gielow, Eureka; Pacific Coast Steamship Company. Bark Santlazo, Anderson, Spreckels & Bros Co. SAILED. Thursday, Honolulu; J D August 11. Stmr F A Kilburn, Thompson, Port Rodgers. Stmr Maggle, Corning, Halfmoon Bay. Stmr Eureka, Jessen, Eureka. -Stmr Bonita, Preble, San Ped Stmr State of California, Neclmn. Diego. Stmr Samoa, Madsen. San Pedro. Grace Dollar, Olsen, Mukilteo. Corona, Gielow, Eureka. Centraiia, Erlcsson, Grays Harbor. Leelanaw, Monroe, Seattle, Stmr Stmr Stmr Stmr Stmr Stmr Centennial, coma. Stmr Det Norte. Payne, Crescent City. Br bark Auldgirth, McConnell, Liverpool. Bark Santiugo, Anderson, Honmolulu. J D Spreckels, Koehler, Harbor. Brig Lurline, Forest, Grays Harbor. Strand, San via Astoria, Pomo, Jacobs, Point Areffa and Albion. Seattle and Ta- Sanak, via Sohe Deasie K, Stark, San Vicente Landing. Schr Confianza, Johnson, Notleys Landing. Schr Newark, Reinertsen, Stewarts Point. SPOKEN. July 23—Outside Polnt Spencer, schr Laura Madsen, hence June 3 for St Lawrence Island; all well, Aug 4—Lat 48 N, long 14 W, Fr bark l;l,‘ungenle Fautrel, from Hamburg, for Port- TELEGRAPHIC. POINT LOBOS, Aug 11, 10 p m—Weather fog8Y; wind SW: velocity 8 miles per hour. DOMESTIC PORTS. EUREKA—Arrlud A\ll 11—Stmr Chas Nel- tmar son, hence Al Rival, Bllled Aug 11- RPived Aug 11—Stmr Arctic, hence Aug hence Aug 9. mr Phoenix, for San Fran- 10. Sailed Aug 11—Stmr| Nanh Fork, for San Francisco; stmr Pomona, for San Fran cisco. e Worth of the FRESHEST AND BEST COFFEE PISTRIBUTED FREE BY THE CALL O ITS WANT AD PATRONS. A pound can of J. A. FOLGER’S GOLDEN FFER GATE CO] WILL B.. GIVEN FREE TO EVERY WANT ADVERTISER IN NEXT SUNDAY'S CALL. Only one can of this high class coffee will be given to a want advertiser, and none but ‘those presenting a bona fide OF NEX SUNDAY'S CALL Will be entitled to receive this See announcement, classified pages. SUPERVISORY TAKEN T0 TASK Board of Education Blames Them for Increase in the APPOINTMENTS HELD UP Action on Naming of Super- visors of Penmanship Is i i The Board of Education yesterday took the Board of Supervisors to task | for having neglected to make provision for lighting . the public schools, an omission which resulted, says President Roncovieri, in the charges therefor be- ing increased during the present fiscal year. Director Boyle stated that he had withheld payment of two bills of the San Francisco Gas Company be- cause the vrice had been raised from 2.9 cents to 7 cents for arc lights and from 45 cents to $1 per 1000 feet for gas. The board also held up the bills of certain lumber dealers who charged for cartage of lumber furnished, whereas | the specifications provide (hat cartage shall be included in the bid. Resolutions appointing Pedro F:pm.x supervisor of penmanship and M E. Freese assistant supervi manship were postponed for one | to give Superintendent Langdon an op- portunity to be consulted on the mat- ter. Miss Elsie Bowman was transferred | from the Gi chool to the Mis sion High, 3 from the Mis | sion High to the Polytechnic Julia Miles from the Franklin to the | Emerson and Mrs. E. L. McDonald from the Irving to the Sunnyside | School. . The week beginning Monday, October | 3, was designated as the mid-fall term vacation. James A. McGuffin and Clara Wester- drooped from the roll of ed to report for duty July Miss May Wilson was assigned from the substitute list to the Fairmount Grammar School. Leaves of absence were granted to Alecia Campbell and Katherine Paxton. T Sess - - THOUSANDS ENJOY PICNIC | | | OF THE RETAIL (ill()(.'El\ The thirty-third annual picnic of i the retail grocers at Schuetzen Park Wednesday was the best attended out- ing ever given by that organization { From 10 o'clock till 7 the grounc | were packed with assorted sizes of hu- | manity from the grandfather to the { latest arriv So thickly crowded was the place that children were lost found every five minu The platform in the pavilion always had a bunch of lost babies walting to be claimed. | Every form of amusement was crowded into the day from racing to dancing. Hundr: of valuable gate prizes were offe Announcement of the winners will be made later. No- body felt lonesome. Hospitality was in the air and the glad mitt was reached out to evervbody. Following are the committees that made the af- fair such a success; Reception committee—T. H. oran (chair- man), E. Blood, WiNam l“lufl 'P. A. Buck- { ley, E. McCoy, John W. King, Lauinger, T.' J. Parsons, Diedrich : Wheaton, Charles Bra Floor committee—J. M floc £a F William hm, R. Dolan hooting _gallery—G man), “osgrove. w. W (chairman). Harry Mahone al Bowling Rawe, I Fuelsche Wheel of F. B. {H H. Conn es—J . McGuire (chairma Hurley, Willlam Off. T. P. O’'Dowd, P. A. Bu | G. Bartels, J. D. Ward Ladies’ ntest (chairman), Frank Snell. J . H. K ran (chait~ Methmann, J. sire. (chairman), es—F. B. Conuolly H. Wre . . Lackmann Press Salomon (chairman), J. P. Mc- Gutrer Wiillam Ring. — ~ Launched Aug 11—Stmr Harold Dollar, for San Franc RN Aug 11—Stmr Lakme, from San Pedro iled_Aug 11_Schr Allen A, for Eurcka 10" midnight | Bertha, Umatilla, Arrived Agg 10—Stmr Al Ki, trom Skaj way. Aug 11, 11 a m—Stmr Queen, hen: Aug 8, & Satifd Aug 11, 5 p m—Stmr St Paul, San Francisco. Arrived Aug 11—Schr Lottie Carson, from Eureka. - DUTCH HARBOR—Arrived July 29—U 8 stmr Perry, from Seattle. July 26— m» Abbi from_Seattle, for C: Iy F - Morris, 24U trom Honolulu; toria. _July Oncar. and’ Hattie, from Victorna: Theresa, from Victoria; stmr Kvichak, from Unalaska, and sailed July 28 for Nushagak Schr Monterey, from Fair- with four whales. Schr Monterey, for whaling In port July weather grounds, To sail July cruise. & POINT REYES—Passed Aug 11, 7 a m— Coos Bay, for San Pedro. NSEND—Sailed Aug 11—Br bark Adderley, for Sydne: GRAYS HARBOR—Sailed Aug 0—Schr Fal- Auz 10—S r Santa Monica, for | for San Pedro: &SA:‘;‘XC BARBARA—Sailed Aug 11-rStmr . for San Francisco. quoia_ for San Francisco. ASTORIA—Salled Aug 11—Stmr Chico, for San_Fran: bktn Fullerton, for ——. N ERET o Salled AuE 11— Scnr Méirose, for San Pedro; schr Forest Home, for San Francisco. MUKILTEO—Sailed - Aug 11—Stmr Robert Dollar, for Sen Pedro. BANDON—Arrived Aug 11, Elizabeth, hence Aug 8 PORT LOS ANGELES—Sailed Aug 11—Br ship Carnarvon Bay, for Portland, Ore. PORT MADISON—Sailed Aug 11—Schr Prosper, for San Pedro. sxpfiuw,\y—s:mxfa Aug 10, T p . for Seattle hflf\"co'b Hr—Pllsed out, Aug 11—Schr Me- teor, from Port Hadlock, for San Pedro: vin John Palmer, from Port Gamble, for San i£co, P AT BRAGO—Safled Aux 11—Stmr Jas § Higgins, for San Pedro. 5 p m—Stmr m—Stmr Arrived Aug 11—Stmr Brunswick. with barge Tid4l Wave in tow, hence Aux 10. WESTPORT—Sailed Aug 11—Stmr West- port, for Santa Barbara. ISLAND PORTS, Arrived Aug 11—Stmr Siberla, for San Francisco Sailed Aug 11—Schr Lurline, for San Pedro. Arrived Aug hr Helens, hence July Sailed Aug 9—U S stmr Logan, for Ma ELEELE—Arrived Aug —Bark W B Flint, July 24. he:lcr'l,o“—ys‘md Aug 9—Stmr_Enterprise, for San Francisco: bark Amy Turmer, for San Francisco. EASTERN PORT. PHILADELPHIA—Cleared Aug Willlam P Frye, for New York. FOREIGN PORTS. 10—Ship NEWCASTLE, N § W—Sailed Aug 10—Br | ship Clan Grabam, for San Francisco. SYDNEY- Aug S—Stmr Sierra, for San_Franc ch-rom rrived Aug 10—Stmr Queen, hence A 8. il“gd ug 10—Stmr City of Topeka, for CREMAINUS—Arrived July 30—Chil bark agasta. Saly { h‘;‘fisfi.{n—mxa Aug 10—Br stmr Manu- ka, for Vancouver, DDATF.-—&HM ‘Aug 11—Bktn James norl—n the above exposition of the tides ‘—————-——-——“4. Tuft, for Honolulu. . Cost of Lighting Schoolsé Postponed for One Week | High, Miss w Wins- | BEND—Salled Aug 11—Stmr Se- | MILWAUKEE | E There's whers the ] quality A& r g U ment | comes in—it's in every bottle or keg tnat bears the “Blats™ la- bel. Order “Blats™ !urr the sake of health—and the beaith of your family. Every bottle steriiized. Blatz Malt -Vivine (Non-Intox.) Tonte. 1AL, BLATZ BREW. CO. MILWAUKEE SAM BIBO & CO., Wholesale Dealers, 213 Battery St., Tel. Main 5859, San Francisco. r Colds . La Grippe | Catarrh Positively cured with Dr. Hal= pruner’s Wonderful Medicine, or your money returned. Price, 50c. and $1.00 per bottle. For sale by all dealers and at office of Halpruner Medical Mfg. Co., 28 California St., S. F., sent by mail or express. People cured free of charge from 1 to 4 p. m. LEADING Ble\E<S CULLEGE OF THA® Over 24 Post n a.u Francisea, Cal. Estab. 40 years w Open entire year.day & night. for circulars (free). SCHOOL OF MUSIC. VON WIEYERHCK equipped schodl on the Pacific Coast—offer- 841 FULTON ST, Established 1805, largest and best g all the advantages of Eastern and European conservatories for a thorough musical Prospectus upon ap- plication. to the World's Fair, St. Louls, a ited to examine the exhibit of the school. Educational Buflding, Call- fornia_School Fxhibit s THE LYCEUM. | An accredited preparatory school for the uni« law and medical colleges, is well for its caref: and thorough work. Come prepars you well; refer< dan or any Stanford pro- Ph. D., Principal versity kkeeping, Typing. thand, Penmanship, sal instruction, ed Course, $5 day and eve. '{nncroit Bldg. 72'3 Market St. HAMLIN SCHOOL AND VAN NESS SEMINARY, 1840 Jackson S. F. Boarding and day tchool for girls.’ Accredited by the leadin leges and universities. _ Special _attentlo en to musie. Reopens TUESDAY, Augus 1804. SARAH D. HAMLIN, Principal. Is the most practicals recommended by ex- pert court reporters. Send for Catalogue, 1382 Market St, 8. F. - BELMONT SCHOOL al kighee Barst musmr.av Colleg FOR BOYS, BELMONT, CAL.—Opens for new | pupils Aug. 15. For former pupils Aug. I7. W. T. REID. A. M., Harvard, Head Master. St. Mary’s College, OAKLAND, CAL. studlu will he resumed MONDAY, August ly BRO. ZENONIAN, President. | | | | | Thorough business course, Enge lish, bookkeeping, shorthand, are ithmetie, clgebra, etc., Civil Sery vice. Individual instruction, Pow sitions for graduates. 6 mo. (day) | WESTERN | BUSINESS COLLERE: I o S - An enroliment of atiforni 450 students tells the story of ous success:new bulld- ng, new i wholesome colleza Hfe: Catalogusy \NSine oileq [ i | 1 825 Golden Gate ave., S. F. ! | | | ANDERSON ACADEMY, IRVINGTON, Califorfia, First term of 1903 begins on August 10, | WILLIAM WALKER ANDERSON, Principal. _ | Hitchcock Military Academy SAN RAFAEL, CAL. WILL REOPEN on August 16. Apply to the Principal IRVING INSTITUTE. Boarding and day school for young ladies and 2126 California street, Will _'- August 1, 1904 Accredited to the universitisg. | REV. EDWARD B. CHURCH. A. M. Principal, Mount Temalpais Military Academy SAN RAFAEL, CAL, Junfor school separate. Fall term begins Aug- ARTHUR CROSBY, D.D.. Head Master. COLLEGE OF NOTRE DAME. BANIOSE. CAL. Eecwely for Somrtns boarding students. Fifty-third year. Literary, Scientific, Conservatory. C-\l— | preparatory accredited, Intermediate and Prie mary Classes. Studies resumed Tuesday, Augs ust 2, 1904 ALTO ACADEMY, on: e trom P T SRty Seye sad ,-. mea prepared for Stanford, Berkeley or Colleges. Exceptional Advantages In - Languages and Higher Mathematics. Fall term T R For catalogue address S AT FHT Palo Alto cal. Weekiy Call $1.00 per Year

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