The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 22, 1904, Page 7

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SAN FRANCISCO ( CALL THURSDAY. Sl;PTE.\YBER 29 1904. — R R e e BURNIA FGR BIC TASK D L Famous Chicago Architeet| Ready to Undertake Plans | for Beautifving the City \l HERE JULIUS 1S TAKEN FOR BARNEY ‘ BERNARD IN SPITE OF PROTEST Judge Mogan Is Satisfied That Fischer’s Former Comedian Is Before Him---Real Estate Man and Sign Painter Engage in Unique Repartee PR I'0O WORK ON TWIN PEAKS “Why, hello Barney,” exclaimed |and calls her reflection names. —pe | Judge Mogan yesterday when Julius| A few weeks ago Jane was in court " - Davis stepped before him. “How are | (0F throwing a lighted lamp at Mrs. | Savs That No Other Place | ko ang Dii ang the rest of the | Klein and her baby. She is early and f . L \d ey ) . ‘Ufiendus far as Police Courts are con- jas the tistic Advan- | "unch? : : | cerned. Has the Artist < . I'm not Barney, I'm Chulius the| Judge Mogan issued a warrant yes taces of San Franciseo vanana man” said Davis. “I'm losing | terday for her arrest on a charge o e gustomers all the time n Chudge, | disturbed the peace and ruined | " of o4 won't you please let me go? |t S Lizzie Gorham of | ~ . e S H According to the | ' e 1ous Chicago Let's Barney, I mean Julius | compiaint the spotiess wardrobe of | en en to de-; you charged with obstrjcting _fhe | Gorham, as it fluttered in the back yard i T s at Dupont and Geary—' roused the ire of Jane. Jane's ire re- | “The gustomers, Chudge. If I move | auires very little rousing. It's troubled | on I lose the gustomer: Ana the ex- cited peddler did a windmill stunt with ¥ that would have set the into a gigglefest. \0 noted the familiar ges- ne with 1 in his Barney Bernard, I'm on to you. A orporating | You can't decsive me. which will ‘But is Chulius,” wailed nd assist- ¢ t know this 3arney does he peddle? Let m iosing my gus- and ool me, your customers! Barney Bernard,” said ge sternly. “You had a bet with some one that you could job me.” $ me is Chulius. M tomerk,” replied the bewildered Davis. “This thing has gone far enough,” 1 the Judge. “You're up n . | Barney. Guilty, and you'll itenced tO-mOTTOW. I'm Chulius, Chudge. What will I {do about my gustomers?” pleaded Davis. “Let the customers go bananaless, Barney Bernard,” said the Judge. | “Take him away. Nobody can job this Court.” | "My gustomers—I'm Chulius—I don’t | know this Barney,” shouted Davis as | he was hustled out. g N On the fence at 732 Valencia street Edward L. Coryell, real estate dealer, and C. J. Raymond have been waging war. Though they live in adjoining oon as it is|flats they are on as pleasant terms as hitect Burnett | Kuroki and Kuropatkin. his task. It! So intense is the neighborly feeling into the winter | that exists between them that they iy to submit his| hurry home to look savagely at each nspection. other across the fence. Coryell swore S e to a warrant yesterday charging Ray- Freaks of Kighiniie Sineke. mond with disturbing his peace and osing him to storm in & North | petanbeshood. , the dwelling of Coryell placed the notice “Furnished wek and his fam- | Room to Let” on the fence. Then it alleges that Raymond placed beside it be as- tl » was s shocked. 'The tob of |, gign reading, “Wanted—A man with | struck by the bolt, | hrains to make a success of renting | g jerable crevice in the | furnished rooms.” Of course Raymond had the advant age in that sort of a game. at it with a will. All sorts of weird notices appeared on the fence. They ng traversed the side ng into the livin h and her eightee: i lose my gus- | the ridicule of the | He went | | | You ) | caused their capture with stolen goods { have made Patri | at 118 Waverley place the Chinaman with insomnia. \ Jane, so swears Mrs. Gorham, care- fully selected some fast colors in mud | and distributed the same carefully over the, newly washed garments, using language that would bring blushes to the face of an alarm clock. I | Con Walsh, who has been on a eech-making jag for fifteen years, | ed Lo orate in Judge Mogan’s ('n“rt.i A three months’ sentence to the County | did not please him and if the police- | man had not elapped his hand over | Con’s mouth as soon as the sentence | was passed the bibulous orator might | k Henry's “Give me e a parlor talk. liberty” sound As was Con did some sign lan- guage with his arms. A translation of this silent flood of rhetoric would be | unfit for publication. Con has been as familiar a figure | along the streets as the garbage cans. | He uses them for rostrums. Mounted on one of these, he leads off with a bit of Daniel Webster, switches to Hen- | v Clay and finishes with Bfllingsgale.;’ pte. . The greediness of Harry Cooper and | ames Joseph, two youthful burglars, b . in their possession. They started to clean out the groecery of Hepry | Bullwinkle at Eddy and Polk streets | yesterday morning. They were too thorough and systematic about it. They made two trips into the place and annexed 20 packages of cigars, tobacco and mixed groceries. They came back a third time, probably to take away the counters and remove the wall paper. Policemen Plume and | Cracke were waiting for them. They were charged before Judge Mogan. The pair will be tried September 26. e e T. Nakamuro, a gay Japanese round- er, obtained a warrant for the arreszi of Ng Fook, a Chinese gambler, on a charge of grand larceny. The Jap says that while he was playing poker bsent-mindedly went south with $20 belonging to him. A warrant was also issued for George Mulloy, the negro who is already charged with battery. | . S Py t for Coryell. He became | This time the negro is accused of crim- | conscious BY | ;roq of the fenceboard repartee and |inal assault. Maggie O'Brien, a 16 eping near the | syore out the warrant. vear-old girl, is the complaining wit- | np was ex- s -4 - | ness. Steve Fallon, the opium fiend n hed and e again Jane Davis is involved in | who stole a shoe dealer’s exhibit, was | antel had all of its & -vard battle. Jane would be a | given six months. Fred Williams, rep- | g ed f except the | prize candidate for lighthouse keeper | nting the “Louisiana Lottery Com- e vl up fn the | OF r on a bell buoy. When there " was fined $100 for having lot- | e loar Branas o1 dy to abuse she goes to a mirror ickets in his possession. the clock | < —p o o ork | NEW AND INGENIOUS | VAST AGE ESTIMATED TYPE OF COMPASS Direction of Needle Has Been Invented. M. Heit, a French inventor, has de- vised a new type of compass, which is - | of an automatic nature. The direction ! of the compass by this arrangement is automatically registered minute by minute, so that by consuiting the chart the ship's officers can ascertain the | route traversed at any time during the pa; The compass card, instead of having at its center an agate rest- ing on fixed steel points, is fixed on a | steel pivot, which rests on a fixed agate. The latter is immersed in a drop | of mercury, which serves to conduct | the current of electricity that makes | the registering of the movements of the apparatus possible. | Colonel Renaud of army aeronaut and automobile celebrity has just per- formed another- service for automobil- | ism. There was recently laid be{ore' he French Academy of Sciences an/ ingenious contrivance invented by him for measuring the powers of motors. | 3t is an apparatus which is attached to the axle-tree of the motor, and as | the action developed is in proportion to the cube of the speed, it is enough to register the number of revolutions | in order to determine the speed and consequently the corresponding power. | Self-registering tablets are provided to obviate all necessity for making cal- culations. The apparatus is capable of | registering up to 150 horse-power.—Ex- change. ge. BITTERS g tonic and e Bitters will That’s why so to the exclusion er remedies. It never fails f Sick Headache, Cramps, in cases Bloating, Fainting Spells, Backache and Indigestion. Try a bottle. —_————————— Steel Ship Building in Canada. Recent reports from the United States Consul General at Halifax say that there are four yards In Canada for the construction of steel vessels. One yard is building a canal boat that is to carry 7500 bushels of wheat, or 23,000 tons of dead weight. Her cost will be $130,000. This yard has sev- eral othem contracts nearing comple- tion. The steel plates used are now imported free of duty from the United States, as they are not made in Can- ada. As British-built steel vessels come into Canada duty free, it is im- possible to develop the industry in Canada successfully, except for vessels of a small size or of a design necessi- tated by local requirements. It is | stated that a Nova Scotia steel com- pany intends to manufacture plates; if i 80, the duty of 25 pet cent will attach and the price likely advance. This would probably cause the suspension of steel ship building in Canada unless sustained by duty or bounty.—New York Commercial. and PRINTING AT CUT RATES mpt delivery ha for my kodak ds Send me a trial ork and pro big 4 ADVERTISEMENTS. THAT MAN PITTS 1008 MARK ‘S:- Big @ for unnstural Could you teil it from the genuine? Experts have failed. The Sapph-Diamond has all the beauty of the real, and electric lights are unnecessary and never used. Guaranteed to retain its wonderful luster. Can be pro- Weak Men and Women ||. o ooy rom worids greac- vidson (Exclusive Western Pal- HOULD USE DAMIANA BITTERS, I Smut Mexican Remedy; gives -..m"i‘.i ace), 124 Kearny St., 8. F. Cat- organs. Depot, 323 aloguc. - | = | AT 2 A Automztic Device for Registering the . Many of the “Big Trees” Were Very | FOR THE SEQUOIAS | i Old When Christian Era Began. We speak about a person’s being as old as Methuselah. Yet the poor boy | lived but a brief hour compared with | some of the great sequoia trees which are. being sacrificed to short-sighted greed in California. A late prostrate monarch of the| woods that was fifteen feet in diameter several feet from the ground, began its existence in 271 B. C. By 24 A. D, | when it was 516 years of age, a forest fire burned on its trunk a scar three feet in width. Then it enjoyed 1196 | years of placid life. But in 1441 A. D. the tree, then aged | 1712, was injured in another fire and it took the scar fifty-six years to heal | The worst attack of all occurred in 1797, when the tree, then 2068 years old, | was attacked by a fire which left a scar | which it took 103 years to heal. i ‘Who would have thought that such a witness to ages of change, after hav- ing stood for over twenty centuries, must have to be brought to earth by | the unfeeling woodman’s ax some three | years ago, & Victim to the mere love of money? But if there is no romance In a ‘Western woodchopper there ought to be some sense in Congress. Only ten | of the great isolated groves remain. When these lone landmarks are gone what monarch shall then ask that its life be spared on the plea that it has reigned supreme for thirty centuries? —_———— The Doom of the Elephant. The recent landing in Brooklyn of 144 tusks of {vory from an Italian ship is held to signify the death of| seventy-two elephants—at least that number, for others, wounded, may have crawled into the jungle and dled, out of sight of the hunters. It would seem that the elephant is as surely doomed as his ancestor, or cousin, the great mammoth, was doomed by cli- matic and geologic change, and, not impossibly, by the persecutions of the man of the stone age. In our country | we have seen within a few years the practical extinction of the buffalo—the last of the Yellowstone herd was shot | a few days ago by pot hunters, who ! succeeded in escaping from the park1 without interference by the troops— and the antelope, that used to range the plains and foothills in thousands, have also disappeared from most of the ‘Western States. As every one knows, the game laws in thinly settled coun- tries are mere “bluff,” and violation of them is daily practiced. In civilized New Jersey the attempt to stop the disgusting and brutalizing slaughter of harmless and helpless pigeons, released from traps. has failed, because of the pernicious activity of gun manufactur- ers and shooting clubs.—Brooklyn Eagle. —_————e————— Date Palms in California. The work of planting the date palms just received from the Sahara Desert | on the United States Government ex-l periment station at Mecca has been completed by Professor Steubenrauch and Superintendent Mills of Pomona, California. There Were 160 female plants in the shipment from across the water and these were supplemented by f.rty male plants from the Pomona experiment station for pcllenization purposes. The plants are nearly all looking finely. Another shipment of | plants is expected to arrive within a few weeks from Asia and these will also be planted at the Mecca station, where the climatic conditions are said to be ideal for date palm culture.—New York Commercial 2EEN | This _district | My | part, the Democratic party | hundred members were present. LOCAL FORCES ARE ALIGNING Indorsement of Union Labor Party Is Accepted by Edward J. Livernash 7/ LETTER TO COMMITTEE Republicans of the Fourth District Will Meet This Evening at Pioneer Hall Delegates to the Fourth Congression- al District Republican Convention will assemble at Pioneer Hall this evening to nominate a candidate for Congress. lies wholly within the boundaries of San Francisco and em- braces the following assembly dis- tricts: Twenty-eighth, Twenty-ninth, Thirtieth, Thirty-first, Fortieth, Forty- first, Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty- | fourth and Forty-fifth. The Republii- cans are confident of their ability fo elect the nominee of their convention. The nomination of E. J. Livernash by the Democratic convention, which met in Santa Cruz last month, did not rep- resent the desires of a majority of ths Democratic voters of the district. In fact, very little idterest was manifest- | ed in the proceedings of the conven- tion. The Union Labor indorsement, which was given to Mr. Livernash's candidacy at Pioneer Hall last Tuesday night was obtained through the agency of Willilam Randolph Hearst, Mayor Schmitz, A. Ruef and other slate work-. ers of the labor convention simply pre- | sented the Livernash programme and the delegates took it in a perfunctory manner. In a letter as follows, Mr. Livernash accepts the nomination of the Labor convention. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 21, 1904. Messrs. ‘Thomas Eagan and E. J. Beaver, Notification Committee Union Labor Party— Dear Sirs: 1 accept the nomination of the Union Labor party to be its candidate for Member of the House of Representatives, Fourth Congressional District of Californla. Two years ago 1 consented to be the can- didate of the Union Labor party and the Demo- cratic party for a seat in the House of Rep- resentatives. 1 consented because I thought I could more effectively champion certain prin- ciples of national government in which 1 be- lieved if I were a member of Congress than if I were mot. I frankly explained to the citizens of the Fourth California District what I would stand for if sent to Washington, and they expressed approval of my principlés by giving me a mandate to represent them in the chief legisaltive body of our country, Since then I have striven to keep the faith 1 pledged my people by standing for such government as within my information and by my conscience I have felt would be most likely to yield number. On my return to San Francisco, and without anything in the nature of solicitation on my again conferred upon me the honor of a momination for Con- gress. And now, likewise without solicitation, the Union Labor party has for the second time made me its nominee. I need scarcely say that these manifestations of an unpaltered friendliness by th parties originally sup- porting me I fully appreciate. That concern for the plain people of Amer- ica which led me to consent to be a candi- the greatest good to the greatest date in the beginning, reluctant though 1 was | to enter public life, governs me more strongly it did two years ago; for now better n 1 understand the dangerous misrule whereby more than 90 per cent of our people are oppressed by unjust laws operating in the interest of a specially privileged and steadily narrowing few. And I wish to return to Con- gress, if at all, with my status in that as- semblage unchanged, to continue the work I have begun, and this free of the accusation that the mandate 1 have .thus far held has been in any sense recalled; -for an alteration of my status in Congress would injuriously affect the mission for which I engaged in pol- itics. 1 went to Washington commissioned to speak for organized labor; and I am mainly d by the action of your convention be- I wish to say to the Fifty-ninth Con- hould I be a member of that body, having observed my work in the Fifty- “ongress, organized labor approved my stewardship and bade me persevere. Please convey to the convention which speaks to me through you my assurance of intention to continue to plead for, essentfal justice to the | plain people. regardless of the outcome of the political campaign now begun. Sincerely yours, EDWARD J. LIVERNASH. SRLLL AT Greek Republicans Meet. The Greek-American Republican Club met and organized for the com- ing campaign at B'nal B'rith Hall, 121 Eddy street, Tuesday evening. Three The following officers were elected unani- mously: President, N. Valianos: vice president, Peter Georges; secretary, Frank A. Kitchner; executive commit- tee, Elias Dervissie, M. Petrakis, Alex Firos, Mick Constantine, G. Niclis, J. Papadakis, G. Miller; sergeant arms, N. Davlareas. The meeting enthusiastically adopt- ed resolutions to support Roosevelt and Fairbanks and all Republican nominees. ———— ‘Where Ladies May Not Swear. If we are at liberty to believe the dispatches from Wilkesbarre, a justice of the peace has fined a young woman $1 34.for uttering two profane words in the privacy of her home “against the peace and dignity of the State of Pennsylvania and contrary to the stat- utes thereunto provided.” An appeal has been taken to see whether a lady may swear a little on her own account at home or whether nrofanity is only an offense against public morals when uttered to the distress of unwilling au- ditors.—Philadelphia Inquirer. at FLAMES CREEP UPON SLEEPERS{ BY RAT POISO San Francisco Merchant anq His Wife Have Narrow Es- . cape From Death at Menlo MOORE HOME DESTROYED Clad Only in Night Clothes Owner and Spouse Leave House Just as Walls Fall — Epecial Dispatch to The Call. MENLO PARK, Sept. 21.—One of the most disastrous fires that San Mateo County has had for many years, and | one that nearly cost two well-known members of San Francisco society their lives, occurred here this morning when the magnificent residence of J. J. Moore, president of the shipping firm of J. J. Moore & Co. of San Francisco, was completely destroyed. Shortly after 3 o’clock this morning J. J. Moore, who occupied an apart- ment in the front of the house, was suddenly aroused from a sound sleep by a terrific crash, which it was later learred was caused by the falling in of the skylights on the roof of his home. Jumping out of his bed, he was startled by the discovery that almost the entire portion of his home had already been burned and that the flames were rap- idly surrounding his sleeping apart- ment. He was not slow in realizing that his chances of escape were quickly dimin- ishing. The ceiling of his room was crackling with the heat and flames were coming through the floor, beneath which there was raging a furnace of fire. Dragging his sleeping wife from the bed, the husband hurriedly carried her out into the hall and down the stairway to the front entrance, through which he made his escape to the lawn. He and his badly frightened wife had barely reached a place of safety before the ceiling of their own room fell, and a moment later the front portion of their home was filled with flerce flames. Not an article was saved from the home, and the only clothing that shel- tered Mr. and Mrs. Moore from the chilly atmosphere of the early morning were their night robes. When the re- lief party arrived and was made to appreciate the predicament of the Moores the latter were hurried into adjacent homes, where sufficient ap- | parel was given them to enable them to go to San Francisco, where they telegraphed for apartments at the St. Francis. Moore estimates his loss at about $75,000, of which $15,000 represents fur- niture. bric-a-brac and the valuable wardrobe of his wife. —_———— Jap Soldiers Postcard Home. The Japanese Government has found a novel and excellent use for post- cards. Realizing that, for various rea- sons, the soldier on campaign may not have leisure or opportunit§ to write home to his family, the military au- thorities have supplied to each army a sufficient number of postcards, ready printed, to which the soldier has only to affix his name, or more exactly, his seal, each Japanese soldier carrying one with him as part of his outfit. @h all the cards the same message is printed: ““This is to let you know that I am alive and well; I cannot give you my address, not knowing where I shall be to-morrow; but your letters will reach me some time or other if you reply to the place the name of which is printed in the postmark. Greetings to my family and friends.” This is an idea which might well be copied by other nations. At once practical and humane, it would cost little and save many thousands of people from unnec- essary anxiety and pain.—Manchester Guardian. ——————— Coke Ovens in England. The inhabitants of the coke districts i the United States will tell the stranger that they realize as fully as he does the shamefulness of tl . waste which accompanies the use of the tra- ditional type of coke oven and regret equally the defilement of a naturally pure atmosphere and the defacement of a beautiful country, but they will add that they know that experiments have been made by the operators with different kinds of coke ovens and that there has not been with any type tried sufficient success in recovery and in the saving of by-product to make the general introduction of new ovens com- mercially . possible. At the annual meeting last month of the British Iron and Steel Institute, C. Lowthian Bell of the Clarence Works, Middlesboro, read a paper reciting the success his firm has had with a German type of coke oven—the Hussener—which he in- troduced in 1902, and from the discus- sion which followed it seems evident that not only has the oven he uses given splendid results, but that there is another type of coke oven in England —the Otto—giving equally successful returns for the investment.—New York Commercial. { dren. CHILD KILLED e Four Little Ones Eat Ro- dent Destroyer Found in a Junkshop and One Dies A ST A Special Dispatch to The Call SPOKANE, Sept. 21.—Four children of Jacob Lesser, a wood hauler, were poisoned at noon to-day by eating ‘“rat biskit,” which one of them had found in a junkshop. Reuben, aged 8, dis- covered the poison and after eating some of it, gave it to the other chil- Reuben died in agonys The other children will recover. —_———— HOLD FIRM BELIEF IN THE EVIL EYE Almost Universal in Rome and Most Strangers Take to the Superstition. The strangest thing about life in Rome is that one not only does as the | Romans do, but ends by the Romans think, feeling as the Romans feel. The best illustration I know of this is the mental attitude of the foreign residents toward certain superstiticns, notably the belief in the evil eye—the malocchio or jettatura, as it is indifferently called. I never knew an Italian who did not hold more less to this superstition. Americans who have lived long in Rome either reluctantly thinking as it,” oo, if they are Roman born, quietly accept it as one of those things heaven and earth of which philos fails to take account. In cert spects the Italian is markedly from superstition as compared with the | Celt or the Scc : for instance, the fear of ghosts or spirits is so rare that I | have never met with it; on the other hand the belief in the value of dreams as guides to action is deep-rooted and widespread. The dream book in some families is held hardly second in im- portance to the book of prayer. The Italian’s eminently practical na- ture makes him utilize his dreams in “playing the lotto,” as the buying of lottery tickets is called. To dream of certain things indicates that one will be lucky and should play. The choice of the number is the chief precccupa- ticn of the hardened lottery player. It is decided by the oddest chance—by the | number on a banknote that has been lost and found again or the number of a cab which has brought one home from a delightful festivity.—Century. —_————— Denmark’s Trade in 1903. Denmark’'s foreign trade in 1903 is computed at $119,900,000 for her im- ports and at $95,000,000 for her ex-| ports. The latter consist chiefly of meat and dalry products—lard and animal fat, 14,000,000 pounds; butter, 197,860,000 pounds; ham and bacon, 174,810,000 pounds; beef, 25,510,000 pounds; divers meats and 17,550,000 pounds. Besides these, Den- mark shipped abroad in said year 47 200,000 eggs, 24,494 head of horses and colts, 62,929 head of cattle, 3 650,000 pounds of fresh fish and 15,- 050,000 pounds of saited herrings. The principal items of Denmark's imports are: Dry goods, yarns, thread, cordage, minerals and products thereof, iron and manufactures thereof, fertilizers, wood and woodenware, oil cake, lin- seed, clover and grass seed, grain (rye, wheat, barley, oats and corn), wheaten flour and groceries. to by American producers, Denmark may prove a more valuable market to them than many of the countries of Central and South America. Neither should be neglected. Both are worth working for.—Baltimore Herald. —_——— New Method of Degreasing Wool. During the past montn the last of a series of patents has been granted to a German company covering new meth- | » ods and machinery for the degreasing | of wool by a dry process. The degreas- ing is successfully perrormed by the use of infusorial earth, used as an ab- sorbent, which is applied to the wood with great force by a current of air by specially constructed but inexpen- | sive machinery, the wool being cleaned and degreased evenly throughout. It has many advantages in the treatment of skin wools—now cleaned by strong alkalis—as the dyes take better, which is an important point In the manufac- ture of fine military cloth and other fine cloths in delicate colors.—New York Commercial. —_———— That Floral Fracas. Evidently the search for a natfonal floral emblem is about as persistent and as vain as that for a new national anthem. Some mysterious law decrees that the discussion as to the flower best fitted to represent the nation shall return every two or three years to en- gender bitterness and®®wrath among the partisans of the several floral aspir- ants. In the last previous debate com- plete and final victory apparently rested with the adhergnts of the golden- rod. Now comes forward a soclety styling itself the Columbine Association to present & new candidate for popular preferment. It is, of course, the columbine.—Indianapolis News. ADVERTISEMENTS. T Alexander Humb.oldt are now being made from the \ new Havana crop which is milder and sweeter than ever. This brand of cigars was Cigars or ! admit that | “there does seem to be something in | sausages, | If well attended | i#p Bustille Bros. & Diaz Makers, Harana and Tampa. Alexander Humboldt Cigars, ”“"‘""‘“,‘,‘Q,. m San Frll:% SOLD EVERYWHERE—10c UP. ) # manufactured in Cuba for nearly fifty years and the change to Tampa, Fla.,seven years ago was made for the purpose of saving the high import duty on manufac- tured cigars. The tobacco used isstillstrippedin Cuba. ADVERTISEMENTS. JTHE BEST AFLOAT | I Sherwood & Sherwood, 21: i 214 Market Street. e Perfect Fitting Eyeglassss At Moderate Gas! V642 /MARKETST | — — { RAVEL. ; - < Steamers leave Broadway | O harves (piers 9 and 1), i Wrangel, \ ® Skagway, 5. Sept. Soer 2. company's Vancouver. | Port Townsend, Sea a, Everets, Bel- | lingham—11 a. m 17, 22, 2. Oeto- | ber 2. Change at Seattle to this | steamers for Alaska and G. N attle or Tacoma to N. P. Ry.: & to_C. Ry. boldt Bay)—Pomona. 1:30 o v 1: Corona, 1:30 Redondo), San Diego Santa Rosa, Sundays, State of California. Feor Los Angeles a. Thursdays, 9 a. m. (via San_Pedro and East Santa_Cruz, Mone ort Harford (Sam Coos Bay, 9 a. m., Sept. For Ensenada, Magdalena Cabo, Mazatlan, Altata, salia, Guaymas (Mex.). For further inform: . San Jose del Santa Ro- h each mo. ion obtain folder. Right 1s reserved to o steamers or sailing dates. TICXET OFFI New Montgom- ery st. (Palace Hotel), 10 Market st._and Broad- way wharves. Preight Office, 10 Market st. C. D. DUNANN, Geperal Passenger Agent, 10 Market st. San Francisco. The Pacific Transter Co.. 20 Sutter s call for and_check baggage from hote residences. Telephone Exchange 312. AMERICAN LINE. outh—Cherbourg—Southampton. From New York, Saturday, 9:30 a. m. ..Oct. 1{Germanic Oct . .Oct. 8/New York......Oct. 28 . New York—DLondon Direct. Minnehaha.Oct. 1.9 am|Manitou..Oct. 15, 9 am Minnepis,Oct.8,4:30 am|Mnnetnka.Oct.22, 4 pm N LINE. Short sea passage. Oct. 1|Southwark Oct. 18 Oct. 8/ Kensington. ... .Oct. 23 RED STAR LINE. New York—Antwerp—London—Paris. Calling at Dover for London and Paris. From New York, Saturdays, at 10:30 a. m. d Oct. 1{Finland. . ..Oct. 13 e Oct. 8 Vaderland. .....Oct. 23 STAR LINE. k—Queenstown— - ’“s-mn‘ ‘Wednesdays. Cedric...Oct. 14. 9 am Oceanie. .Oct. 19, 2 pm Arable. ..Oct. 21. 8 pm ................... Do 13 Nov. 1 NEW SERVICE FROM BOSTON. Fast Twin-Screw 0f 11,400 to 15,000 Tons. o e Azores, Gibraltar, Na) Genoa. da O R TR REPUBLIC. ..Oct. 20. Dec. 1, Jan. 14. Feb. 23 ca!nc..‘.:.scv. 3, Dec. 12. Feb. 4, March 13 FRO! ‘BOSTON. “. Nov. 19, Jan. 7, Feb. 18 mamAn, SANOA, NEW ZEALAND am STONEYa DIRECT LIMA 1o TAHIT for Honolulu, Samoa. Auck- Thursday, Sept. . 2 p.m. MEDA, for Honolulu, Oct. a £E ATRIPOSK, tor Tanitt, Oct. 20, 1f mm. .D.SPRECKELS & BROS. C0., Agts., Tieket 0ffca 543 ¥ar- g Treight Office 329 Market SL., Pier 7, Pacifie St COMPAGNIE GENERALE TRANSATLANTIQUR VRE-PARIS B VLSS Oceanics.s.co. S & SONOMA. land and Sydney, of Broadway (Hudson building). 3. F. FUGAZI & CO., Pacific Coast Agen! Montgomery avenue. i !u:: :lld by all Raflrcad Ticket Agents. To U. S. Navy Yard and Vallelo. e —Leaves S. F., foot of . Corcoran A L 30 a 5 bie, Monticello and Arrow, Stmrs. General Frisbie. Mon < 30, 3:15, 6, 8:30 p. m. (ex.Sum.); mu-.n‘..n:nfi » m'l.‘-.‘{m

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