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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1904 JAPANESE FISHERS MURDER A COUNTRYMAN Pare Two Tinroofers Fall Thirty Feet, Being Seriously Injured —_— The bark Servia, which arrived Thursday evening from Karluk with a cargo of salmon, brings down from the north a story of murder, committed among the fishermen. The Japanese employed in the fish- eries became enraged at their boss, K. Amoto, and with that true Japanese ferocity which is now being exhibited on the battlefields in Manchuria pro- ceeded to butcher their countryman. The unfortunate men was assaulted as he elgpt and brutally stabbed to death. It was a savage as well as cowardly act. Twenty knife stabs were found in the dead man’s body. The murderers Wwere arrested and taken to Valdez for | examination. The Japanese quarreled over the wages due the men. The Servia brought down from Kar- ', luk 48,600 cases of salmon and the Star of Italy, which arrived from Pyramid Harbor Thursday, had on board a e carge of 42,115 cases of salmon. { —— Two Tin Roofers Injured. Two tin roofers were taken yesterday morm- ing to the Harbor Hoepital from the corner of Montgomery and Chestnut streets suffering with broken limbs and Juternal injuries. The men, whose names are Edward Guy, living at 813 Natoma street, and George Cambridge of | 521 Ellis street, were at work on the roof of & | mew building, when they had the misfortune | S to siip and fall through an open skylight. Guy tried to hold his compenion back and both | wpled over the frame of the skylight and | pped thirty feet to the floor below. Cam- bridge sustained a fracture of the right leg, severe contusion of back and internal injuries. Guy received a fracture of the bomes of the right foot and contusions of the right shoulder 208 the neck. He probably is injured inter- iy. SRS e Repaired Northland Sails. The steamer Northland, with her hull re- d, salled yesterday for Astoria and Port- She is in charge of Captain Jamison ace of Captain Bonifield who recently ran in Monterey Bay. rocks sis license for six months be- he wrong course, and Hedvall papers for all time because he fol- at course even when he knew the ves- sel was steaming to disaster. pact B e R Increased Overdue Rates. on the overdue ships is the 100 per cent mark. ent i Changes in Masters. changes in masters have been r Despatch, Weber, vice Leon- re, Burtis, vice Macgim; Jamison, ' vice Bonifiel , ¥ice Nicholson; steam , vice Thomas; State of Cal- olson, viee Cousins. B — Water Front Notes. coner Besste K, which put ng with engines disabled, erday from that port in tow of the ers St Paul and Portland have Nome bound for Seattle and Ssn STIT] n: p City of Peking | to-aay at noon. - were decorated expected arrival of Vice rral of Mexico. AR SRl = s NEWS OF THE OCEAN. Matiers of Interest to Mariners and Shipping Merchants. The ship Tilile Starbuck will proceed to Newcastle, . in ballast. RS T3 34775 Exports by the Kosmos Liner. eamer Nicaria of the Kosmos 4 on Thursday for Hamburg . carried an assorted merchan. aden at this port and valued at > be distributed as foliows. For 10; Central America, $1L472; Ecu- Peru, $5603; Chile, $1180; Ger- Holland, $512. The following exports, —S bbis flour, 130 gals 8 cs wine, 20 cs whisky, 10 pkgs groceries provisions, 836 lbs_raisins, 61 pkgs pota- 10 cs salmon, 1756 Ibs dried fruit, anned goods, 376 ibs spice caps and fuse, 537 Ibs rosin, 3 bale duck, kg nails, 9 pkgs electrical supplies, 10 12 ints, 1655 1bs cement. 891 bbis flour, 1602 ctis 43,007 1t lumber, 204 pkgs . 0 sks coal, 32 tanks oll, 3 pkgs pain ibs tallow, 26 cs line, 8 pes car material, 160 cs coal ofl, 17 phkgs acid Ecuador—§20 bbls flour, 2700 gals wine, s canned goods, 20 c= paste, 98 cs salmon, Ibs tes. 200 cs cartridges, 50 cs coal ofl, gasoline, 24 pkgs ofis, 3 bdls Rk Peru—54.030 ibs mait, 2395 Ibs spices, 299 1bs bams, 68 cs canned goods, 440 Ibs dried fruit, 80 gals . 1480 1bs lard, 12 pkgs table preparations, 7070 Ibg tallow, 5000 raliroad tes, 2 bales leather, 53 bdls rops, 1100 bdls sbooks, 4550 ibs carbide, 4311 ibs grease, 3 les duck, 10 cs paints, 1000 Ibs cyanide, 39 pipe, 12 pkge machinery. Chile—260 cs canned saimon, 38 cs canned goods, 4 pkes grooeries and provisions, 500 ibs drjed fruit, 1 bx soap. To “Germany—#76,565 lbs dried prunes, 15 cs canned good: To Holland. $7682 $11.118 and toes 4 cx 125 1 Ben Jose reports tc the Branch H; e Office that at 12:45 p. m. October 19, 1904, when six miles west (true) from Point Sen Pedro, he saw a schooner's mast with rig- #ing attached. Lower part of the mast painted of mast it had white.Judging from the looks —-— % (120th BAN ‘Weather Report. Meridian—Pacific Time.) FRANCISCO, Oct. 21—5 p. m. The following ‘maximum and minimum tem- Deratures are cities. Eastern Chicago monmt'u-mmdumm B0-44/ Pittsburg .u::g St. Louls . Reinsurance Rates on Rapidly Increasing ty-four hours: Last Stations— 24 Hours. 0.00 0.00 i 0.00 X 0.00 x 0.00 € 0.00 i 0.00 .58 0.00 (13 0.00 .15 02 01 AST RECORD. 1:44 0.0 P E EUY e NOTE—In the above exposition of the tides 5 BF 85237 22 3 |the early morning tides are given in the left § 35 S5 3% & |band column and the successive tides of the 8§ 25 2222 25 Z |day in the order of occurrence as to time: the STATIONS. 7 55 E5E85 § £ | fourth time column gt t tide of the g 38 z"2 % £ | day, except when there are but three tides, as i S : § | sometimes occurs. The heights given are in 5 . 52 $ T | addition to the soundings of the United States ‘Winnemucca Yuma WEBATHER .80.28 68 36 SE Clear .00 20 64 30 NE Clear .00 3008 72 52 W Clear .00 30,02 T8 48 S Clear .00 .30.05 78 63 NW Clear .00 .30.12 62 20 E Clear .00 .30.28 62 32 SW Clear .00 30.08 78 48 SE Clear .00 ..290.90 92 58 SW Clear .00 80.08 60 65 N Clear .00 ..30.02 80 54 SE Clear .00 2988 86 52 NE Clear .00 ..80.00 78 57 NW Clear .00 .30.04 T4 44 W Clear .00 *50.04 82 58 SE _ Clear .00 .30.08 72 46 NW Clear .00 ..30.04 76 52 E Clear .00 30.28 58 34 W_ Clear .00 .30.04 78 60 NW Clear .00/ .20.88 94 64 NW Clear .00 .80.12 58 42 NW Cloudy .00 .80.28 66 36 E Pt.Cldy .00 29.98 60 52 E Clear .02 80.18 76 44 S Clear .00 30,24 68 30 NBE Clear .00 ..20.88 90 66 N Clear .00 CONDITIONS AND GENERAL FORECAST. Warm weather continues in California and afternoon temperatures along the coast from Point Conception southward reach 90 degrees or_high: er. No rain has fallen west of the Rocky Moun- ns. The pressure is beginning to fall rapidly at Tatooeh Island and an east wind with a veloc- ity of 48 miles is reported. Forecast made at San Francisco for thirty hours, ending midnight, October 22: Northern California—Fair Saturday, becom- cloudy at night; wind, changing to westerly. Southern California—Falr Saturday; not so warm; light southwest winds. Nevada—Fair Saturday. San Francisco and vicinity- cooler; light light westerly winds; not so warm. Los Angeies and vicinity—Fair Saturfay; not so warm; light southerly winds. Sacramento—Fair ‘winds. Fresno—Fair ‘winds. Saturday; Saturday; light light southerly Fair Saturday; east southerly A. G. McADIE, District Forecaster. — not been long in the water. a schooner of about fifty tons register. J. C. BURNETT, Lieutenant, U. 8. N,, In charge. e St R L Movements of Steamers. + Mast belonged to TO ARRIVE. Steamer, | From. Due. Elizabeth. .... Coquille River *| Coquille Riv, c Portland & Way Ports. Oct. Centennial Alameda. v Panama.. New York via Ancon. &% ortland & Astoria. G. W. Eider. o Seattle .| Grays Harbor . .| China & Japan | Grass Harbor -l Seattle & -/ Honolulu | P | Humbolat Portland & Astoria. |San Pedro ...m. pas ./ San Diego & Way Pts. .| Willapa Harbor . Point Arena & Alblon. Tacoma. | Mendocino & Pt. Arena.|Oct. .|San Diego & Way Pts. |Puget Sound Ports. Oct |Oet. Oct. Oct. [Oct. {Oct. TO BAIL. | Destination. £ 5 8. Monica. .. Columbla. .. October 23. Coquille River -|Portlana direct Eel River Port: Seattle & Tacoma. Seattle & Tacoma. Los Angeles Ports. Humboldt Puget N. Y. via_ Ancon. Astoria & Portland| October 23. San Diego & Way. Los Angeles Ports. ber 24. Eureka & Coos B. Los Angeles Ports. d Ports. rena & Alblon| | San Diego & Way. October 28. o o | on HE Be eRFenr BE Es8B3c833%3Y it | Baston 4 —Stmr cilfan Prince. from Naples, etc., in tow. 6—Stmr Coast Survey Charts except when a minus (—) sign precedes the height, and then the number given is subtracted fmn‘hh. depth given by the charts. The plane of teference is the mean of the lower low waters, SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. ARRIVED. Friday, Oct. 21 Stmr F "X Kilburn, Thompson, 7 hours from Port Rodgers. Stmr Novo, Johnson, 27 hours from Bureka. Stmr Homey, Donaldson, 40 hours from San Pedro. Stmr Norta Fork, Nelson, Eureka. Stmr Argo, River. Schr Besste K, Stark, 9 hours from Bowens Landing, in tow of tug Dauntless. Tug Dauntless, Shea, 9 hours from Bowens Landing, with schr Bessle K In tow. CLEARED. Friday, Oct. 21. Stmr_Bonita. leland, San Pedro and way ports; Pacific Coast Steamship Company. Stmr Northland, Jamieson, Portland: E J Dodge Company. Stmr Santa Rosa, Alexander, San Diego and way ports; Pacific Coast Steamship Company. Stmr Queen, Thomas, Victorla, B C, etc; Pacific Coast Steamship Company. Br_stmr Wellington, Cutter, Ladysmith, B C; Western Fuel Combany. SAILED. 26 hours from Dunham, 23 hours from Eel Friday, Oct. 21 Stmr F A Kilburn, Thompson, Port Rodge: Stmr Magzie, Eagles, Halfmoon Bay. Stmr Alcatraz, Olsen, Poirit Arena. Stmr Nerthland, Jamieson, Portland. Stmr Gipsy. Gray, Santa Cruz. glmr Jeanie, Bartlett, Seattle and Tacoma. tmr Empire, Burtis, Coos Bay. Stmr Shasta,” Hansen, Bellingham. Stmr Aberdeen, Hansen, Portladd. Br ship Wanderer, Dunning, Seattie. Fr’bark Duchesse de Berry, De Kermoal, Queenstown. Schr Excelsior, Trudgett, Willapa Harbor. Schr John A, ‘Olsen, Eureka. TELEGRAPHIC, POINT LOBOS, Oct 21, 10 p m—Weather hazy and calm. DOMESTIC PORTS. UMPQUA—Sailed Oct 20—Stmr San Gabriel, for San Pedro, via Eureka; schr Lily, for Francisco. EUREKA—Arrived Oct 21—Stmr Alliance, from Portland, via Coos Bay; stmr San Ga- briel, from Umpqua River, for San Pedro; stmr Eureka, hence Oct 20. Sailed Oct 21—Schr Azalea, for Redondo. SOUTH BEND—Sailed Oct 21—Stmr Se- quola, for San Francisco: bktn Echo, for San Francisco. PORT HARFORD—Sailed Oct 20, midnight— Stmr Santa Cruz, for San Francisco. Oct 21, noon—&tmr Robert Dollar, from Mukilteo, for San_Pedro. BELLINGHAM—Sailed Oct 21—Stmr Nor- wood, n Francisco. m Tacoma: bark Louisiana, from Port Blakeley. SANTA BARBARA—Safled Oct 21—Stmr State of California, for San Diego. Arrived Oct 21—Stmr State of Callfornia, hence Oct 20 for San Diego. SAN PEDRO—Arrived Oct 21—Stmr Robert Dollar, from Mukilteo; bktn Skagit, from Port Gamble; schr J W Clise, from Port Blakeley; stmr Coos Bay, hence Oct 18. Isaued Oct 21—Stmr Coos Bay, for Sar Fran- cisco. Arrived Oct 20—Stmr Acme, from Bureka. FORT BRAGG—Arrived Oct 21—Stmr Na- tional City, hence Oct 20. TATOOSH—Passed In Oct 21—Br ship So- koto, from Hongkong, for Port Angeles. Passed out Oct 21-—Chil bktn Alta, from Port Gamble, for Manila, Passed out Oct 21—Bktn Northwest, from Port Hadlock, fo# San Pedro. COOS BAY—Arrived Oct 21—Stmr Break- water, hence Oct 19, ASTORIA—Sailed Oct 21—Br ship Bska- soni, for Queenstown; Br ship Hartfield, for | Queénstown. ()(-Ar:’fl"d Oct 21—Stmr Geo W Elder, hence t 19. TILLAMOOK—~Arrived Oct 20—Schr Glen, hence Sept 28. POINT LOBOS—Passed Oct 21,3 p m—Stmr Westport, from Westport, for San Pedro; 5:45 p m—I8 ‘miles northwest, stmr Whittier, with bktn Fullerton in tow, from Portland, for Gaviota. N E—Salled Oct 20—Stmr St Paul, Seattle; stmr Portland, for Seattle. HARDY CREEK—Sailed. Oct 21—Stmr Marshfield, for San Pedro, SAN DIEGO—Sailed Oct 21—U 8 stmr Paul Jones, for Magdalena Bay. EE VER—Salled Oct 20, 8 p m—St Argo, for San Francisco, via Shell!pr Con o SEATTLE—Arrived Oct 21, 3:30 p m Olympic, from Bellingham. GRAYS - HARBOR—Salled Oct 21—Stmr Santa Monica, for San Pedro: stmr G C Lin- daver, stmr Newburg, schr Henry Wilson and schr or Boy, for San Francisco; schr G W Watson, for Hen Pedis. T ISLAND PORTS. HONOLULU—Satled Oct 20—§t; dan, for ului; bark Mohican, lormEn"n"F.‘nn- cisco; stmr Rosecrans, for San Francisco. EASTERN PORTS. CAPE HENRY—Passed Oct 20—Br stmr Craigneuk, from Colon, for Norfolk. NEW YORK-—Salled Oct 20—Br stmr In- drasamha, for Stagavore. FOREIGN PORTS. VICTORIA—Sailed Oct 20—Stmr City of Puebla, for San Francisco. CHEMAINUS—Safled Oct 20—Chil bark Ad- miral Tegetthoff, for Antofagasta, BARBADOES—Arrived Oct 10—Br bark Shakespeare, from Huanchaco, and safled for ST, ‘o 3 i AN N—-, et 'mr gcnl::s Sept 17, and sailed for San h-ncl::.o 5 n COLOMBO—Arrived Oct 17—Ger stmr Augs- burg, from Manila. LIVERPOOL—Salled Oct 10—Br ship Ver- bena, for San Fracisco. NEWCASTLE, AUS—Safled Oct 18—Fr bark Gael, fér San Francisco. HAVANA—Arrived Oct 21—Stmr Buenos Ayres, from New York. SYDNEY—Arrived prior to Oct 21—Br bark Adderly, from Port Townsend. LIZARD—Passed Oct 21—Br ship Hougo- mont, from Tacoma, for Falmouth. MAZATLAN—Saiied Oct 20—Stmr City of Panama, for San Francisco. OCEAN STEAMERS. LIVERPOOL—Arrived Oct 21—Stmr Prin. cess Irene. from New York. MARSEILLES—Arrived 21. 8- for mr PALERMO—Salled Oct 1 for New York. PENHAGEN—Sailed Oct 19—Stmr United States, from New York. . LIVERPOOL—Sailed Oct 19—Stmr Cana- gian, for Boston. Oct 21—Stmr Geormie, for New York. LONDON—Eailed Oct 20—Stmr Minnehaha, for New York. Oct 21—Stmr Hungarian, for Montreal; stmr Columbia, for Boston. Arrived Oct 21—Stmr Cambrian, MOVILLE—Sailed Oct 21—§ from €Ol FATHER IN JAIL AND Political ardor elevating the spirits of the male parent and neighborly sym- pathy depressing the soul of the moth- er were the causes of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dolan’s five minor children be- ing shamefully neglected. Undue in- | dulgence in strong waters by both pa- i rents was also contributory to the piti- | ful plight in which Patrolmen Bruce :and Connolly found the little ones last | Thursday evening at the Dolan resi- fdence, on Perry street, near Fourth. | The police were summoned by resi- | dents_of the neighborhood, and when | they entered the house they found Do- {lan, hilariously intoxicated, the sole custodian of a five-month-old infant that was lustily crying for maternal at- tention. The older little ones were complaining of hunger and their ap- pearance verified all that the neighbors had said concerning the unnatural con- duct of the parents. Dolan said that he had been ‘electioneering” all day and returned home to find his wife ab- sent and the children crying. Asked where the woman was, he endeavored to construct 4 coherent falsehood, but his sodden brain was unequal to the task. Then one of the children said the mother had departed early in the { morning to assist in the obsequies of an acquaintance and had neither come back nor sent notification of when she would come back or where she could be found. Dolan and the children were taken to the City Prison, where the man was charged with . cruelty to a minor child and his offspring were placed in custody of the matron. Up returned to her home, nor had the po- | lice been able to find her. Judge Mo- | gan' continued the case against the | father till next Monday, by which time | his consort will probably be sharing his captivity. Dolan was a minor politician of some note during the, last two municipal | campaigns. He was appointed a jani- { tor at the Hall of Justice, but neglected his duties and was dismissed. The po- {lice say that if he would let politics |alone and devote his time to more | profitable tasks his wife might Be a | better mother. While he pursues some !1gnis fatuus of politics her toil sup- ports the household, and her lapses from maternal duty are the protests of an overburdened soul. PR T | Fire Marshal Towe told Judge Canba- | niss that in his opinion, formed after | i | exhaustive investigation, Mrs. Julia Duffy did not feloniously start the fire that threatened to burn down the house in which she dwelt with her son |and his wife at 29 Guy place. The blaze was discovered by neighbors one | evening while Mrs. Duffy was alone in ;!he house, the other inmates having | gone to a theater. While flames were | fiercely crackling in one apartment the | old lady was complacently seated in an | adjoining room, and when the danger was averted her arrest was effected. | The Fire Marshal, however, failed to | find evidence of arson. The defendant’s | son carried a $2500 insurance policy on the house and furniture. Judge | Cabaniss dismissed the charge of arson | against the woman. s e e Elvira Croce, who was shot by Paul | Sassel one night about three weeks | ago on Montgomery avenue, has com- | pletely recovered from the effects of her wound and refuses to file a com- plaint against her assailant. Sassel has also survived the bullet hole in his head which he made immediately after shooting the girl because she ; declined to marry him. Patrolman J. P. Herlihy has been instructed by rJudge Mogan to ,charge Sassel with | attempt to commit murder. BT e ‘William Fox and Thomas Foyer, | young fellows, stole a box of tobacco | from a wholesale house and had the | plunder concealed in a sack when Pa- | trolmen McCowan and Conlan over- hauled them on lower Sacramento street. They got six months aplece from Judge Cabaniss. . “You are dismissed,” said Judge Mo- gan to Roy Mills, tinsmith, convicted of having cruelly neglected his wife i and three helpless children, “because I cannot send you to prison without de- priving your family of sustenance and thus punishing them also. I hope the next Legislature will make provision for such cases as this. If the Delaware whipping post law were in operation in California it would give me extreme pleasure to sentence you to a flog- ging.” S “Koindly give me a chawnce, your | Washup,” pleaded Daniel McCallum, who was arrested, with Willlam Clit- ton, for disturbing the peace in a sa- loon at Washington and Kearny streets. ‘“‘Me and me, matey, Bfll, are 'ard-wukkin’ lawds. Please let us down heasy.” “Please do, your Washup,” chimed in Mr. Clifton. *‘Me an’ Dawny ’‘ere are foiremen haboard th’ Wellington, an’ she clears for Laildysmith to-mor- row morning. Koindly give two ’ard- wukkin lawds a chawnce. After the complaining policeman had stated that Daniel and Willlam had not fractured the peace to irreparable extent, Judge Mogan dismissed them, and they simultaneously plucked their forelocks by way of salute and mur- mured, “Thank your Washup.” SN ey nts Carouse; | Children Suffer Overdue Ships Are| Policemen Rescue the Babes| to noon yesterday the mother had not | MOTHER IS SOUGHT capture and the hearing set for Oct- ober 31. s e . Charles Matthews, a wmte-hurod! youth, had five live chickens in his | possession when Patrolman Stein over- | hauled him early yesterday morning on | Twenty-fourth street and as he could | not give satisfactory explanation of | how the poultry and he happened to be. together he was arrested. He told | Judge Mogan that the birds belonged | to his father, a rancher on the Mission | road, ‘and .that he brought them to! town to sell them. Case continued for | investigation. i a6 e i Mrs. Margaret Werner, widowed mother of two pretty little girls, was | cleared of the charge of seiling liquor without a Hcense in her grocery at 61 Tehama street. She declared that the policeman who arrested her was in plain clothes when he entered her store | and piteously begged for a drink of | whisky to quell a stomachic cramp that ' had suddenly seized him, that she handed him a small vial of the desired liquer and that he then laid a dime upon the counter, which she declined to accept. If the same trick were again attempted, she averred, it wouid prob- ably be successful, as she could not re- fuse to relieve apparent human suffer- | ing. | 24(11111. 24/11536. Hazel Damon, a young domestic from Berkeley, who flercely fought Patrol- man Orr when he arrested her last Saturday evening for drunkenness and disturbing the peace on O'Farrell street, was pronounced guilty of both offenses and will be sentenced to-day. | Her demeanor in court was sullenly de- fiant and the only defense she offered was the testimony of Al Morris, night ! clerk at the Hotel Franklin, who said he had known her about five weeks and did not regard her as a disorderly char- acter. James J. Davis, accused of malicious 3 mischief, testified that when he entered a Howard street saloon and ordered a drink of whisky the bartender, Gerald Donovan, invited him to drink with some ladies. Not being a ladies’ man, Mr. Davis declined the invitation and laid a quarter of a dollar upon the counter to pay for his sclitary drink. Mr. Donovan picked up the coin, chucked it into the till and refused to give Mr. Davis the fifteen cents change to which he was entitled. That started the argument that terminated in Mr. Davis smashing things and being ar- rested. He will be sentenced to-day. Sii® HoA John Ryan, who manufactiires and mends human footgear in the basement of 1080 Howard street, made such, a “rough house” of his workshop last Thursday evening that Mrs. Tritoch, residing overhead, summoned Patrol- men Kruger and Brown to quell the racket. When the officers entered the cellar they found Mr. Ryan dancing like a dervish, howling like a coyote on short rations and bombarding the walls and ceiling with old shoes and lasts | and boot-trees and other missiles. They | experienced some trouble in subduing him. While the policemen were telling their story*in*Judge Mogan’s court the defendant -laughed hysterically and ! otherwise acted so irrationally as to | create doubt of his sanity. He was sent to the Lunacy Commissioners for examination. ——— The Original Little Louisiana Com- | pany of San Francisco. { ESTABLISHED JANUARY, 1887. | SPECIAL NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC. | Owing to the fact that numerous schemes | oo are placed before the public from time to time, we would respectfully call the atten- | tlon of purchasers of tickets to buy only from | responsible agents and to see that their tick- ets read as follows: |4 THE ORIGINAL LITTLE LOUISIANA COM- | PANY OF SAN FRANCISCO. 3 ESTABLISHED JANUARY, “1887. Each coupon has the initials *'M, & F. the face and back of the ticket. The following are the capital pri: cided by the H - s o =§g§ss=55 L saaspessessiaarras and 93825 each win $250, eold in San %3 claco, Cal.; Nos, 22563, i 56370 each win $100, Cal., and The 38144, 50838 and | 41000 San Francisco, | » | o 26569, ), sold in San Luis Obi Kearce (cigar busi- ness), res| streets, ence 155% Clara street, San Francisco, Cal., lldl(llo ! John Meyer (barkeeper, Fair Wind saloon), 1 East m-en.( San 0, Cal., $1000; Wil- son Fields (automobiles), 49 Cit. =n i o y Hall avenue, ™ szEzsnzarpeBan 55 —_—— The Louisiana R. G. Company of San | soo Francisco. | ORGANIZED MAY, 1900, TO THE PUBLIC: BEWARE of COUNTER- FEITS ! ! All genuine tickets of this com- ‘monogram “R. G. Following are the capital prizes as decided by the Honduras National Company, Saturday, Obtober 15, 1604: é«ln: 10036 wins d Immedlately the company, Francisco, $10,000 reward will be nald to any person who has ever presented ome of our prizes at our office and was refused . —— SUNDAY CALL — ————= WANT ADS. —— i Single Numbers Class “K” Drawn at Puerto Cortez, Honduras, C. A., Saturday, October 15, 1904. lN UMBERS Honduras National Lottery Co (LOVISIANA- STATE LOTTERY). PATENT APPLIED FOR. 18 16/ 18 50| 16 | ! e SEEEN | thie Saturday, October 13. '1304. i i FRRERES2EED 58 - a ™ @ Y TTIT NS 5 s E L R e 558 8 =3 2 ~ SL’E‘:EE::BSEG'B!CSE:5‘233353833335;255533';3’553:313:13!! APPROXIMATION PRIZES. 100 numbers from 10886 to 10086 i { being 50 numbers on each side of the number drawing the capital prize of $30, . 100 numbers from S6080 to 36199, inclusive, { being 50 numbers on each side of the number $S000—$24. drawing the capital prize of . 100 mumbers from 27741 to 27841, inclusive, being 50 numbers on each side of the number drawing the capital prize of $4000—$18. TERMINAL PRIZES. 980 numbers ending with 36, being the twe | last figures of the number drawing the cap- ital prize of $30,000—$8. 999 numbers ending with $49, being the two figures of the number drawing the sec- ond capital prize of 35000—$8. The subscriber, having supervised the single number drawing, class “K.” Honduras Na- tional Lottery Company, hereby certifies that ez, Hondurae. C. A., S. CABELL, Commissioner. $3750 FOR 25 CENTS—-ONE-EIGHTH OF FIRST CAPITAL PRIZE. NEW YORK, August 18, 1004 Daniel Hasselbach Ul WUSTROW, Notay 3 Notary Public, N. ¥. &o. ULRICK THIELE. $5000 FOR $2—WHOLE OF SECOND CAR ITAL PRIZE. i i BEE [ i | i ; B il' of the fine i £ ad | TFINE Ci W for $INe W wews =