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THE SAN FRANC 1SCO .C,—\LL. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 1904. BARK BELVEDERE LOSES HER PROPELLER AT SEA ¢ Continues the \\ldlll o Cruise Under Sail Ski an Emergency Hospital Surgeon S e R L S pper ved Nov 6—Ger stmr for San . ARBARA—Sail for San Francisco. Bay, from v 6—Stmr Ni Brunswick. S Higsins, for —Arrived Nov 6—Stmr Chas N ISLAND PORTS NOLULU—Arrived Nov stmr N STBAMERS 6—Stmr Ionian, Stmr Minne w. for Boston, led Nov 5—Stmr via Boulogne. Memoranda Sun, Moon and Tide. Wagner. & P United States Coast and Geodetic Survey— bie . Time ang Height of High and Low Waters at Fort Point, entrance to San Francieco Bay. Published by official ty of the Fort Point both places. NOVEMBER T the height MONDAY. SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. ARRI Allen, 75 hours from 1r nn gives the last tid there are but three tides. as he heights given are in hours from rs from Eureka b trom and then the number he depth given by reference is the mean Movements of Steamers. TO ARRIVE aro Willapa Harbor Grays Ha Coquille River £ Honoluly & K, Sequola City Pue Puget Sound Ports... State of C San Diego & Way Ps Cotona Humboldt Lun)l Humboldt Crescent City Hamburg & Way Ports San Pellro & Way Pts - . Point Arena & Albion 2 Nelson Seattle & Tacoma. o Weather Northland San Pedro . Marchuria... | China & Japa A Arcata o Bay & Pt Orford Ammop. ... ttle I & | Breakwater. .| Coos Bay . | Homer San Pedro R Pomona Humbolde . i John | Columbia Portland & Astoria for San | P. Mendocing & Pt. Aren San Diego & Way Pts Marsh. | Hayan Bark Haydy Pedr T tktn | " T San Pedro; | 2. trom Port Gamble, for Fran e : Portland & Astoria. £ Geo Loomis, hence | | Honoluls de. TR Portiand & Astoria. . 'usz:‘l-‘nv'hl"""‘ b, New York via Ames ¢ #chr Aloha, Fortlang & Astor; | Cottage City. | GARRISON VAKES 11 LN NNTAND l'ulvl]th‘h of Port Arthur Are Said to Have Liaoti Fort on HAVE IL.\ C: OF LAl \1)\ 1. E CALIBER > \ ———— Reports From Chefu and Tientsin Say oessell’s Men Are Holding Out Des- “perately Against Enemy LONDON, Nov. 7.—Special dispatches from ( fu and Tientsin report that the defenders of Port Arthur have re- tired to the Liaoti Hills fort, where are holding out desperately, en- ched and with ten guns of large Many Russians, the corre- assert, are deserting and The Japanese, it is add- advancing with irresistible reliable reports do not confirm ents, but the Tokio report of Wantai }illl, a domi- ort with two miles of the rminus, shows that the Jap- making rapid stride t Burleigh, the Daily Tele- correspondent, reports from C that there was no fighting on night of November 5. The troops of the Mikado, he says, haye frequently nto the native town of Port Ar- fter dark, but invariably were out at daylight with heavy The Japanese have four large facing the Russian works on Rih- and Shanshu Mountain, ; are mounting naval guns one foundations. Mukden dispatches to Berlin state that the Ru paring their m Port Arthur an commanders are pre- ren to hear of the fall of Sttt ) SLAVS EXPECT RESPITE. St. Petersburg Believes Last Battle of Year Has Been Fought. ST PETERSBURG, Nov. 6. — The ny organ to-day publishes a Iong‘ new commanders in the Far ncluding the appointments of Generals Linevitch and Kaulbars to the First and Third armies ommand the Twenty-second and Thir- ty-seventh divisions of the First Corps, whose chief, General Meyendorft, is re- signing on account of ill health. Gen- eral Slouchevesky, commander of the Tenth Corps, also has resigned and it is expected that he by General Jzerpitsky. | The sweeping character of these changes may imply that there is no intention on General Kuropatkin's pnr( to assume the offensive during thi: vear's campaign, favorable opportunity offer. Indeed, it begins to look llke a deadlock below Mukden for the winter unless Port Arthur fall or the Japanese abandon the idea of renewing the assault upon the fortress there and settie down to a regular siege, either of which would release enough troops to give the pre- ponderance necessary to try to force the Russians out of Mukden. In fact, the latest dispatches from the front in dicate that some such move is prepar ing, though the best opinion at the| War Office holds to the view that there likely to be another big battle r, one of the indications point- being the departure of many attaches for the winter. ral Orloff, whom General Kuro- patkin blamed for the Russian reverse at Liaoyang, declares In the course of | an in view published in the Xfl\'fie- Vremya to-day that he obeyed General kelberg's orders in making the ch criticized attack, in which his ion was decimated and he himself wounded. General Kuropatkin appar- ently is convinced that Orloff was not to blame, and the order detaching him has been revoked and he has been ap- pointed on General Kuropatkin's staff. g FLANK MOVEMENT. PLANNING Oyama Will Attempt to Make Muk- den his Winter Quarters. MUKDEN, Nov. 6.—The Japanese are still working hard entrenching their front, which begins to look like a continuous fort. It is believed they are preparing seriously to advance, making their front strong, possibly in order that it may be held by a com- paratively small force while the heav- ier force engages in flanking move- ments. The Japanese have learned by bitter experience not to expect much from a frontal attack. They L . -~ | TO BAIL. Steamer. Destination. | Sails.| Pler. | November 7. | Los s.| 1 pmiPler 3 Los 0 am Pler 10 Seatt | 5 pm Prer 20 .| Grays Harbor { 4 pm{Pter 10 Coquille River ....| 5 pm Pier 20 Mexican Ports ...010 am Pler 11 .| Newport & Way..| 9 am Pier 11 .| Humboldt ........| 4 pmiPler 2 J. Higgins. Los Angeles Ports. 1l am/Pler 2 | November 8. | G. W Elder| Astoria & Portiand/11 am|Pler 2 Rainter. ttle & Blingh: pm|Pler 10 November | Astoria & Portland| 5 pm Pler 27 | Humboldt _........| 8 am|Pier 13 China & Japan....| 1 pm|Pler 40 b Humboldt | @ am Pier 2 Corona Humboldt . :30 p(Pler 9 Chico Coquiile River ....| 6 pm|Pler 2 . Nels Los Angeles Ports.' 2 pm Pler 20 Chehalis... | Los Angeles Ports./il am!Pler 2 November 10. | | Sierra......| Evdney & Way Pts( 2 pm(Pler 7 ewburg...| Grays Harbor...... 1 pm!Pier 10 Lindauet| Grays Harbor......| 6 pm‘PI-l‘ 2 Sequoia. Willapa Harbor...'12 m Pler 20 Fomo Pt. Arena & Albion| 6 pml“" 2 Ftate of Cal| San Diego & Way. | 9 am/Pler 11 M. Dollar. . rays Harbor...... pm|Pler 20 £ Monica..| Los Angeles Pnrwlu am|Pler 3 November 11. | } Breakwater| Coos Bay direct..| 5 pm(Pler 8 Arcata Coos B. & Pt Dr{d 10 am/Pier 13 City Puebla | Puget Sound !'oru {11 am|Pler 9 Cous Bay.. | San Pedro & W .9 Nevadan...| Hono. & Kabulut.|. Alliance. .. | E: C Acapulco. h Ammon Hamburg & W Pts|10 Arg Eel River Ports..| 4 Point Arena| Point Afena .. 4 November 13. Cotumbia. . | Astoria & Portland|l1 ami|Pier 23 t lovem] | N. Fork....| Humboldt ......... {12 m Pler 20 November 15. | | Manchuria. | China & Japan....| 1 pm|Pter 40 November 16. | Umatitta...| Puget Sound Ports.| 9 am|{Pier 11 | FROM SEATTLE. Steamer. | Destination. . | Safls. oo | 5 Jefferson. ... | Skagway & Way Poris. |Nov, 3 Skagway & Way Ports |Nov. Bertha. Cooks Inlet & Way Pts|Nov. 10 Humbols Skagway & Way Ports.(Nov. 11 Santa Ana... | Seldovia & Way Ports. Nov. 16 Been | Driven Back to the Ningle Hill | respectively. | Generals Kutnevich and Selivanoff will | will be succeeded unless an exceedingly | 2 | passador, to-day submitted to Foreign Young Girl to Mudy Co ~ Growine in West Indies. { | & ‘Gwendolyn S | Hamllton S Task. Leaves Home to Go to Ja- maica. LONDON, Nov. 6. 1t js rather an odd mission for a woman which is be- ing undertaken by Miss Gwendolyn S. Hamilton, who left this country yes- terday for King-| ston, Jamaica, and is going there at the behest of Sir Alfred Jones, head of the new British Cotton Growing Association, to re- port on the possi- bilities for cotton growing In the West Indies. Miss Hamilton is only twenty-four. She was educated in Liverpool and Oxford. She is a daughter of J. Law- rence Hamilton, M. R. C. S, who |is well known on both sides of the Atlan- tic for his work on fishery matters and who is an honorary member of the American Fishing Society. Since her graduation Miss Hamilton has writ- ten much on scien- tific topics. She is one of the most| prominent members. — - ele of the recently GLI“H GIRL WHO HAS LEFT HOM formed Lyceum SHE WILL MAKE A STUDY OF Club for women | - workers. + 5 ~5 * s —% | are obliged, however, to maintain a| water, has passed through the Bos- strong front to prevent General Ku- | phorus on the way to join tha Rus- ropatkin breaking through their line | sian Baltic squmlron and carrying the war to their rear. There is considerable evidence to in- dicate that the Japanese will make Linevitch Returns to the Front. every effort to force the Russians out| KHABAROVSK, Nov. 6.—By Gen- of Mukden, not only for the moral ef- ; eral Kuropatkin's order General Line- R fect on Europe but on the Chinese as! vitch left to-day to rejoin the fleld well. Mukden is extremely important | fore. to them as winter quarters. —_———————— The Japanese continue to receh’e! reinforcements and it is believed by Russian military men that their ad- vancing awaits only the arrival of suf- ficient men. MURDERED BY BANDITS. OLYMPIA IN COLLISION WITH BRITISH SCHOONER Forelgn Vessel Damaged, but American Cruiser Escapes In- Jury Near Gibraltar. GIBRALTAR, Nov. 6.—The cruisers Olympia, Cleveland and Des Moines of the United States European squadron, Rear Admiral Jewell commanding, have arrived here. The Olympia had in tow the British schooner Elizabeth, with her stern badly damaged as the result of a collision with the Olympia on the night of November 5. The Olympia was not damaged. ——— American Evangelists in England. LIVERPOOL, Nov. 6.—The Ameri- can evangelists, Storry and Alexander, opened a three months’ revival here to-day in a building that had been specially erected for the purpose, with a seating capacity of 12,000. Twen- the Russian Lieutenant Colonel and Three Men Put to Death. ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 6.—Gen- eral Kuropatkin reports that Lieuten- ant Colonel Bogddenoff, who was sent by Viceroy Alexieff to explore Mon- golia, accompanied by only two inter- preters and a courier, was attacked by Chinese bandits on November 3 near Duinbin Mountain, on the Chinese Eastern Railway, and that one of the interpreters was killed, the others of the party being captured. Cavalry sent in pursuit of the bandits found the corpses of Lieutenant Colonel Bog- denoff, the second interpreter and the courier, which have been brought to Harbin. General Kuropatkin adds | that punitive measures will be taken. General Kuropatkin also reported the repulse of a Japanese attack on his right flank on November § Six ty thousand persons came to the open- ing meeting. 'TO UNDERTAKE WORK FOR ENGLAND| MURDER ENDS WAR OF WORDS |Aged Oregon Miner Shoot and Kills Son-in-Law Dur- ing Qunrrel Over a Claim Buy Your LAYER l\l-,. SHOTGUN | UnderweaR, iInturmml l)l(l Man Slays From Us and Save His Daughter’s Husband One-Fourth [ by Shooting Him in Back We are anfma-s SR TR and | and save our customers the 25 per cant profit. that the other stores pay the wholesale dealers. Try Us Once and You Disvatch to The Call ecial | GRANTS PASS, Ore., Nov. 6.—News | | was brought to this eity this morning | | of a shooting affray at Williams, Ore., | eighteen miles south of here, last night. W. D. Shoemake, 70 years of age, shot and instantly killed his son-in-law, Will Never Pay 2 Profits Again | Oliver Sargent. — | The old man has been living with his | son-in-law for several years and the See Our... two have frequently quarreled. Last | - Extra Special ‘n!ght they disputed over a mining | ‘clalm and Shoemake grew infuriated $1.00-$1.25 | and getting a shotgun sent the con- | tents of both barrels of the weapon into the younger man's back. Mrs. | 1Sargen: and her children fled and | alarmed the neighbors, but the old man barred the doors and windows and kept le\er\ one away at the point of his ‘ - | *To-aay Sherift Lewis and several . . deputies went out and, after some little | skirmishing, succeeded in taking the and upward | old man into custody | s ey g A | Goods Freely Exchanged and Monsy Refunded PROPOSED ARBITRATION TREATY PLEASES GERMANS | EAGLESON & CO. | | 1 Seml - Official Newspaper Article ‘ Speaks in Tone Flattering to United States. ; BERLIN, Nov. 6.—A paragraph | | | 780-786 Market. St.. 242 Montgomery St. Los Angeles and Sacramento. Shirt Factory—533-335-537 Market St printed in the North German Gazette | gives utterance to the great pleasure of Germany at the inauguration of ne- an arbitration treaty | with America. The paper comments | to the effect that while in the past the two nations have had differences the present conditions show that be- | tween the countries exists the fullest amity, without the slightest infringe- ment by either of the other’s prog- | res —_— Coughs Sore Throat Bronchitis Positively eured with Dr. Hale 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. FRENCH SAVINGS BANK 315 Montgomery Street. Capital paid up $ 600,000 | Dividends paid to depositors . 1,656,226 gotiations for his utterance, which is believed to be governmentally inspired, is written throughout in a tone most flattering L o the United States. | ——————— | Army and Navy Orders. | WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.—By order | of the War Department Post Quarter Sergeant Charles H. Owens is relieved | from further duty in the Philippine Division and will be sent to San Fran- cisco, reporting by telegraph upon his | arrival to the military secretary of the army for orders. First Lieutenant George Garity of the Second Cavalry will proceed from the United States Army General Hospital at the Presi- dlo, San Francisco, to Hot Springs, Ark., and report to the commanding officer of the Army and Navy General | Hospital at that place for treatment. | Orders to naval officers—Lieutenant Commander G. W. McElroy will be detached from inspection duty at the American Steel Casting Company at Thurlow, Penn., on November 10 to the naval post at Cavite, P. 1., to head the department of steam engineering of that station, sailing from San Francisco December 17. Bl oo O Snow Falls in the Catskills. CHAS. CARPY, President. ARTHUR LEGALLET. Vice.President. KINGSTON. N. Y., Nov. 6.—There BOCQUERAZ, “Secretary was a_heavy fall of snow in the Cat- TOHN GINTY. ‘Asst. Secretar. skxll'f;}{?\;rfula)::s“;z;tn night, the flrs(’ DIRECTORS: snow . Dr. E. Artigues, n-a tarpy, Leon Kauffmaa, —_———— | 0. Boato, B. Clot, ~ A. Roos, g SR £ o oY Crown Princess of Korea Dead. | 3°A. Bergaroe, * % 8. Godeat, 7. 7. Sack SEOUL, Nov. 6.—The Crown Prin- | ) Interest paid on deposits. Loans made om cess died here last night. Real Estate and approved securities. 5. Russians were killed. | - e VLADIVOSTOK FORTIFIED. Japanese Will Find the Siberian Port a Second Port Arthur. CHEFU, Nov. 6.—As the result of months of preparation Viadivostok is now strongly protected, according to Captain Halvorsen of the Norweglan steamship Tungus. Captain Halvorsen says that the Vladivostok system of fortifications begins many miles out- |side the city proper and grows | stronger as the city is approached. | g The captain is unable to estimate the| ] strength of the garrison, but he says | that everybody at Viadivostok seems to DEWEY, STRONG &CO Dl' Gibbon’s Dispensary, HEARNY ST. Fstablished nhood. Debility or on body and mind and & Doctor cures when Broadway (plef‘ 9 and 1), ‘rancisco - be either an officer or an ordinary For Ketchikan, Wrangel, soldier. o Juneas. Treadwells, Halnes Skagway, eto. aska—11 .lf the Japan_esp make an anemptE s m, Nov. 1, & 1L, “. . te capture Vladivostok it Is the belief 28, Dec. 1. Change this of Captain® Halvorsen that they will | o company’'s mu Seat- find it to be a second Port Arthur. = Costs nothing but a Postal Card or Letter. [ (e e ! TR We are giving away a brand new Sentile. Tacoma. Everstt. South Bel DENIES RUSSIA'S ACCUSATION. Japanese Minister to Holland Makes Counter Charge of Forgery. | THE HAGUE, Nov. 6.—Naboukata Mitsuhashi, the Japanese Minister to The Netherlands, to-day denied abso- lutely the statement cabled from St. Petersburg that he had organized an attack on the Russian Baltic squad- | ron. If Russia should vroduce, as the “high authority” in St. Petersburg is quoted as saying would be done, be- fore the international commission a message purporting to have been sent by the Japanese Minister “containing complete evidence that such was the case,” Mitsuhashi said, the document would be a forgery. SR Czar May Risk Visit to Poland. ST. PETERSBURG, ' Nov. 6.—Ac- cording to present arrangements Em- peror Nicholas will go this week to Poland to bid farewell to the two rifle | brigades stationed not far from Skier- | . niewice, going thence to Minsk and Vitebsk to bid farewell to the Fourth and Sixteenth corps. The trip to Po- land, however, may be deferred on ac- count of alarming reports from War- saw of rioting at Czenstochova, where Price $350, in beautiful exchange for your the better. on the back. strings. The Prlze HARVARD number of this piano was sealed not be uncovered until 10 a. m,, nearest to that of this Harvard the Second Brigade is stationed. the privilege of exchanging (he >~—— any additional expense. Russia Proposes New Articles. Should there be more than ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 6.—Sir earliest date will receive the award. | Charles Hardinge, the British Em- This Tontest is open to every Francisco, or within 200 miles of | Minister ' Lamsdorff_three additional | | articles of the Anglo-Russian agree- ! ment, the first providing for legal as- sessors for the contracting parties, the second for a division of the expenses | of the commission and the third that | the decision of the majority of the | commission shall be binding. —-—— | Slav Vessel Passes Dardanelles. | CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. 6.—The Russian volunteer steamship Yaroslav, from Odessa with supplies of coal and \ HARVARD PIANO READ THE FOLLOWING: Write the number of your old piano or organ on a card, together with your own name and address and the name of the paper publishing this ad, and bring or mail them to our store before November 15 - the earlier If your instrument is an organ, you will find thc number in or If it is a grand square, the number will be under the n our window may be seen the beautiful new award will be made to the person whose instrument bears a number dilapidated your instrument may be. Send in Your Numbers Immediately. s \ileB.Alen G, 931-933 Market Street, San Francisco. EENEEEENENNIAEENRNEREEN lingham. Bellingham—11 a. m., Nov. 1, 6 1. 16 M. Change at Seattls to this com- Seattie or Tacoma to X. P. RY.; at Vancouver w0 C. P For Bureka (Humboldt Bay)_Pomona. 1: p m., Nov. 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, Dian s My Nov. '3 8, 15, 3, 7 Dee 3 For Los Angeles (via Port Los An'l- and Redondo), San Diego lnd Santa Roea, Sundays, 9 a. m. State of California, Thursdays, 9 a m. For Los Angeles (via San Pedro and San Pedro), Santa Barbara, Santa (hx. terey, San Simeon. Cayucos, Port Harford (h Luls Obispo). Ventura and Hueneme m., Nov. T, mahogany case, in even old piano or organ. Cabo, Mazatlan, Altata, | salia, Guaymas (Mex). 10 a2 m.. For further information obtafs. folder. O ery st (Palace Hotel), 10 Market st..and Broad- way whnDr\ es. Preight Ofice 10 Market st. C. D. | eall age residences. Telephone Exchange 312 Ocecanics.s.Co, 5o i 8. S. SIERRA, for Honolulu, Samoa. A: and Sydney....Thursday, Nov. 10, 2 p. m. 8 8. ALAMEDA, for Honolulu, Nov. 19, 11 am. 8. S MARIPOSA, for Tahiti, Nov. 25, 11 a m. PIANO we will give away. The before this offer was made, and will November 15, at which time the Piano. Such person will be given old mstrum:n{ for the new without one winning number, the one of | | owner of a piano or organ in San i 1.D.SPRECKELS & BROS. C0., Agts,, Tickst 0@e3 543 - | kot Freight OfMcz 329 Market SL, Par 7, Pacids 3% COMPAGNTE GENERALE TRANSATLANTIQUL DIRECT LINE TO HAVRE-PARIS Salling every Thursday instead of “ Saturday, at 10 a. m., from Pler 42. North River, foot of Morton st. LR is ci First ciass to Havre, $70 and upwar b «his city, no matter how old | ond class to Havre. $43 and upward. GEN- ERAL AGENCY FOR UNITED STATES AND | CANADA, Broadway (Hudson bullding). New York. J. F. FUGAZI & Co.. Pacific Const Azents, 5 Montgomery avenue. San | Tickets soid by ail Rafiroad Ticket Agents. H {am.9am days, 7 am., 9am, 3:20pm. Spm. Pler 2 | fe Mission st.; phone Main 1508. HATCH BROS S —————————————————— "wnn.rou.t., $1.00 PER YEAR. For U. 8. vy Yard and Vallejo. Sers. Gener‘l rmbx- Monticello and Arrow, 12:30 pm. 3:15 pm., 8 pm.. §:30p, Leave San Francisco Sundays 9:48 a.m.. Leave Vallejo, 7 5 p.m.. 6 p.m. Sun-