The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 6, 1905, Page 4

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YRE: SAN ! VS MTE SUGGESTED BY KAISER HUNDREDS KILLED BY THE QUAKE ]mormtnw Revelation Con-| lll]l('l' Repm-t\ From India cerning the Ameri retary’s Efforts to Preserve the Neutrality of China BERLIN GOVERNMENT THE FIRST TO Wilhelm 'l'll:ml\'wl by Presi-| Intense dent Roosevelt for Having Initiative in the Taken Nar- rowing War —That it »f Emperor first time offic t vance sheets of publi y. It that nitiatory force n but it yosgible to ob- atior f the cable- to cure the and the utrality com- necessaries asse, according ter’s repert, “while in the best anxiety” sugges- general 7, but was Later acceptance GRANTED BEEF ( JOMBINE Federal Grand Jury “Obtains Much Valuable Information From Witnesses. Apri Prices paid for the packers alleged re- kers by the rafl- of the same and & of some of the AG HI( pac king concerr- are to be closely in- red into within the next few days the Fe 1 Grand Jury which is business affairs of the of the question of fon of me of tion of the Judge the the le jurors deunlbd and rmation along these 1i ed at the investigation to-day. Some of them testified, and, aithough they refused to make public what they told the jury, it is said & large amount of data able to the Government was obtai More complaints of interference with witnesses reached United States At- riey Bethea and Captain Porter of the secret service during the day. ———— gainst the organizeq w HAT 19 'IHhRE IN IT? Scott’s Emulsion is a care- ful blend of the purest cod liver oil, hypophosphites of lime and soda, glycerine and a dash of flavoring. The com- bination of these valuable ingredients emulsified as in Scott’s Emulsion represents the greatest ' remedy yet dis- covered for weak lungs, poor blood, low witality, child weakness and all wasting diseases, We'll send you 2 sample, free SCOTT & BOWNE, 4op Pearl Stroet, Now York. fan »\H-> ACT | District | Tell of Great Loss of: Life and of Vast Damage as Result of Temblor —_— HOMELESS PEOPLE [PREMIER QUICKLY SLEEP IN OPEN AT Suffering Prevails | Among the Survivors at a Military Station to the Northwest of Simla g CALCUTTA, April 5.—Later ac-| counts from various cities tell a tale of severe damage to property arising from ! the earthquakes on the morning of April 4, but it is impossible a8 yet to e the extent of the loss of life. reach into the hundreds. No news has yet been received of damage i less than to buildings at Agra. No loss of life is reported from Delhi, but many build- ings were damaged. Visitors from Mussoree report con- | siderable damage to private property. It is a curious fact that the older houses in Mussoree escaped with less damage than modern buildings. The only fatalities yet reported there were two natives. pl Many houses were com- ly demolished. The fissures in the ds have dings have been started. Dhar northwest of Simia, was destroyed, all the houses in the place being leveled to the grou nany natives killed n are sleeping in the open air. Food m( procurable, as the bazaar is in nins. The suffering of the survivors Urgent demands for medical intense. istance have »orts indicate that Dharmsala felt been closed and repairs to | 1sala station, eighty-five miles ! i and some Europeans and | Ladies and chil- been sent to Lahore. | the full force of the shock. The deaths include C. W. Loxton, who only the! previous day had assumed the office f District Judge, vacated by Captain Elliott, who with his family left the same day, escaping the shock. Mrs. Loxton’s fate is not known. Others who perished were F. M. Levi, C. T. Young, T. Miller and F. Farleys, all officials; Captain Muscroft, Robinson and the two Misses Robin- n. Colegnel Robinson is believed to have survived. The hills show the effects of the shock, though information is very mea- ger from some of the summer stations, where telegraph offices have not yet been opened. At Frozur, forty miles goutheast of Lahore, Amtritsar, Tarana, Dehra Dun and Srinagar many natives were killed or_injured. Personal stories from Mussoree state that the reverberation which preceded hock will never be forgotten by heard it. The mountains heaved and swayed a full minute and then three severe shocks, each lasting a few seconds, were felt in quick suc- cession. Between 6 o’clock én the morning of April 4 and midnight there were twelve | shocks. The day was fine and clear and most of the inhabitants were al- | yeady up when the first shoek came, Those who were still in bed described the motion as being like that of a ship in & rough sea, while those on foot found it impossible to Mmaintain their balance. Many narrow escapes are re- | ported. The effect of the shock in sickness and dizziness with many still | continues. A number of people siept | outdoors during the whole of last night e MRS. CHADWICK GRANTED A STAY OF EXECUTION | Case Will Be Presented on Some Time During the Month of May. Mrs. | | Government ought to resign. | to the request to adjourn till Monday | THEY SHOL AT BALFOCR Remarkahle Demonstration in the House of Commons Following Liberal Victm-_vl in the Brighton Election e LEAVES THE HALL Winston Churehill and Other Speakers Declare That the Present Government -Has About Run Its Course| A I S ‘ LONDON, April 5.—The mgst striking ‘ overturning of a Unionist majority among the numerous recent defeats in bye-elections was recorded at Brighton | to-day, when Gerald Loder, Unionist, recently appointed Junior Lord of the Treasury, was defeated by E. Villlers, Liberal. Villiers’ majority was 817. | The Conservative majority at Brighton in the past twenty years was never | 00. Loder was seekirg re- | election at this time on his appoint- ment as Junior Lord of the Treasury. | The election turned almost altogether on the finance question. The House of Commons to-night was the scene of a remarkable demonstra- tion, based upon the defeat of the Gov. ernment candidate for Brighton. While a somewhat desultory and uninterest- ing debate was dragging on, there was | a rush of opposition members from the l lobbies, shouting with joy over the Lib- | eral victory. “Villjers is in!” was the cry, which was received with great cheering. | Premier Balfour, who was just then entering the House, was greeted with | shouts of “Resign! resign!” Balfour | quitted the House almost immediately. | On motion to adjourn an extraor- | dinary scene occurred. Liloyd-George, Advanced Liberal, said he had intend- ed to question the Premier on the fate that had befallen a member of the ad- ministration at Brighton. He com- plained that on receiving notice that | the question would be raised the Pre- | mier had deliberately left the House The Premier's discourtesy to the House, he said, was becoming abso- lutely offensive. Several members spoke supporting Lioyd-George and declaring that the Winston Churchill said it looked like the beginning of the end, and that it was retribution for its shams and shuf- fles and for the manner in which the Premier had treated Parliament. Sir Alexander Ackand-Hood, repre- senting the Government on the treas- ury bench, having declined to accede | in order to enable the Government to | consider its position. the House ad- journed amid loud opposition laughter. en | SON OF CHICAGO BANKER WANTED FOR EMBEZZLEMENT | Max Abrahams, a Jeweler, Obtains a ; Warrant for the Arrest of Sid- | ney L. Cohen. Max Abrahams, a jeweler at 126! Kearny street, obtained a warrant from Police Judge Conlan yesterday | for the arrest of Sidney L. Cohen on a‘ charge of felony embezzlement. It is said that Cohen's father is a wealrhy‘ banker in Chicago. Abrahams alleges that on March 21| | Cohen called at his store and got a| gold watch, diamond pin and ring of the aggregate value of $100, which | he said he wished to show to a lady! friend. If the friend did not purchase the articles they were to be returned. the First National Bank of (,hxcago,| {with which he said his father Was | jety at St. Petersburg. CINCINNATI, April 5.—A stay of ex- | honored. | ecution in the sentence of Mrs. Chad- } wick has been authorized by the United | have the case in hand, say that States Circuit Court of Appeals. The | decision was announced by Presiding connected. The check was dis-| Detectives Dinan and Wren, vuchux 0- | hen has given similar checks to the| management of the St. Nicholas Ho- | tel for money he borrowed and his| { official circles for | are for peace. I'scribed in the gossip that goes about | will set the peace negotiations in mo- | tion. | its consideration as an | feat and destruction of the Manchu- | in extent or character. | Later Cohen called at the store and{ Government Appeal | gave Abrahams a check for $100 on|retary Hay to inquire into this mat- EXPECTS PEACE WITHIN MONTH r the First Time the Ger-| man Government Predicts Early Ending of War NICHOLAS I8 WAVERING B en the Grand Dukes Are Now in Favor of Making Terms With- the Mikado BERLIN, April 5.—Peace at an early date is regarded as probable by the German embassy at St. Petersburg, and in consequence of dispatches received ! by the Government during the last three days this opinion circulates 1n‘ the first time since the war was begun. The Russian Em- | peror it is true, has not yet decided for | peace; but the Grand Dukes and all, or‘ practically all, of the members of the court who have access to the Emperor | The Emperor is de- | here as standing alone irresolutely. The considerations that still delay his deci- | sion are personal ones, he feeling that ' | his reign is a failure if Russia does not |, win the war and that his prestige as a | sovereign will be lost at home and in | foreign countries, but he cannot yet bring himself to speak the word that Much good will and sympathy are felt ’ for the Russian Emperor in higher of-, ficial life here, but it is regarded as a | certainty that he must yield to his family and Ministers and that the. month will not end without peace. In| the meantime uncertitude of the Em- peror weakens the military administra- tion and delays the execution of plans for fresh armies and the gathering of new supplies. SRy 'AUSTRIAN ATTACHE MISSING. Count Schertzizky Has Not Been Seen | Since Mukden Was Taken. GENERAL KUROKI'S HEAD-| QUARTERS, Tuesday, April 4.—The Japanese army has been making a fruitless search for information as to the fate of Count Scheptzizky, a cap- tain in the Austrian army and the military attache of that Government with the Russian army in Manchuria. Count Scheptzizky has been missing since the battle at Mukden. He |is not among the prisoners or wnundedi in Japanese hands. It is possible, however, he may have escaped into Chinese territory. If killed, he prob- | ably was buried as a Russian, amung‘ the dead of that arm: apri. COMPLAIN OF CENSORSHIP. Russian War Correspondents Ham- | pered by Officials. ST. PETERSBURG, April 6.—Rus-| eian newspaper correspondents in Manchuria, having received papers | containing accounts of the battle of Mukden, are wiring protests against ‘“‘overwhelm- ing disaster and unprecedented de- rian army.” The correspondents com- | | plain bitterly of the censorship which | of true ac- forbade the. transmissio] | the Russian counts of the battle fro | side, permitting the papers and the | public to derive their impressions from telegrams colored by the an-! anese view., S e B FOREIGNERS IN NO DANGER. | Groundless Reports of Threatened Rising of Chinése Fanatics. WASHINGTON, April 6.—Russia has been informed by the United States, so far as the American Min- ister at Peking, Conger, has been able to learn, that reported anti-foreign movements in China are not unusual The Russian | requested Sec recently ter, which was a cause of some anx- e RUSSIAN LOSSES ENORMOUS. l“ll'llll Returns Show 107,000 Men ing Since Mukden Battle. IN, April 5.—Complete HAP re- Justice Lurton Wwhen court convened |poarq bill and also to the manage-| turns received at headquarters give the | to-day. The stay of sentence is to hold until the further order of the court, it appearing that a writ of error had' been sued out within the required sixly‘ days and a copy lodged in the clerk's! office of the lower court. Judge Wing, counsel for Mrs. Chadwick, said fl’lat‘ he epected to be able to present the appeal some time during the month of May. ———— HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS AS GIFT TO HIS FIANCEE | Presented by Wealthy Man to Tele- | ephone girl, phone Girl Who Won His Heart. NEW YORK, April 5.—To be a tel- working for a small sal- ary, one day and to have a man hand | her a check for $100,000 the next hfll\ been the unique experience of ‘Miss| Anna Bennett, whose engagement to E. R. Whitney of Montreal was an- nounced to-day. Whitney gave that sum to his fiancee, telling her to be generous with the money in purchas- ing her trousseau. He also told her | that he had ordered an automobile of and a | special design to cost $9000, large sunburst of diamonds as be- trothal gifts. e TWO NEGRO MURDERERS SING ON THE SCAFFOLD They Render “Old Time Rcligion” Just Before the Drop Falls. NASHVILLE, Tenn.,, April 5—An- drew Hibbett and -James Schudder, negroes, were hanged together in the jailyard here to-day. Schudder mur- dered his three-year-old crippled son, and Hibbett killed his mother-in-law. Both men sang “Old Time Religion” Just before the drop fell. —————— Banker Accused of Fraud. KEOKUK, Iowa, April 5.—Judge Jueger, aged 70, president of the de- funct Commercial National Bank, which failed here last February, was indicted to-day on three counts for fraudulent banking. 'He is in the county jail. 1 GIFT FROM = ASTRONOMER.— —Bexkeley. April 5 —The Puikova Observatory of Russia through it givector, Professor O. Backlund, bas presented to the University of California, Tor the use of the students’ observatory, an aimost comwlete #st of Its valuable pubiica— ticns. e set includes twenty-six large Surio volumis, Dr. Beckiund, who is one of the most moted theoretical astronomers of the world. offéred the gift of th> vublications to Professor Leuschaor fiv ! servat s | ment of the Majestic Theater. Cohen | has been representing himself as be- ing in the theatrical business. He is| expected to arrive by steamer from | Eureka to-day, when he will be ar- rested. —————————— COURT THINKS VANNUOCI'S ACCOUNT LOOKS PECULIAR Raffaelo Vannucci has proved him- self the possessor of so many quali- fications that Judge Kerrigan yesterday appointed J. F. Tyler referee to ex< amine his last account of his trust as administrator of the estate of his late partner, Felice Matteucci. The estate of the deceased, according to the in- ventory, is worth $27,500, though Vannucci says the property was worth but $10,000 at the time of the death of Matteucei and hag increased $1000 | in value since then. “I find,” said Judge Kerrigan in ap- pointing Tyler referee, “that the ad- ministrator has, according to his ac- count, pald out $1000 for family al- lowance, when no allowance was or- dered by the court; that he has al- lowed $500 attorney’s fees, a sum en- tirely disproportionate to the value of the estate; that he contends he has| paid out moneys on assessments on\ stocks when the inventory shows the ! estate owns no stocks, and that he al- | lowed $1187 50 burijal expenses and has no receipts to show that such a sum was paid. I wish the referee to examine into these matters as soon’ as possible and report without delny to the court.” Vannucel is represented by Attor- ney A. D. Splivalo, ——— Say They Were Decelved. i Sol Kahn and Fannie Williams filed |’ suit yesterday against John Breuner and Lewls A. uld to recover $1080 they allege they have paid as rent for the Roycroft, 305 Turk street, over and above what the defendants should have charged them under the terms -of an agreement. Plaintiffs allege that de- fendants agreed to rent them the prem- ises at the same price paid by the de- fendants under the terms of a lease held by them. The defendants, plain- tiffs say, claimed they paid $i20 a month under the lease, and believing the statement to be true the plaintiffs | paid this sum for a period of seventeen months and ten. days, and then discov- ered the defendants only paid $360 a month. Hence they ask for the return of $60 a month for the period named. ————— Forest, Fish and Game Exhibition. Vie't the Art Gallery and get an agt ? He started to-day for S8an Francisco on total Russian losses in killed, wounded | as 107,000. The wounded are being | { taken away from here over the Sibe- | rian Railroad as rapidly as possible in order to free the hospitals prepara- tory to the renewal of the fighting. — —_— SISTER LEAVES HIM A FORTUNE Special Dispatch to The Call. REDDING, April 5.—Aldx Leiter, a | merchant of Igo, a few miles from Red- ding, received a letter yesterday from | Germany announcing that a sister had died in a small town near Berlin, leav- ing him a fortune of about $250,000. Leiter came~to America about twenty years ago, after having been disowned by his parents because he had refused to marrv a bride whom they had se- lected for him. Since that time he has not been in communication with his relatives in Germany, and his good for- tune comes as a great surprise to him. his way to the Old World to take pos- session of his new riches.' WILL ERECT BIG FACTORY J Speclal Dispatch to The Call. — TACOMA, Wash., April 6.—James B. Middleton of London, representing an English syndicate, has arrived here with letters of credit and authority to purchase a site on Puget Sound for a million dollar sugar beet factory, work on which wili be started this year. ing business condmlfi ited plants in Idaho and h he reported in London that flu'&lft Sound country afforded an 0ppo: ty for the operation of such a plant a syndicate was lormd and flnt money ubscri hgm of one w(thwuml? qut; 1 be Hugd on “"“ Sovrnd and X\i Ovecen.” !R'\‘\'(J 5CQO CALL, THURSDAY APRIL 6, 1905. AWAIT SIGNAL FOR_OUTBREAK Revolutionists in PRESS AIDS TERRORISTS Adds Filcl to the Flame of Popular Indignation by Exposing Gross Corruption | ST. PETERSBURG, April 5.—The prospect of a general upheaval of the city and country with the advent of Spring increases dally. Evidence ac- cumulates that the radical forces are acting in unison and awaiting a sig- nal, which, it is generally believed, will be given shortly after the Russian | Easter. The terrorists are showing great activity and reports from all dis- | tricts prove that the ‘workmen, who, in many cases have been formulating petty demands, which are no sooner | granted than they are succeeded by others, are acting under instructions from the revolutionary leaders, who are only biding thelr time. The guard regiments, which usually ¥go to camp in April, will be retained in St. Petersburg, it is announced, until June, ostensibly in order to allow the camps to he cleaned in view of the danger of cholera, which is regarded as being so serious that the sanitary authorities have ordered the immediate cleaning of the streets, sewers, cess- pools and canals of the capital and have issued specific instructions to householders, especially in the poorer districts, where the people live in cel- lars. ‘What is now called the constitutional press is adding fuel to the uames by entering upon a campaign for exposing the corruption and venality in various branches of the administration. Old scandals relative to the transportation of merchant freights, especially on the | Siberian railway, have been revived, and from the documentary evidence the most astounding state of affairs is shown to exist. The military authori- ties control transportation on the Si- | berian railroad, the general staff is is- suing permits for every car, and mer- chants desiring to ship goods to Irkutsk or farther East are compelled to buy such certificates. A regular traffic in them has been exposed, permits bring- ing from $300 to $500, the authorities then shipping the goods as munitions of war, while the munitions are side- tracked. A case is cited where it cost a mer- chant $1453 to get a single car to Ir- kutsk, and another where a car re- mained on a sidetrack from May to | January because the consignee declined to pay any more money to the military authorities. S ATy | PHYSICIANS DIP INTO POLITICS. Anti-Cholera Convention in Russia Indorses Radicalism. MOSCOW, .Aprll 5.—The congress of doctors from all parts of Russia which was summoned to meet in Mos- cow to devise means for combating | | the expected visitation of cholera has | Russia Are Ready for a General | Rising Against the Czar| ADVERTISEMEN1S. T laid your eyes u and ornamental Price reduced to FRIDAY & SATURDAY Extra Large. This is one of the real com- —for the ex- pansive per- son. In red Oalk or Imitation Mahogany; upholstered weing st nd back— ot our great regu. lar bar- Eains, al- Gemand, but, to keep to our promise of real, genu- ine reduc- tions in real, sub- stantial | <4 furniture. 1 | X i we include it in our cut prices in. golden fini: | The Hnest imitation of finished m Three pieces, nlmmx is worth ordinarily llmodt'lw'htwnkdadnlmm day:. fortable ones | (I i mum“ i woodwork you in silk damast Soind $24.50 for the set Your< C’[mnc FOR THUORSDAY, A fine chair in every respect; absolutely the best chair on || earth for double the money: | double cane seated; elght big rounds; perfect !«z\lln[ all this big stoutness for. .. Carpet Depariment | 27-ineh Axminster Rugs— regulariy $3.00, now. . inch both sides. 1. ugs—Alike on regularly $1.75. 25¢ 770 MlSSlOIl Street justified the APPrenensions Of the All- | se—————————————————— thorities by adopting as its first step in the anti-cholera crusade a set of | | resolutions calling for the execution | of the whole of the radical political programme. This grafting of political considerations upon the ostensible aims of the gathering was justified, | the speakers argued, by the incapacfty ! of the present administration to cope | adequately with cholera. The con- gress also demanded the immediate ]smppage of the war. This action of the congress was not unexpected, as the medical profession of Russia is largely composed of Jews and Poles and has been subjected to the radical influence of the universi- ties. ———— i POLICE FORBID FUNERAL. | Cossacks Use Their Swords in Dis- persing a Warsaw Crowd. ‘WARSAW, April 6.—In anticipation of the funeral of a girl who died of wounds received in the fighting on Sunday the workmen of all the fac tories In the northern part of the city left their . work yesterday afternoon and crowded the streets. The police, fearing a hostile demonstration, for- bade the funeral and summoned Cos- sacks who, using their knouts and swords freely, finally mccaeded in dis- | and prisoners at the battle of Mukden | persing the gathering. A non-striking workman at the gas- works, whom the strikers had con- | demned to death, was shot and severe- ly wounded yesterday by a striker. SRR AR MOBS COERCE THE PRIESTS. Force Clergymen to Proclaim Fealty to Their Cause. 8T. PETERSBURG, ficlal advices report continued dis- orders in the Caucasus. Within the past week peasants have looted and burned public offices in many villages in the Gore district, sacked schools and private estates, cutting down trees and threatening to kill the police if | they interfered, and forced prlests to | go with them and take an oath of solidarity with their cause. At Kishineff Wednesday night an unsuccessful attempt was made to as- sassinate Assistant Police Commission- er Kirighll. —_——— ALLEGES THAT PARTNER IS SHORT IN ACCOUNTS Thomas B. Coghill Clatms George A. Kahn Has Defrauded Him | Out of $30,000. George A. Kahn was summoned by Judge Beawell yesterday to appear next Friday to show cause why he should not be permanently enjoined from in- terfering with the business or tuuper— ing with the assets of the firm of Cog- | hill & Kahn. Coghill sued Kahn re- cently for an accounting of the busi- ness, fand now makes the allegation that he has discovered that his partner has defrauded him out of $30,000 through tampering with the books of the firm. Coghill says he hn learned that Kahn, who seventeen day. at $233.572 69. g April 6.—0f- | FOR A FALSE MURDER COYFI ESSION PAYS Prominent Politician of Urbana. Ohio, Found Guilty of Subornation of Perjury. URBANA, O., April 5.—In the case of Samuel Standish, charged with subor- nation of perjury, the jury has re- turned a verdict of guilty. Standish was formerly Mayor of Woodstock and {s at present a justice of the peace and -a prominent politiclan. He was charged with having induced William | Wooley to make a false confession of | | the murder of Wilbur E. Latimer, the ‘Woodstock merchant, more than a year ago. ‘Wooley made a confession that he and William Nichols killed Latimer. ‘Wooley pleaded guilty to the murder charge. When Nichols’ trial was called, Wooley alleged that Standish { and Columbus Brown offered him $300 i and his liberty if he confessed. —_————————— | “DIED OF GUNSHOT WOUND" | WRITTEN ON HIS CASKET | Strange Development in Case of Sup- posed Victim of Rail- road Wreck. HOLLAND, Mich.,, April 6.—A mys- tery has develomed here with the ar- rival from Las Vegas, N. M., of the body of Charles Defeyler. Relatives of | the young man understood that he had been killed in a railroad wreck. When the body arrived the words “Died of gunshot wound” were found penciled on | the rough box inclosing the casket. An investigation has been started. —_——————— GENOA, Italy, April 5.—Secretary and Mrs. Hay, who are stopping at the Hotel Isotas, | again took a drive to-day. Hay is looking bet- ter cvery day ond smys: the bracing air is strengthening him. who was killed | I LITTLE GIRL JUMPS ROPE UNTIL SHE DROPS DEAD Gains the Championship of Her Dis- trict at the Cost of Her Life. NEW YORK, April 5.—Louise BE. Rivers of New Rochelle, 11 years of age, has sacrificed her life in a success- ful effort to become the skipping rope champion of her neighborhood. To jump the rope 200 times has long been the championship record of the district. The child had often tried in vain to exceed it. When she began jumping in her last attempt, Louise ed as well as usual. As she ap- ached the 200 mark she was pale and tired, but she doggedly kept on | jumping. At 218 the girl fell, scream- ing with pain and died shortly after- ward at the hospital. The doctors found she had been attacked by acute appendicitis. ———— SEEKS WIFE IN ST. LOUIS, BUT LANDS IN AN ASYLUM Hurd Galbraith of San Francisco Says That He Is Being Perse- cuted. ST. LOUIS, April 5.— At the request of his wife, Hurd Galbraith, lately of San Francisco, was taken into custody by the police and later removed te the | observation ward at the City Hespital. He said while in California a year ago he wag informed that his wife, from whom he had separated, intended to re- marry in St. Louis. He returned and attempted to effect a reconciliation. Shortly after his arrival here he was placed in an asylum from which he was released ten days ago. He says he is not insane, but Is being perse- cuted by people who wish him out of the way. ADVERTISEMENTS. To Reachthe East at Least Expense Use the Burlington’s, Tourist sleeping car service from i San Francisco, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. Only the best patronage solicited, and a strictly high ‘grade Tourist service guaranteed. Remember, a Pullman Tourist sleepi Pullman Palace car, except that its int car is like a finish is less elaborate. It is no less comforgable and no less cleanly. T want to tell you about our great diversity of routes.

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