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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY APRIL 20, 1905. RECLINES IN GUTTER JAPAN ADDRESSES WHILE STORM RAGES # SHARP NOTE TO Berates Rescuing Policeman| Declares in Court That He Deliberately Lay Down in | the Stream to Cleanse His Clothing and : Denounces Police Tyranny. BY JAMES C. CRAWFORD. Joseph Hart was personified damp- pleaded absence of intent on the part of the shouters to convey annoyance. “We all lives in dis neighborhood,” | he explained, “an’ we has no udder place ter play in w'ere de cops won't s as he stoc e Judge ment. before the bench of Conlan and solicited en- His abundant hair lay in ‘etted wads, his whiskers were dis- | Dinch us.” veled, his tattered coat hung in loose “Why don't you gambol in Ports- and the bottom sections of his | moutt quare?” the Judge asked. | ers were suggestive of semi-dis- ‘Cops,” was the laconic answer. He ! ended coneertin i]rromlso«]_ however, to either muzzle Wh. R A | his companions or lead them out of : et him—in the bay " { pe court’s earshot. | d Patrolman Charles . . . i John A. Scheel said, “Well, well, an’ | 1 up from a gutter ; can vou beat that?” when informed in court that he was in the act of disrob- ing and hanging his garments upon a | fire hydrant at Bush and Mason streets when Special Officer Sturn arrested | thim. He had removed his coat and | | vest and one suspender was unfastened when the officer opportunely arrived. | “I don’t remember a blessed thing | |about it,” he informed Judge Conlan. “So drunk as all that, hey?” the | Judge responded. | “Loaded to the muzzle,” was the re- Joinder. | Ten dollars or as many days. . e If he had removed the clock with the rest of his belongings when he | | changed his place of residence Louis Burke would not have been before Judge Cab: ss on the charges of malicious mischief and assault with a deadly weapon, both sworn to by Mrs. Imwalle of 148 Valencia street. She testified that when he returned to her house and demanded the clock he act- d like a man demented, and when vio- ly ejected by her husband he drew arge pistol and with it smashed a door. Mr. Burke pleaded intoxication apnd promised to pay reasonable dam- ! | | #&es if he were permitted to depart in | | pegee, and as Mr. and Mrs. Imwalle were satisfied with that proposal the | | charges were dismissed. | | . . . | | | When business slackened at the| | | American Can Company’s factory Jake Fisher was among the operatives tem~ porarily retired, and while he con- sumed er to drown his chagrin at being * d off” a former fellow work- man told him that he was a victim of unjust discrimination on the part of the foreman. So back to the factory at Seventh and Townsend streets went Jake and there he disturbed the peace 80 ruthlessly that Special Policeman | George Beben took him into custody. | When arraigned before Judge Mogan he expressed contrition, also determi- nation to forever shut his ears against 3 street, near Commercial, f Tuesday night was The gutter was bank t was stretched at full g arms support- | “knocking,” and so earnest was his g ng his face | demeanor that it won him dismissal the rushing flood, | with a reprimand. | u from the pelting . . . e dammed | Patrolman Hines had reason for re- | garding Charles Cook, who emptied the contents of both barrels of a shotgun | into a dog, as a person of violent tem- per, who had frequently terrorized his family by exhibition of the same, but the wife and son of Mr. Cook declared that the officer had been misinformed, as a man of more amiable disposition than the husband and father did not exist. The shooting of the dog, young Mr. Cook averred, was an act to be com- mended rather than censured, inas- much as the animal was a family pos- sessién and was sick nigh unto death ad not found ar and free C When yulled to the n who im- of a help- want to know some- remarked to the became a citizen in ances to lie down ter of a deserted attire to re- sing? If this d of San f 1 am still | 5 -+ of America, | please in- | I have offended. 11 esire for personal a crime in Califor- the court could comply with the complainant stated that ve plea was speciou pursued the officer, in the gutter when the d. The idea of him seeking you up for sixty Judge to Mr. Hart, uld be more seve badly punished day and the e if_you y Jupi- ey S butting to fragments front door of , 927 Broadway, ctured with his on that tively, by and also when that young onstrance against the | | tion of his skull as a will be sentenced ischief and peace ge Mogan inti- e shall not be tem- | nning scared feminine resi- | t portion of Vallejo street he Italian quarter by fur- | peeping around corners and mak- | deous faces and menacingly dis- | ter to such ladies as | 4. * him away. Patrol- | y d him and Judge | When the lead was poured into it with | Conlan gave him fifty days. intent to end its suffering. If a man o 5 had not a right to execute his own dog | Four little bovs were haled before | in the interest of humaneness, for good- Judge Mogan, &t his request, to show | ness sake what liberty is left to the in- they should not cease using | dividual in this law-ridden city? ting the Hall of Mrs. Cook wept as she pleaded for | Justi quarters, as | leniency at the hands of Judge Ca-| a playground. Their shrill shouts, his | baniss. If the court knew what she Honor explained to—the m, jarred the | knew of the sweetness and light cast machinery of his court and he said | upon the Cook household by its mascu- | that some of their scr s had been | line head the idea of punishing him for euffici to disturb the Inani- | pezce disturbance and discharging fire- mate f the Morgue. One |arms within the municipal limits would | chubby-faced and round-eyed voung- | appear absurd, not to say ridlculous. | ster, attired In & sea-green sweater Besides, she and several young children ' many sizes too large for him, served | were dependent for maintenance upon | * epokesman for the quartet and | Mr. Cook's breadwinning capacity, and | i if he were sent to jail the family also would suffer. . ADVERTISEMENTS. The wife's plea won, as such pleas nearly always do, and Mr. Cook was set at liberty to return to his home at 1947 Stockton street and resume his vo- cation of peddling coffee. Patrolman | Hines, however, adhered with obstinacy | | to his belief that Mr, Cook was a very theBaby™d "= = FOOD A baby who frets, worries, or cries, or sleeps poorly is prob- ably poorly nourished, unless there is actual disease. Mellin’s Food provides plenty of good nourish- ment ; easily digestible, and does away with all fretting and crying. Try Mel. lin's Food; we will send you a sample. Mellin’s Food is the ONLY Fond ek rocsived the Geand the ;nd:ml.nld-nh- er than a gold medal. MELLIN'S FOGD CO., - BOSTON. MASS. B Judge Fritz discovered that R. H. Merret, accused of supplying his 3-year-old son with cigarettes, could not be convicted under the law pro- hibiting the giving of tobacco to minors, so a charge of cruelty to a { minor child was substituted and will be tried to-day. With the prosecution rests the task of proving by expert medical testimony that cigarette smok- ing is injurious to the physical health of little boys, and the defense may insist also that spiritual teachers be summoned to show how the -moral well-being of youth is affected by the fumes of “coffin nails.” A Journal bearings were pilifered from the Southern Pacific Company’s freight vard by James Murray, who pleaded guilty of petty larceny and thus re- lieved Judge Mogan’'s court of consid- erable trouble and himself from prob- {Oyama Evidently Planning a Move- | Death of the Assassin to Occur With- | begin the | better. | flood. | way. | yourself will go to Yosemite this vear. | $30.00 | street, Santa ¥e Office. [ acquitted. { Commander J. B. Briggs, who was in PARIS GO Contihued From Page 5, Column 2. ron appearing here. The officials are prepared to insist upon the neutral- ity of this port being respected. The Japanese ships which have been plying between Amoy and the island of Formosa are not making their usual trips. The Japanese have a building here filled with stores- sup- posed to_-be medical supplies. The British steamship Heathbank, which has been at this port since Feb- ruary 11, is said to haye ammunition and iight artillery under her supposed cargo of coal, intended for the Rus- sian squadron. o A SHARP SKIRMISHES OCCUR. ment to the North. HARBIN, April 19.—There was a determined attempt on the night of April 17 to cut the railroad between Harbin and Vladivgstok, a formidable body of Chinese bandits making an attack near the station of Imyanpo, 100 miles east of Harbin. After a fight which lasted several hours the bandits were driven off and dispersed. The vigor of the skirmishes taking place on the east flank of the Russian army seems to indicate that the Jap-* anese are planning to thrust north- eastward, to interpose a force between Harbin and Vladivostok. — PREPARES FOR EMERGENCY. Japan Storing Vast Quantities of Sup- plies in Manchuria. YINKOW, April 19.—Few trans- ports are now arriving at Newchwang. This contrast with the rush of traf- fic since the opening of the Liao Riv- er indicates that precautions are being | taken against possible interference by the Russian Pacific squadron. Vast accumulations of stores have already been made along the Japan- ese lines of communication, assuring full supplies to the armies in the field, even if the transport service be in- terrupted. AT e o A MUST NOT READ OR LISTEN. Order to Russian Troops Concerning Revolutionary Teachings. ST. PETERSBURG, April 19.—The circulation of revolutionary literature among the troops throughout Rus- sia has now spread to the regiments of the Imperial Guards and a general order has been issued to the guards forbidding them to ‘read proclama- tions thrust into your hands in the streets or im your lodgings, or to lis- ten to those allies of Japan.” LR S Death of Earl of Stanhope. LONDON, April 19.—The Earl of Stanhope (Arthur Philip Stanhope) died to-day. He was born in 1838. Farias KALEIEFF WILL BE HANGED. in a Fortnight. ST. PETERSBURG, April 19.—The plea at Moscow yesterday of Kalefeff, who was sentenced to death for the assassination of Grand Duke Sergius, that a state of civil war existed in Russia and that he was a prisoner of war and not an ordinary prisoner ac- cused of a crime, is considered here to indicate the position which the ter- rorists will assume hereafter. Natur- ally, such a pdsition is not acknowl- edged by the Government, but the ter- rorists will persist in the fiction. Kaleieff, having been tried by a spe- cial commission of the Senate, against which there is no appeal, will be hanged probably within a fortnight. —————— Yosemite Now Open. On Monday, April 24th, Santa Fe stages Yosemite Valley season, via Merced, Merced Falls and Merced Big Trees. Weather conditions were never The famous falls are in full Millions of flowers beautify the Now is the time to go. Reserve scats early. Thousands besides stage the round trip, at 653 Market . COMMANDER SEYMOUR ACQUITTED IN MANILA ‘Was Tried in Connection With the Grounding of the Cruiser Baltimore, MANILA, April 19.—After trial before a naval court-martial Lieutenant Com- mander Isaac Knight Seymour has been Lieutenant Commander Seymour was the navigating officer of the cruiser Baltimore when that vessel grounded in the straits of Malacca about six months ago, and it is presumed that his trial was in connection with that affair. command of the Baltimore, was also tried by court-martial and acquitted. ——————— Dr. Gerald J. Fitzgibbon, having re- turned from abroad, has resumed prac- tice at his offices, 21 Powell street. * — 4 able commitment for grand larceny. He will be given six months, . D Frank Burgess, charges with petty larceny, pleaded not guilty before Judge Conlan. “What did he steal?” his Honor asked the arresting policeman. “Journals,” was the answer. “Morning or afternoon?” the court. “Brass,” replied the officer. “Well, sixty days’ imprisonment is the regular penalty for larceny of a paper journal, and I can see no good reason why it should not be applied in cases where the plunder is brazen. Two months !o.r W;l. M:. Burgess.” inquired These are the citizens who will sit as a jury and decide whether Daniel Creighton, cashier for “Zick” Abrams, did or did not sell a race pool to Paul Q. Smith, a detective employed by the Grand Jury: ‘W. F. Powers, president Powers Rub- ber Company; Willlam B, Collier, capi- talist, 124 Sansome street; John B. Wet- more, secretary Wetmore Bros., 413 ‘Washington street; Henry Schussler, vice president Schussler Bros, 119 Geary street; Samuel J. Eva, president United States Engineering Works, 418 Califor- nia street; Andrew Carrigan, president Dunham, Carrigan & Hayden, 17 Beale street; A. J. McNicoll, president Mc- Nicoll Elevator Company, 207 Second street; Walter D. Bliss, architect, 2% Crocker building; H. A. Kennedy, Ken- nedy & Co., 10 Post street; Ed Horton, capitalist, and P. McBean, president Gladding, McBean & Co., Rialto build- ing. of testimony will begin at Taking 10:30 o'clock to-morrow morning. It is predicted that the defense will raise the |. point that Smith was an accomplice in the alleged pool transaction and that his unsupported testimony cannot le- gally be considered adequate to con- vict. The prosecution’s plan has not been foreshadowed. UDERNMENT PR e TURKEY'S REFORMS MEET SUCCESS IN MACEDONIA Financial Scheme Said to Be Achiev- ing Good Results at Present. VIENNA, April 19.—The negotiations between the powers regarding Great Britain’s plans for the financial reform of Macedonia will probably be ter- minated at the end of April. Some doubt is entertained here about Ger- many's attitude on the subject. The Neue Freie Presse publishes an interview with Herr von Mueller, the Austrian agent in Macedonia, charged with carrying out the Austro-Russian reform programme, who passed through Salonica recently on his way to Athens, in which he declares among other things that since March 1 the financial reforms in Macedonia established by Turkey through Hilmi Pasha have been working very well, all the officials and other officers receiving their sala- ries promptly through the Ottoman Bank. He expresses the opinion that this system will have the most suc- cessful results. The Foreign Office here does not deny statements to the effect that Herr von Mueller will not return to Macedonia. —_——— AMERICANS SHORTER LIVED THAN GERMANS, HE ASSERTS Figures Given by Dr. B. Laquer at ‘Wiesbaden to Prove His Statement. WIESBADEN, April 19.—“Americans are shorter-lived than Germans,” was the conclusion reached by Dr. B. La- quer in his paper on “Social Hygiene in the United States,” submitted to-day to the International Congress of Medicine, now in session here. “Although more temperate in the use of alcohol than the Germans and working an average of 10 per cent shorter hours, the ‘Americans are,” sald Dr. Laquer, “exhausted earlier in life.” The doctor gave figures for each thousand of the population. The num- ber of persons from 40 to 60 years old are in Germany 179, in America 170; persons over 60, in Germany 78, in America 65. Dr. Laquer did not under- take to explain the facts. He simply gave them as the result of inquiries which he made during a visit to the United States in 1904. —_——— MORGAN RECEIVED BY THE KING OF ITALY Thanked for Return of the Cope ‘Which Had Been Stolen From Cathedral. ROME, April 19.—King Victor Em- manuel to-day received in private au- dience J. Pierpont Morgan, who thanked the King warmly for the grand cordon of Saints Maurice and Lazarus which he wore. The King was most cordial in his manner to- ward Morgan and made the American financier sit next to him. He expressed his personal gratification at the pen- erous action of Morgan in returning to Ascoli the cope stolen from the cathedral there and sold to him by an unknown person. The conversation, which was carried on in English; last- ed half an hour. Later the King received United States Senator Nelson W. Aldrich of Rhode Island. —_— e LORD KITCHENER THREATENS TO TENDER RESIGNATION Clashes With General Elles in the Conduct of Affairs in India. LONDON, April 19.—The correspond- ent at Calcutta of the Daily Express learns that friction has arisen between Lord Kitchener and Major General Elles, military member of the Governor General’s council, whose position en- abled him to thwart the commander in chief’s plans. Lord Kitchener threatens to resign unless General Elles’ duties are restricted to the administrative de- partment. Kitchener further desires a voice in the council or to be placed in close relation with the Indian govern- ment. J. P. —_————— NEGOTIATIONS OPENED WITH TRACTION CONCERNS Chicago Makes First ‘Move Toward Acquiring Control of Streeg Car Lines, CHICAGO, April 19.—Negotiations for the purchase of the Chicago street railways were opened to-day between the traction representatives and the city of Chicago. The nearest approach to definite re- sults obtained was a practical agree- ment on a joint conference to be held soon by the Mayor, the traction inter- ests and the City Council committee on transportation. SPINAL MENINGITIS IS A CONTAGIOUS D cially Declared to Be Such by the New York Department of Health, NEW YORK, April 19.—Cerebro spinal meningitls has been offcially declared a contagious disease by the Department of Health and orders have been issued that every place in which there has been a case shall be fumigated as thoroughly as after a case of scarlet fever. For the present, however, there is no quarantine, nor Offi Prints_daily not only more news but more reliable and interesting news than any San Francisco newspaper. During the season it will have more information of what is going on at the Summer Resorts than any of its contemporaries. It will be, therefore, the most valuable medium for advertising Summer Resort at- tractions. It will be found on file at the resorts and will be sent by mail to any address for 2o cents per week or 75 cents per month. : Don’t forget to order The Call before leaving for your summer outing. The Geysers Heaith and pleasure resort is now open to guests, under same management which made this famous resort so popular last year. The hotel, cottages, bath-houses and grounds are lighted by electricity; a new dancing pavilion has been erected, and good music will be fur- nished for dancing. Several new cottages have been erected to accommodate the increased demand for rooms; also a tennis court has been built for lovers of that sport. Our best advertisement {s our table, which cannot be surpassed. We have our own dairy, hence we have plenty of fresh milk and cream. Rates are $12, §$14 and §16 per week; bath free to regular weekly guests. Postoffice and long distance telephone in For further particulars and booklet CURRY, Proprietor. Improvements galore suffi- cient to delay the opening of Aelna Springs Until May 15th. “VACATION" is issued annually by the California Northwestern Railway THE PICTURESQUE ROUTE OF Send for booklet, Aetna Springs, Napa County, Cal . hotel. dress R. H. - AGUA CALIENTE SPRINGS For rest, health and pleasure, scenery and SEA BEACH HOTEL CALIFORNIA'S FINEST SEASIDE RESORT. | gyyqeuy BOARDERS ARE TAKEN, Largest and Best Equipped Bathing Pa- | AND SELECT CAMPING SPOTS. vilion on the Pacific Slope. Best Beach on the Coast. and is the standard publication on the Pacific Coast for informa- tion regarding MINERAL SPRING RESORTS, COUN- ‘wasza This year's edi VACATION Tiintiig aolans *Bitas: Tl WS 1905, contal 0 pages. beau- climate. ' The nearest hot sulphur springs to | o oW Diniagroom: & Steam Hea — tifully illustrated, and 1S com- San Francisco; sure cure for asthma, rheuma- | SEYcs: attrastive mew lobby. o L plete Ip fts detatled informmtion tism, malaria, kidney, liver and stomach com- plaints. Hot plunges, tub baths and the largest mineral water swimming tank in the State; all baths free to guests; trained mas- and Fishing; beautiful Drives; paid Orchestra. HOTEL ST. GEORGE under the same man- agement. J. J. C. LEONARD, Prop. as to location, accommodations, attractions, etc.. with terms from $7.00 per week up. seurs’ and swimming teacher. No staging. - s o be had at Ticket Offices, €30 5:"'7:;%0‘0n‘xléflpirm;se.fl:{.:ze%:u;:tef So- Market street (Chronicle Bullding), d Tiburon Ferry, foot of Market reet; General Office, Mutual Life Building. corner of Sansoge and Cali= fornia streets. San Frantisco. Cal. PARAISO SPRING noma_County, HOT SPRINGS, SONOMA COUNTY; only 4% hours from San Francisco and SKAGGS e s e — Waters noted for medicinal virtues; best naturai | Applications by Mail Wil Receive Ime mediate Response. hot mineral water bath in State: boating and | p swimming in Warm Spring Creek: good trout MONTEREY CO. CAL. | JAS. L. f,n;z';'!f;\fi"}; S Nenadar S telephone, telegraph. daily mail, ex- 000 Rud MRIGheE abose: Sad U . X. . Gen’l Pass’e Agen F&.mcslseoflgz}r;tfi;‘n‘g g_e:g; large swimming tank; excellent FIRST-CLA! table; grand mountain scevery: open all the || y a4 ympo; sPRINGS Pon dan Fraacisco ooty 35 50, 1ok ., = | STAGE B Hopland to Bartlett T e ity at 180 o . o 2:80 b, T oorings. || Sorings. via Lakeport, carrying passeugers foe Rates $2 a day or $12 a week. References,”any | | Montgomery st. & Lakeport and Bartlett Springs. Stages connect with trains at Hopland. Leave 12:30; arrive at Lakeport at 3: Bartlett Springs at 7:30. New 6-horse l4-pas- senger tourist wagons, with all the most mod- Hopland at guest of the past nine years. 0; arrive at tronage of 1904 unprecedented. Information at Tourist In- formation Bureau, 11 Montgomery st., Bryan's Bureau, 30 Montgomery at., or of J. F. MUL- ern improvements. Passengers for Lakeport or SRR SAGNRIORE L ol S SE lGI ,ER Bartlete Springs, call for tickets by Burtiets | Springs Stage Line. Tickets can be purchased FORDE’S REST Eoa HOT SPRINGS | OF othee of ‘Califoraia N. W. Ry.. 630 Mot st., or at Tiburon ferry MILLER & HOWARD, Props. in mountains Om Summer fome &2 mountains [y Mester Pure water, equable climate, lots at $10 up; cottages built by Meeker, 330 up: depot; stoves: restaurant; hotel; post:’express: phon mill; 1200 lots sold: 400 cottages bullt. Sau- salito ferry, N. S. R. R. M. C. MEEKER, Camp Meeker, Sonoma County. Mts., 8. P. C. R. R., round trip $3; surround- ed by two romantic trout streams; ng, bathing; a picturesque place. Adults, §7 per week; families, special rates. W. C. FORDE, P. M., Eccles, Cal WILLIAMS & BARTLETT SPRINGS STAGE LINE Leaves Williams daily on arrival of northbound train for Bartlett, Allen’s, Houghs' and Cook's Springs. Daily except 'Sunday for Wilbur Springs and Sulphur Creek. WILLIAM QUIGLEY, Proprietor. Are immensely popular because of their many wonderful facilities for health and pleasu: Natural Hot Baths and stomach waters, a positive cure for Rheumatism, Malaria, Blad- | der, Liver and Kidney Troubles. Arsenic | Beauty Baths, Swimming. $10 to $12 per week. Baths and amusements free. Many new im- provements. Booklets Peck’s, 11 Montgomery st., or H. H. McGOWAN, Seigler, Lake Co. REDUCED RATES Trip to Lake County easy by Wm. Spler's spring stages; more comfortable than carriages. From San Francisco to Anderson, Harbin, Spler's and return, $7. To Adams’, Seigler's, oberg’s Howard.” Astorg and Glenbrook and return, $9. Stages leaye Calistoga 11:30 a. m., Sundays excepted. One-half hour for lunch the Caiistoga Hotel. Fifty pounds o allowed with each ticket. Tickets on sale at Southern Pacific offices. WILBUR HOT SULPHUR | _Colusa Co., Cal., 26 miles west of Willlams. Stage leaves Williams daily for Springs; tare $2. Hottest and strongest water on the coast; temperature 148 degrees. Sure cure for rheu~ | matism, dropsy, all skin diseases, liver and | kidney ‘compiaints, paralysis, mercury in the system, dyspepsia and catarrh. Natural mud baths; new bathbouse: $10 to $12 per weel WILLIAM OLEGART, Proprietor. BEAUTIFUL BROOKDALE — Santa Cruz Mts.; 3 hrs. from S. F.; beautitul GAS COMPANY FAVORS TAMMANY COMBINATION Contracts for Nearly - Four Hundred Thousand Dollars Awarded ‘Without Competition. FE XOHR, Apf 18- The lele- of stream, mountain & forest: warm, dry air lative committee which is investigat- B L U E pure "gr; :o“:‘un sites w‘th R"fldlt Testric- ing lighting conditions in New York | , Boatine. Bathing and all other amusements | Jo0%, 00 0es. " Fiectric lghts: sowerage: 3 City called Mayor McClellan and City | phur springs. s,.mom. l:;mph[e!, 0. WEIS- t.n{'-;l ;:le»hillogeml:«: fi,;c:!;‘l:”u: v - | MAN, Midlake P. O., Lake County, Cal. or 3 / Comptroller Grout to the witness e R ot G- 3% | ground. BROOKDALE LAND CO.. stand to-day and they testified as to their action on the various lighting contracts that have been made during the terms they have been in office. The committee also inquired into the st., 8 F. LAKES SISSON TAVERN. Ploturesquely located on the westarn slope of Mt. Shasta. A visit to the Portland Expoaftiom. contracts made by the Consolidated LAUREL DELL For ~ulars consult the information bu~ Gas Company with the New York| guests at Laurel Dell have privilegs of 1 | reaus cf San Fraucisco, or adiress Sissons Contracting and Trucking Company, in which Aldermen Gaffney and Mur- phy, a brother of Charles F. Murphy, leader of Tammany Hall, are associ- ates. It developed during the testi- mony that contracts amounting to $380,000 had been awarded to the Gaffney-Murphy firm without compe- differept mineral waters at Saratoga Springs. Boating, swimming. marine toboggan, new itvery fally-ho coach, croquet, bowling, new walks and drives. Pamphlets at Peck's, 11 Montgomery st. E. DURNAN, Proprietor. Laurel Dell, Lake County; Also proprietor La Trianoy Hotel. SUMMER HOME. HARBIN SPRINGS—Most desirable in Lake Co.: contain suiphur, ron, magnesia arsenic; over $15,000 in improvements; thor oughly renovated and new sanitarfum out; one large 3-story building just com; 3 bowling alley, tition. Mayor McClellan told of the| Grand location on creek in Santa Crus administration’s efforts to secure leg- wflwfia n;:ma; mineral islation for a municipal lighting plant, and said he hoped his successor in of- fice would see a plant In operation. —_— e ‘board, etc.; phome. Terms, to §12. m folder. H'W. HAINES, m-wua.gx. Te: ANCHORAGE Try the United States Laundry. 1004 Market street. Telephone South 420. * b atader = mountatne, First-ciaxs table. Rooma in rustio Breaks Trans-Pacific Record. ‘Address Gifford Hall, Patehen P. O. SEATTLE, April 19.—The steamship Minnesota of the Great Northern Steamship . Company’s Seattle-Oriental fleet and the largest freight carrier Glenm Napa nS.oda Spring. are the children of families in which health and pleasure resort. Call Peck’s, 11 a case exists to be debarred from |afloat reached port last. night on her | Montgomery st or address John Jacobs. R R . Crwt school attendance. This matter will | return voyage from the Orient, having (~——— ——_————— | Moamiecs. B8 JCRRTE, Bonninn e be considered by the commission at its | broken all trans-Pacific records on her SAMTOGA spm - home cooking, solid comforts, & meeting on Friday. trip across. The Minnesota’s time from 15 at . > o e ‘closs ,-:t danceball, etc. Campers' Yokohama was eleven days, twenty-one | o n u"m"“u "‘"",.cr"" x“’r_fiu "‘"“ = o.tn.' n::. unh:.n“eu'mmm address Gibbe HELENA, Mont.. April 10 —The pearing on | hours and five minutes. st., or at J. MARTENS, Bachelor P. O., Lake E (::tnrflcrut:d -!;w m“:'dhy the !waflon R Bl L S County, Cal. ] RICHARDSON SPRINGS—In the fook- t resul n lown* of the big mine in Butt . PETER'S PICNIC.—The plenio of St. Bills of the Slerras, 10 miles from Chico, No ;.:hmz copper @ n e -'l:,_mdl.l: n‘:’;‘o r:.‘ru' o pariah, Rev. Father , pastor, will VICHY SPRINGS grade, no dust. Famous for the cure of rheu~ Jusge William H. Huit In”the United States | be held this ear at Camp Tayicr, Thursday, | Three miles from Ukiah, Mendocino County. | matism, gout, serofula, stomach. Uver and court. \ May 11. atural electric waters, ; | kidney diseases. houses. porcelain ovely ; fishing and hunting; tubs; trout fishing: telephone: from : S ocominodations ena tabls rst crase. | Chico datly. J. H. RICHARDSON, Chico, Cal P REDEMBYER, proprietor. I ADTIT R HOWELL NT.. WOODWORTI S| moti D Soupeny By, ., .. HOWELL MT., WOODWORTH'S| . Sr‘hawsy momve: lenkons ‘connection: & b ;. hot, col L Makes hair light and fluffy. Stops itching instantly. = ,\,""_;:",‘;“,.,. ,E&.‘f.{"". .,..w."".:_ b~ ;.‘:Z,""""""m ewimmis a4z, GOINGL GQING!! GONE !l &SOLLER " oG T & SeeB Nl f i % WILLOW tfully lo- oot cittoater” phoses Smoaot- | eatea 1o redwoods § from Santa Crus, u‘n‘ Spring water, frult, milk, excellent table; the | dally mall; free conveyance; $7 week; ‘sanitarium, | Suburban 87. MRS. W. CRANDELL, or | Cruz, Cal. - warcos WU UTET, waoe WL NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE bm%fi‘h‘h‘h" DON'T BLATE YOUR MIRROR Emttue se e e Orug Stores, $1.00. Sead 10c, stamps, to HERPICIDE CO., Dapt. N, i AT PROMINENT . £ g A D By ihe cumovalof et Combtallsaf shghdy doe HoNT s GO Proprietors, Bl Verano. ‘eased hair that could be saved. Hmfln’ could talk It would plead with you o . your TAWRENCE VILEA. Sonome—Com- Newbro: M‘.fiau’&"&hfl P bus daily to Hot Springs: 35 week. B &l.mqm“.“m- PELLISSIER. % M . N JONE, Pr Clovecdale, car SV W 4 vt T ROOKY FALLS ¥ SHOPS. santa n e — 14 R . D, Saata Crua \