The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 30, 1905, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

(5] ’ THE SAN- FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1905 CHARLES YERKES CALLED INVENTOR FACES Traction Magnate Dies at New York ‘ Kotel. A | Wife Goes to Bedside| ; Just Before the ] End. f SEEAAT SN 1 ’ 3 | ot day in his | w yrf-Astoria | tor more suffered from & s growing out 1 His condi- | | days past | | “ ns gave his illness: | Charles | Edward Mrs. nd my- | al statement l who had at- | | | | | [ | d e THET CHARE Accused of Stealing Jew- Il elry and Bopds from a Woman While Her Guest G. W. CORNWELL IN JAIL Valuables Said to Be Worth Eleven Thousand Dollars Stolen During a Party b B T, BRIDGEPORT, Conn., Dec. 20.—George W. Cornwell, until recently treasurer of the Wheeler & Wilson Manufacturing | Company, aud an inventor of note, was arrested to-day, accused of the theft of United States bonds and jewelry to the value of $11,000. The complainant is Mrs. Gilvert A. Lumpkin, wife of Gilbert A. Lumpkin, who also was known as Lump. kin A. Gill, of St. Louis, of the firm of Arnold & Co., which became involved in legal difficulties with the Postoffice De- partment because of alleged *‘get-rich- quick” methods of doing business. Corn- weil went to jail in default of bail. The alleged theft occurred on the night of January 29 last, and the location of the bonds taken at that time, it is said, was determined only a few days' ago, when, according to the police, Cornwell tried to negotiate cne of them. | Mr. and Mrs. Cornwell live upstairs in | the same gpartment-house as Mrs. Lump- { kin. On the night in question Mrs. Lump- kin was entertaining a party of friends, including the Cornwelis. She had placed the bonds and her jewelry in a case and hidden it in a bed. During the party the case disappeared. It so happened that outside the house snow had fallen, and the police found that no one had left or | entered “during the hours of the party. | The recent appearance of one of the m TRACTION NATIO! MAGNATE _OF INT L_FAME WHO DI DAY IN NEW YORK. |Ing registered bonds and the fact that | Cornwell had been concerned with the ne- | gotiation of it led to his arrest. It is said that the missing jewelry represents | L | did a large and profitable business in € State and municipal securities. of Mr. Yerkes is particu- | Hig close connection with the a time when his | finances, however, was the cause of tion with the Lo apidly ap- and important { He had 1 | | being put in upcra-i | | Marcer, great trouble of his life. been acting as broker for i was let E -y to be a defaulter to a large amount. two were indicted, tried and convic Yerke two ¥ This was February 10, 1872. At the of seven months, September, 1 granted full pardon and disc heal d wa should portion ompleting it and £ se of his death. | custody. NEW YORK, Dec. 20.—Justice Truax in geme have been perfected | jor several yvears thereafter nothing | (e State Supreme Court to-day handed d the pProper | was heard in Philadelphia of the finaneia] | 40Wn a decision in favor of the plaintiffs genius and pardoned prisoner. He had |0 the several actions brought by Zim- | with it was | puried himself in the West and. it is satd. | Merman & Forshay of this city against m ome \rily abandoned the name of | other firms, involving the alleged failure he should recover from the | Of the defendants to deliver to the plain- ~ s = tiffs certain bonds claimed to have been v g ries oty ek Thnt in Philadel- | 1ssued by the United Rallroads of San be w i Yomemladel- | Franciseo and the United Raflways In- me v beard of Cha erkes again | Logiment Company. Damages amounting until, seve rs afterward, he ap- | peared in Chi i immediately en City Treasurer, when the latter was found The was fined $500 and sentenced to ars and nine months imprisonment. , he was arged from | cred the speculative | cemed 1o | Mrs. Lumpkin's wealth left T8~ sepgration Prom hiw. ‘2| UNITED RAILROADS % BOND SUIT ENDED wea. | Decision in Favor of Plai tiffs Given by New York Justice. n- end to $16,965 were awarded against the de- follows: Hudson & Co., : Timmerman, Dahigren & Co.. §10,- fendants as & he precise terms Everything he touched 5; Weaver, Rabourg & Co.. $625; Bunnell ~itpcd turn to gold, He had made large sums of | &~ Bychanan, $300; F. & C. Randolph, gl money in booming Fargo, N. D., and was | gigso. such a man- | able to make a strong start on coming |~ mng question involved was-as to wheth- or as er to forego her dower | © Ghieago. His first iarge move was ta | o of hot:the Bonps were jjssaed on or rights e-t : in the prop- |OPen ® banking house (1581) at La Salle | ;ror to July 7, 1902. 'The defendants took t and Madison streets. . | the ground that the contracts had mnot Provis s he began negotiations | matured because the entire issue of the Chicago street and some Philadelphia friends d control of the Chi Company, which w as motive power. Two secured control of the ‘ompany opted ision Rallway th factor in ilroad systems i i sion Loop Comps ) facllities { and formed YERKES' SPECTACULAR LIFE. Down Disgrace to Attain | 17 1% Great Helghts, | ‘:Ai‘ k Yeokes, ational | in the broed S street rail- | he did ers to He Lives he and safe passenger world's populous metropolis. a way that astonished the I and completing in time vast [ tube’ roads rkes accumulated a lar even as fortunes are measured now, of varied and was born in | i ine 2 The Yer tch origin, the first coming to Ameri the advent of Wi color edpcated th aker was man of lberal culture and artistic rimination. directors of the in “high school began business mmission house received $50 as a pres- for his atten- - business years of age, he opening a money and three years banking house. He of first-class bonds g the Civil War of the exhibits in that department. ut for himself, s office a art collections in America. at over $2,600,000. He gave to the Universi the assistance of Chidago capf- icago City Ra as reorganized himself as president and cables werc y to provide terminal | all the roads in the heart of | He then branched out and built ) miles of suburban roads as feed- hig several intermural systems. went to London and became ! solving the great problem of | transportation | he was not a money maker only, but a | He was one of the board of Columbian Exposition in 1593 and a member of the committee on fine arts, and to his efforts was largely due the elaborateness and great success | In his New York residence, a palatial | structure costing over $1,000,000, he gath- ered one of the most complete and costly It is valued of Chicago a telescope costing some $400,000—said to be ! bonds, amounting to $20.00.600 had not | been put on the market at the time. Jus- tico Truax holds that a sufficient number of bonds were on the market July 7, 1902, to fill the defendants’ contracts could be bought in the open market both in New York and San Francisco. An appeal will be taken, as it is claimed several other large suits, involving con- | tracts for the delivery of bonds, ‘‘when, the | ¢ ana as fssued,” depend upon the final decision in the present case. ES i 3 | | | the largest and finest In the world—which lis located at Lake Geneva, Wis. Yerkes was twice married, first when he was a broker in Philadelphia, and again when he had become a power in The first wife, whom he left behind when he whs released from prison and went West in 1872, he divorced after | making ample provision for her future comfort. His second wife was Miss Ade- laide Moore of Philadelphia, whom he met In the West before he went to Chi- cago to settle. With one exception every one of Yerkes' | predictions for himself came true. His soclal success in Chicago @id not keep pace with his other conquests. He and his wife were received with open arms abroad and were given much recognition | in New York, but in Chicago they never reached the top rung of the social ladder. It is said that that was one reason why Yerkes deserted Chicago for New York. In June, 1891, he erected in Greenwood Cemetery, New York, at a cost of $50,000, a magnificent tomb te receive the remains of himself and wife on their demise. his | on- but 1 dis- Alfred Lilienfeld @ Co’s 5 DAYS’ SPECIAL SALE - OF Overcoats, Ulsters Cravenettes and " Ceases To-Night at 10 O’Clock A Host of Pretty Novelties—the Production of America’s Foremost Tailors, in Overcoats, Ulsters and Cravenette Raincoats... FOR MEN AND YOUTHS At Tremendously Reduced Prices Alfred Lilienfeld @ Co. 201 and 203 Kearny Street | At Northwest Corner Sutter St. Twentieth Century Clothiers -~ High Grade Tailoring after the | wreck of her husband's business and her | and | | | ST. PETERSBURG, Dec. 20.—The sup- pressicn of the insurrection at Moscow and the certainty that similar uprisings clsewhere will collapse of the first attempt of the “Reds” fo overthrow the Government armies and administers a defeat from which, it is believed in Government cir- | cles, the revolutionaries cannot quickly | recover, |ing away the utter hopelessness of the inonfllct seems to be apparent. The popu- | lace held aldof and not a single miiitary unit actually joined the revolutionaries. Even' the general strike crumbled under | their feet by their challenging and pre- cipitating a conflict before the proleta- riat organizations were prepared. The Government securea a compara- tively easy though ruiuless victory, and it is believed in hikh official circles that the organizaticns have been so demoral- ized and disrupted by the blow and by the arrest of their most'aple leaders that it | will be impossible for them to attempt {the coup planned for the anniversary of | “blaody Sunday.” In desperation, un- doubtedly, the revolutionaries will again have. recourse to acts of terror, which they spring at the most unexpected mo- | ment. The country has quieted down and the Cabinet now hopes- that the election of a | Douma is assured; that tne Government the revolt more especially in the Baltic provinces and to the solution of the | agrarian question. 1f means cannot be found to in some measurc satisfy the land hunger of the peasants before spring the Universal opinfon is that the peasants | everywhere will rise. The ldnded pro- prietors seem to be convinced of this to such.an extent that the landlords in the | neighborhood of Minsk are calling their | tenants together and are voluntarily ar- ranging the distribution of a portion of | their private holdings upon terms satis- "l;n tory to the peasants. | Peter Struve, editor of the Osvobojdenie | (emancipation), who has again shifted his | position, publishes a ringing article this | afternoon, in which he admits the defeat | of the attempt aimed at the overthrow | of the Government. He says the attempt | of course was madness, and was bound {to be extinguished in blood. Neverthe- |less, be alleg:s, there was a heroic spirit | behind it which should terrify the Gov- ernment. ‘“‘Another such victory and the | Government is lost,” says he. | The report that Lieutenant Mistchenko has been wounded is not true. | The League of Leagues bas split, one | portion favoring a continuance of the | strike and another the abandonment of | violent tactics and co-operation in peace- for the work of the | ful preparation | Douma. | With the evident object of inflaming | sentiment abroad the revolutionary agents ! are putting out a story to the effect that | the Government is deliberately plotting | a’ great massacre of the Jews. -These | agents display what purpowts to be the text of an appeal by a rabbi addressed to the Jews to fight against the cross, which they declare is being printed by the Ministry of Marine for distribution among the ignerant classes, with the ob- ject of produciug a concerted attack. In- vestigation fails to substantiate the charge that the Government is favoring | gny such document. Tuere was a slight |®elapse on the Bourse to-day. Imperial | 4s were quoted at 80%. | AL I HEART OF RUSSIA AFLAME. Revolutionists Are Causing Disorder \in the Interlor Provinces. ST. PETERSBURG, Dec. 20.—The Molva prints an interview with a student who has arrived here from Moscow, .in which the student says the horror of the sights he witnessed was driving him in- sane and he was forced to flee. It seems established that some members | of the fighting organizations of the Ger- |man and other foreign Socialists have | come to Russia to imstruct the revolu- tionists in the use of arms, the art of erecting barricades and the manufacture of bombs. Although it is now only a question of time when the flames of open revolt will be extinguished, the Moscow revolution- ists have‘made goed use of their Instruc- tions to start fires elsewhere, For the first time the provinces east of Moscow in the heart of great Rus- sla are affected. At Zlatoust, a town in the Government of Oofa, where a large Government - arms factory is isuated, the workmen seem to be in complete pos- session of the town. They have seized the works, hoisted the rea flag, have de- clared a republic and all the authorities have been made captives and are threat- erled with instant deal.. .f troops are sent to Ziatoust. In addition, the workmen have organized themselves into a small army and daily parade the streets headed by a band of music playing the “Mar- selllaize.” Here, too, German socialists have appeared. At Samora, near Nizhni Novgorod, also a large manufacturing town, 20,000 workmen arose and attempted to march on Nizhnj Novgorod, but were met by troops with. artillery and were routed with the loss of several score of men. Eventually the workmen were driven back to Samora, where they erected barri- cades which the artillery have been fir- Ing at for two days. The workmen used bombs freely at SBamora, which is now separated from Nizhni Novgorod, but a rising is expected at the latter place, which has about 5,000 inhabitants. At Veronezh, South Russia, the work- men decided in favor of an armed rev- olution, but the authorities succeeded in arresting eleven of the ringleaders, whereupon the revolutionists halted three trainloads of sailors of the re- serves, who were on their way to the Tar Bast. The latter responded to the appeals of the workmen, promptiy joined them, marched into thé town and aided in the liberation of the pris- oners, The Government has intercepted tel- egrams showing that the Social Dem- ocrats and Workmen's Council have arranged for uprisings at Kieff, Kazan and Krasnoyarsk and for a general in- surrection in Peland. which will be proclaimed on December 51. At Kieff and Kazan the authorities believe the movement has Been nipped in the bud by the arrest of the ring- leaders and the seizure of arms. At the former place one of the leaders was a porter in the Governor General's house. At Rigu the proclamation of a gen- eral strike was accompunied by anopen effort on the part of the fighting or- ganization to seize the city. Barricades sprang up on all the streets as if by magic and tighting between the revo- begun. At Tamboft, Central Russia, all ths Vice Governor Bogdanovitch, it is now confirmed, has been shot and seriously wounded. : 4 The revolutionists are also completed preparations for a gen- \ GENERAL ST 'Russian Government Will Now Give Attention to the Growing Trouble in the Baltic Provinces. be crushed marked the | | Now that the smoke of battle is clear- | can devote its time to the,suppression of | lutionists, gendarmes and police has | REVOLT AT MOSCOW CRUSHED 'BY TROOPS OF THE CZAR. IS CRUMBLING RIKE ‘Troopy at Riga Break Up a Meeting | { the Soclalist organization for the pur- | pose of holding a general meeting, | when a force of troops arrived unex- of the troops entered the hall with a !} company of infantry and announced | to the revolutionists that they disarmed. The building was then oc- | Pe¥e. cupied by the troops. Cossacks and dragoons are con- stantly galloping through the streets, dispersing crowds wherever they are gathered. The dragoons seem to be furious and gre shooting and striking | everywhere about them. This attion is probably in revenge for the treat- ment of their comrades at Takum and Talsen. The revolutionaries are posting placards | in five languages ordering the inhabitants to disarm the police and soldiers and to | barricade the towr The people, how- ever, frequently tear down these placards. A heavy snow is falling in this district. It is said that the new Governor Gen-| eral with 32,000 additional troops is plan- { ning to” uproot the revolutionary move- ment by surrounding Livenia and Cour- Jand and driving all the revolutionaries into a bag-shaped corner between Riga | and Libau, where they will be anni- hilated, warshipg cutting off all escape by sea. Is fense t ried to to dete; age. J. . | MEYER IS ALARMED. jbald in g having Embassador Reports That Situation in | 577" Russia Is Growing Desperate. WASHINGTON, Dec. 29.—Secretary | Russian Refugees Reach New York. NEW YORK, Dec. Eight Persons Killed by Bomb. DEFENSE IS STILL OFFERING TESTIMONY uit Over the Howard Estate ST. LOUIS, Dec. 29.—The trend of the | testimony of the witnesses for the de- Leafgreen, who claims to have been mar- whaose estate she is Suing for §: Howard and the condition of his hair— whether he was bald, and if so, at what Mrs. Virginia Lupton, s Howard, when she sald in her testimony: “1 know positively that my brother was | most part were Howard and employes of Howard Pressed Brick Company. H INQUIRY INTD . INSURANCE OVER New York Committee Reaches { End of Hearings and Will Hold Last Session To-Day HILL REMAINS AWAY | DISARM REVOLUTIONISTS. QUIET REIGNS AT MOSCOW. | the Pay of Equitable Says Streets of City Are Gradually Assum- He Is Too Il to ;\ppem' ing Neormal Counditions. Called by the Socialists. 3 e gt o MOSCOW, Dec. —The _electric > RIGA, Livonia, Dec. 28, via Bydtkub- | o), ¢ing gystem was restored this aft- | NBW YORK, Dec. #.—With the ad- nen, East Prussia, Dec There has | ornoon. The streets are gradually as- | journment of the legislative committee been no break in the general strike | suming their pormal condition. It is|oOn insurance investigation to-night the | here. None of the newspapers ap-|probable that the railroads will soon |Inquiry into the last of the old line com peared to-day. The inhabitants are|commence tneir regular edules. | panies was completed. To-morrow the not molested by the ‘revolutionists., Work has been resumed in most of |last of the committee's sessions will be Otherwise the situation remains un- |the factories. The Town Council is or- | €iven over to exhibifs which have not changed. ganizing a system for tite relief of the | been heretifore presented. These are so Several thousand revolutionists as- | families of the victims of the recent | numerous that they will not be read for gembled yesterday at the building of | disturbances. the record, but after introduction by the witnesses will be marked for identifica- tion. The examination of the United States BT R ASEA Y —Twelve hun- pectedly. The infantry surrounded the | dred s S hitacn: 7 them | Life Insurance Company was completed BRI Wiilla the" chewiey Batred: the | Tant ot Lorue "“dfl“;) of them | to-day, and the Manhattan Life Insu: streets and quick-firing guns were | Hamburg-American steamer Graf Wal- | 21¢¢ Company was taken up. President placed at the corners of the streets|dersee from Ha: g ship | Stokes of the latter company was a wit nearest the hall. After these prepara- | brought 200 Hungarians, who will set. | "¢s% The last old life company taken up tions had been made the commander | tle in the South. | the Life Insurance Club of New | York. This company has a system of se- curing insurance without agents by means of advertising. In the examination of its —_— i surrounded. He asked them to dis s,,‘.ffila’::"ae‘:,:izdng’:i:‘!' i A | president. Robert Wightman, it was perse quietly and to give up their! oy, o5 S5 rm"x ,f":lfli-kv »l"-,br ht out that the system is antago- arms, as otherwise the bullding would | acoidental explosion of a homt ar o | PIStic to.the larger companies. e be bombarded. ~ Most of the leaders, | THER 0, CER 08 of a bomb at a| payid Bennmett Hill, former TUnite { however, had already escaped through & of workmen last night eight | geates Senator, has written to the legisla- la secret door. The remainder de- | heace g were killed and twenty-clght | yive investigation committee, saying. clared they had mo arms, whereupon| wor¢ Wounded answer to a letter requesting that he a {they were searched by the soldiers. e pear as a witness, that he is fll. H ,Those on whom arms were not-found Martial Law Is Proclaimed. wWrites that he is in bed part of the time were allowed to leave the building, : BERDICHEFF. Southwest Russia, | and he does not think he ought to make while 160 were arrested -after being | De¢ 25.—Martial law has been announced | so extended a trip as would be necessary | if he testified for at least two weeks to | come. It is on record that Hill received | a $5000 annual retainer from the Equitable | Life Assurance Society for a period of }s‘ears. COURT GIVES LECTURE TO ALLEGED LUNATIC nisses Charge and Warns Him Not to Again At- tack Wife. Special Dispatch to The Call, SANTA ROSA, Dec. 20.—The charge of W insanity made by Claude Church against | Deibert Church, his father, was dismissed | this morning by Judge A. G. Burmett. | The court read the accused a lecture on ster of Laclede | his conduet. Chureh is a prominent farm- much amusement | er residing near Sebastopol. He was given a terrible beating by his som last week when he attacked his wife. _Dr A. G, Herrick and J. M. Crump, whb ex- amined Courch, reported that they found a strain of insanity, but did not belleve he was insane at the present time. Mrs Church and her daughter, Miss Birdie Church. as weil as the son, testified that Dragging Along at St. Louis. D o-day in the suit of Mrs. Mary | the late Laclede J. Howard, and 250,000, was rmine the height of Laclede J. created 1881, for I distinctly remember rubbed his head to make the hair The witnesses for the defense in relatives of Lac the | Root to-dgy received advices from Bim- | "Horace H. Baldwin, witnesse for the | Church had insane spells, at which times bassador Meyer at St. Petersburg Stat- | piaintiff, testified that he was a ticket | he would be very abusive. In dismissing ing that the situation in Russia‘ls be- | agent for the Wabash at Palmer, 1ll. In | the charge Judge Burnett warned Church coming more desperate. Strikes ap- |1g51 he knew Charles Howard, the man | that he had no right to strike his wife. lpe.'\rR(O he br».’ékiug out in ey nlrg“:»fl | who married Mary Moore, now Mrs. e n ussia and troops are being dis-| feafgreen;: that Hé was present when patched to Moscow, where the injured | the depositfon of Chm-résE M#}a’r‘, the | Take "_r:‘c‘:r':‘ n"w‘m'n‘r m«:"flblem are estimated at 2000. The Moscow trouble has continued for six days and is still in progress. Tumwa Wash,, | was not the- man whom he Knew in Pal- Druggists refund meney if it fails to care. ter Mayor, was taken in Olympia, y E. W. GROVE'S siguature !s on each box. 23¢.* e and_that the Tumwater Mayor Baron Stackelberg have gone to Mos- cow. Lo o = RIOTING AT WARSAW. Troops Frustrate Attcmpis of h'(rlkerll to Bulld Barricades. WARSAW, Russian Poland, @ec, 29. Bands of Socialists are parading the streets here, striving to enforce the orders for a general strike. They compelled the newspaper and insur- ance offices to close and sent out gangs of youths to smash the windows of shops whose owners refused to close | their etablishments. Traffic is much impeded on the Vi- enna Railrcad. Only two trains left Warsaw station to-day. Military en- | gineers are maintaining traffic on the Alava branch of the Vistula line. The chief of the Postal Telegraph Bureau says that the regular tele- graph service has been resumed. Dur- ing the last few days 600 Socialists have been arrested. There was some rioting to-day, dur- ing which the troops frustrated at- tempts to build barricades. The majority of the workers refuse to join the strike. st St ASSASSIN COMMITS SUICIDE. Swallows Poison After Making Attempt on Life of Clvil Governor. NEW YORK, Dec. 29.—A cable dis- patch, to the World from Moscow, dated Decenmber 28, says: “A boy tiried to #¥sassinate Baron Midem, Civil Governor of the city, to- day, and failing, committed suicide. “Wearing the Red Cross uniform, the assassin gained admission to the Baron, and approaching him, drew a revolver and fired three shots. All of the bullete missed their mark and the noise brought soldiers, secretaries and servants running. “Without a moment's hesitation and before any one could seize him the lad swallowed the liquid in a -small Yial which he hed hidden in his Pears’ ! A soft, fine grained skin is a valued possession. Pears’ Soap gives titie to At Rostoff a meeting of the revelu- | mer, ill., as Charles Howard. New Comie Opern Ix Producel tionists was fired upon by an artillery | .} CUTICA. N. Y. Dee. 20.—“Mgxicans, force. Many were killed and wounded. | 7 = % |a new comic opera. was prodiuced At Kharkov a collision occurred be- MABLE BEESON, the first-time by the Messrs. Shubert at tween troops and a large body of | Another of The Call’v Special the Majestic Theater here to-night. laborers. Two hundred were injured. Staff. has an Interesting Story | | Christie MeDonald, Tho Q. Sea- The shons are closed and business is on “The New Old Mexico™ | { brooke and Joseph Herbert were pri suspended. IN NEXT SUNDAY'S CALL. l {cipals in the cast. Raymond Fubbell Wholesale arrests. are being made at virote the music and Robert B. Smith St. Petersburz, which is aquiet except ¢ < | the book. in the outskirts of the city. where in- | NORFOLK, Dee. 20.—The “mammoth T et ST significant _collisions between soldiers | drvdock Dewey. which lert Soomons Island | Many a man | crooked that his and laborers are occurirng constantly. | =N 0% (0 M8 U assed out ot the | measure can only be taken with a cork- |, Cossack General . Mistchenko and | Virginia Capes at 10:30 o'clock to-night. screw. ~The beer brewed by The Christian Moerlein Brc'mg Campanv. of C‘mcinmfi, the famous old Ciacinnati Extra Pale, is the best beer in the world. There are four reasons—the first of which is the brewer, the master of the brew—he yho makes the beer is the secret of the excellence of Moerlein’s beer. The finest hops, the best malt from the best barley that the world grows, and the purest air and water—these are the contributors to the best beer—Moetlein’s. THE CHRISTIAN MOERLEIN BREWING CO, CINCINNATI, OHIO JOHN H. SPOHN CO. (lacotporated) Pacific Const Ageats 16-18-20-23 Frons St.. San Franciseo, Cal. Chicago a2 East Are easily reached by the through train serv- ice of the Chicago, Union Pacific and North-Western Line. Three daily trains from California points via the most direct route and over the only double-track railway Daily and in Pullman Tourist sleeping cars through to- Chicago without change. Double berth only $7.00. Choice of routes. i i V.57 uu:.(" o U2 617 Market Srws, Piace Eoal, -1::-'-& P.C 124 BAN FRANCISCO, CAL.

Other pages from this issue: