The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 4, 1906, Page 2

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©w Republican Ticket Is Victorious in Mil- waukee. Pl Dunne Pocket Ballot Law in Wisconsin Defeated. - wed From Page 1 MAYOR ROS! Ticke of Republican ¥ . e Asso- - r KANSAS CITY REPUBLICAN, rehip Both Municipal dorsed . WOMEN VOTE IN KANSAS, Compel Resignation of a Mayor Who iLicensed Liguor Shops. < six wards of K , Kans,, p M W = polity o joints, the May favored adminis- >int | April W da despite JEress that bloodshed had oc- | rrec own Clerk Frank Hauster while t} Was muc e e election t was g or fear of E: that was no invasion -of warlike Fin- ers. o Goes Republican. ) pril —Wil- Republican ay was rity of SUPPRESS THE PULAJANES Two Companies Dispatched to Render ce to Goveraor Curry. al Bliss have of Mindanao, | Wood will turn over the ship of the Moro provinces 1o Bliss on April 15. e St ot Excarsions for Home-Seekers. CHICAGO, April xecutive offi- cials of Western roads today decided toy run home-seckers' excursions to the Northwest eve Tuesday during the ing It is declared that the Middle West and the 1 into li those d thus mak- iring to set- ection of the they may de- sir The Union Pacific gave notice today that it would tender weekly rates its connections, and similar notice already had becn given by the Rock Island-Frisco system —— Will Show Fiag In Australin. MANILA, April 3.—The United States cruiser Baltimore is about to sall for Australia, where she will show the American fiag in the leading ports of the colonies. CHICAGO VOTERS FAVOR MUNICIPAL OQWNERSHIP i | Must Face Jury on Charge of | | avowed the proclamations, are taking THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDA = NICIPAL RAILWAYS WELL'S DAILY FLOW | 5 5000 BARRELS Big Oil Gusher Struck Near: Los Angeles. ‘: —Another | { was lost | struck in ven a flow the new egard to with 5000 still flowing 5000 bar- immediate indications for whi The have an im- ves flow. rels and is th. no It began will YOUTHS ACCUSED OF THREE MURDERS| Slaying Two Men and | a Woman. After a tending 1 yea 4 | prelimi- cver Court on Henry A. J body wa thern ¥ o tracks ¢ Helm and his of murderi aged ma Jackson s found on Febru William rily age after the crime in jail since. ttorney ided include W but fil on The at last | lliam in the ate in > brother I the moment n Jackson m d a se m f aged Daniel Hayes whose bodies were found half | coyotes in a lonely spot on the West Side about three months ago — e ———— | | HUSBAND FEARS THAT WIFE { WAS KILL BY WILD ANIMALS | Spouse of Minneapolis Detective Disap- | pears in District in Which Cou- ' gars Are Plenty. | PORT TOWNSEND, April 3.-—Mrs. | Johnson, wife of Detective John- | son of Minneapolis, who, with her hus- | i, has been spending several weeks tives in this county, started ce of a neighbor near »turn ‘to the home of her afternoon and has not | since been see The ing woman valuable diamonds carried s the ‘time of her disappear- he -settlement:whére her rela- eside is located at the edge of 2 , and it d Mrs. Johnson may have been killed cougar, many of which infest the vicinity. e LONG FIGHT OVER FRANCHISE IS ENDED BY CITY TRUSTEES Councilmen of Red Bluff Decide to Allow Redding Line to Use | Jackson Street. | April The long- at battle over the franchise petitioned for by the Redding and Red ff Electric Railway was decided t night by the Board of City Trus- tees. The board selected Jackson street as the street in whicl the line shall enter this city. Jackson street is on the west side of town, in what is known as the Western Addition. Resi- dents of that part of town have long favored the’ building of the railway there > SRR T SUPERVISORS OF SOLANO SOON TO BUILD NEW JAIL Architect to Draw Plans for a $50,000 Prison at H Fairfield. | SUISU pril 3—At a meeting ves- | terday of the Board of Supervisors | steps to construct a new County Jail i 1d were taken. An architect was employed to prepare plans and specifications for the jail. The plans are be approved by the State Board of rities and submitted to the Super- ors at the meeting in May. It is said the building will cost $50,000. ———— D WOMAN CAUGHT IN zmploy tha ALLEGE! RG! LOS ANGELES | | Is Wanted in Fresno for Making Use | of Checks That Proved Worthless, LOS ANGELES, April 2.—A woman giving her name as Mrs. J. Herman, who is wanted in Fresno for passing | alleged worthless checks, was arrested here today by detectives as she stepped from a southbound train. The woman is now in the City Prison awaiting or- ders from the Fresno officers. R s Big Lockout in Germany. DRESDEN, April 3.—All the metal working establishments of this city have agreed to a lJockout of employes belonging to unions, owing to the fre- quency of strikes. Twenty-five thou- sand workers are affected. | country at large, | torward to a working majority in the | of Kutais, Transeau biggest | | t RADICALS WIN AT THE POL Constitutional ~ Democrats Sweep Everything Before Them in St. Petersburg PR MAY RULE PARLIAMENT Place a Candidate in the Field for the Presidency of the Lower House AT ST. PETERSBURG, April 4—The of- ficial canvass of the votes cast at the election on Monday, owing to the un- expectedly heavy vote and the inexperi- ence of the officials, had not been com- pleted at midnight, but it is conceded that the Radical tide has swept to vie- tory every one of the 160 Constitu- tional Democratic electors. The Con- stitutional Democrats naturally ‘are ju- bilant at the sweeping triumph which they have won in the capital, the head- quarters of the bureaucracy, and which is bound to have a strong effect on the nd are now looking national parliament. They have nominated a candidate presidency of the lower house in the person of M. Petrunkevitch of Tver, who is regarded as one of the most able and vigorous advocates of a con- stitutional government for the empire. The Rpsskoe Gosudarstvo, Premier de Witte’s newspaper organ, which ad- mits the victory of the Constitutional already for the Democrats, attributes it to the vacilla- tion of the Conservative faction and the intemperance of its organs. The paper also declares that Count de Witte will hold on to the Premiership until t convocation of the Parliament and that his resignation then will depend upon the attitude of Emperor Nicholas. | General Staroselsky, former Governor sia, who was dis- missed from the service for sympathy with the revolutionists, has followed up the appeal of Bolkovadze, promi- nent Georgian writer, to- Russian wo- men in behalf of the women of his own race, who, he sa are being ruthlessly outraged by the brutal sol- diers, authorities investigate General Alikbanoff, commander of the Russian forces in Transcaucasia, whose | barbarous ‘“pacification” of Kulals, | General Staroselsky says, means fire, | murder and violation, which, he de- clax re a blot on humanity. 3.—According to a v the police authorities a expell- in from fifty to.si an refu- gecs from Berlin weekly for breaches | of the laws. The official stated that ere are now in Berlin 7000 Russians | who are on the verge of = poverty. Nearly all of these are Jews. Tie po- | lice authorities local Jewish auxiliary society to try to induce the refugees to quit Berlin before - they become objects | charity. There is a able panic among the Jews here account of the free circulation of were a, April on proclamations which seemingly printed in Government printing offices nd which incite to anti-semite out- rages. The authorities. who have dis- | the strongest measures 10 'prevent dis order MOSCOW, April ficer accused of ma idonove, who shot Luzhenoffski, chief of the gécret pol fined a hospital here under order from authorities that he be examined as to his sanity. CHITA, Siberia, April 3»+By order of General Rennenkampff, Governor Gen- eral of Transbaikalia, General Kolchevni- koff has been arrested and will be tried ~—Abramoff, the of- by court-martial for recognizing a deputa- | tion of railroad operatives during the re- cent railway strike Kkoff has been dismissed from the army. The specific charge on which he has now | | be n arrested is recognizing a revolution- government. ——————————— WOMEN INTERCEDE FOR R Ask President to Protest Against the Threatened Massacre. April 3.—At today's TOLEDO, Ohio, session of the executive board of the | National Council of Women it was | voted to send a protest against the | threatened massacre of Russian Jews | at Easter to President Roosevelt, with a request that he do whatever he can to prevent the, horror. The bill for he creation of the L'nile.d States Childrens’ Bureau was indorsed and its immediate passage urged. It was also voted that a committee make | to Congress to direct the Bureau of Statistics to examine into the conditions of working women. In- vitations from Chigago and Denver for an appeal | the holding of the 1907 annual aonven- tion were referred to the executive committee, \ Mrs. Kate Willer Barrett of Wash- ington after presentinge a paper on the “White Slave Traffic,” said: T am bappy tg say tbat, through the finan- cial assistance of a gentlemen who has come greatly interested in the “‘white sla traffic’” and its abolishment, our committee s now maintaining a special agent, who traveling and living on the great Canadian frontier, working and operating with this country’ and securing data and Information regarding this traffic. Her report will be made, and then we will know just what steps to take in a hope of blotting out this terrible crime. GIVES UP OFFICE TO KEEP SALOO Stockton Police Commission- er Will Resign to Become Liquor Dealer. STOCKTON, April 3.—Police Commis- sioner George H. Campbell tonight re- signed as a member of. the Police Com- mission. He is the Republican member of the board, the other two being Demo- crats. Recently he bought a saloon for its license and asked to remove it to agother section of the business quarter. Metchants and others objected to a sa- loon there and a point was raised that the city charter prohibits a city officer or employe from holding any license. One member of the City Council is a saloon- keeper. Campbell withdrew his applica- tion to change his saloon location, saying he did not want to offend the citizens who objected to a saloon in the busin section he had selected. Now he says ‘he will retire from office so he can be free to hold a license. It is said that the charter provision will be enforced with regard to others in the city employ. ————————— Shot by Intended Victim, CHICAGO, April 3.—James Clinch, 21 years old, said to be of a wealthy fam- | ily of Portsmouth, Va., was 'shot and fatally wounded today by Henry Sea- man, whom Clinch and two compan- ions, it is said, had attempted to rob. with an open demand that jthe | and - prosecute | re conferring with the | of public | treating Mlle. Spir- | e at Tamboft, is con- | General Kolchevni- | IAN JEWS/ AgreementAdopted by Carmen This -, Morning. Danger of Strike in Oakland Is Now Past. i MR Continued From Page 1, Column 6. opinion that ‘the proposition 'will be accepted by our membership for an honorable settlement of the dispute.” From President Heron of the Trac- tion Consolidated came the following statement: “We have agreed upon.a proposition that is satisfactory to the Company and to the carmen's com- mittée as well. It isnow for the men themselves to approve their commit- tee's Lwork. “I am not at liberty to give out the terms of the settlement further than to say that they are satisfactory to all of the members of the confer- ence committee and are expected to meet with the union's approval. Our committee went over a lot of ground and the settlement was reached after | the situation had been thoroughly canvassed from every side.” MIDNIGHT MEETING CALLED. As soon as the union committee had dectded that the proposals should be | favorably recommended to the union |a call was sent out for the midnight | meeting, reading as follows: “Midnight meeting, Tuesday, April | 1906.—The company having offered a !sc[tlemem, your committee is prepared ) | | | | | 3, to submit the terms of same for your conslderation. Therefore, there will be a midnight * meeting held at Dietz Opera House, Twelfth and Webster streets, on Tuesday, April 3, 1906. “Meeting called to order at 2 a. m. | Positively no monthly card. By order of the CONF ENCE COMMITTER.” Such is the formal record of the day's developments. Behind the scenes was the meeting between men of affairs, who had each given way that the city | should, if possible, be saved from the | hostilities of a strike. was fair- minded, clean discussion and when' it was all over the men concerned had | enly words of commendation to offer in behalf of the others who had taken part in the important deliberations. The conference this morning contin- ued between Heron and kelly, Mahon |and EHNison from 9:30 to 11:30 o’clock. Then' the two carmen appeared and went to the union headouarters, where they remained for nearly three-quarters of an hour in consultation with the agreement committee. This was fol- lowed by another trip to the syndicate offices, where, at 12:30 o'clock this al- , the conference was ehded. ation by the, union ends the No further steps will be geces- The amicable adjustmsng of;ithe troublis relieves the company from the care of 150 to 200 men who were brought to Oakland in the preparation to meet a tié-up of the system. These men, whose number was | increased teday. by, the, arrival of Afty more from Chicago, were quartered in the Emeryville yards, They will be sent back | Bast as soon as the traction company is advised officially by the union that the settlement has been accepted. Up to the last minute the traction com- pany kept in readiness. for a strike. Its preparations were made for a hard strug- | gle. At the same time the hand of fellow- ship was extended when the overtures for a quiet conference and peace were made by the carmen. The relief from the high tension of the last few days was mani- | fest as soon as the satisfactory results of the conference were given publicity. = TR Strike Breskers on Way to Oakland. RENO, April 3.—Twenty-five men, | who say they are to take the places of | Oakland carmen in event of a strike, arrived here from Chicago this morn- admittapce without matter. sary to the settlemen |ing. Three of the band deserted here. Charles Langtry, ene of them, said the | men were to receive steady positions, with double wages during the strike. —_—————————— DISASTER IS AVERTED. Section of Train Stopped on Brink of 300-I"oot Precipice. SAN LUIS OBISPO, April 3.—The soft roadbed caused by the recent rains was responsible for a tie-up of all traffic on the Southern Pacific today. At 4:30 o’clock this morning the second section of train No. 10, running.ahead of the ‘le, went off the track and was ar- rested two fect from the Brink of a | 300-foot precipice. Fortunately the train was going slowly owing to.the | soft roadbed, thus averting a fatality. | Trains from the south, running three hours late, are all held up here. No trains can arrive from the north and the dispatcherg say they do nct know | when traffic will be resumed. —_———————— LEVEES STAND STRAIN. ‘With Moderation of Wind Danger of | Flood in Sutter County’ Pnsses. MARYSVILLE, April 3.—The levee is still intact. The heavy wind of yes- terday moderated during the night and in consequence there are no damaging waves. There were hundreds of men on watch day and night to prevent a break, Itisnow believed they have the situatien well in hand. Butte Slough weir, where the Public Works Commission did a great amount of work during the last two seasons, caused trouble again, embankments still being soft. Thewsacramento River is falling «after almost reaching the high water mark. —————————— Thunder and Hail Follow Rain.. RIVERSIDE, April 3.—Riverside was treated to a thunderstorm this after- noon, accompanied by a fall of two inches of hail. The rainfall for one hour's storm was 1.06 inches. Hearst Recount Bill Kill ALBANY, N. Y, April 3.—The As- sembly today practically killed the bill which would permit Willlam R. Hearst t6 secure a recount of the vote cast in New York City for Mayor at the last election, when George B. McClellan was elected’ on the face of the returns. The bill was recommitted to the committee on judiciary, —_————— s Howard Begins Life Term. LOUISVILLE, Ky., April 3.—James B. Howard, who has heen in jail here pending the disposition of his case by the United States Supreme Court, was today taken to Frankfort to begin his term of life imprisonment, to which he was sentenced for the murder of Wil- liam Goebel. —_———— Los Alamos Hotel Burned. SAN LUIS OBISPO; April 8.—The Los Alamos Hotel was completely destroyed by fire this morning. The hotel was o;:’nod ‘by the Commercial Bank of this Traction | around district No. 70, in Sutter County, ' The levee at | the ! +- LIGHTS AND SIGNALS FOR NORTH PACIFIC Government Prepares to Ren- der Shipping More Safe .Along Coast. =~ = — SEATTLE, Wash., April-3—Major 8. W- Roessler and Commander P. J. Werlich spent the afternoon in this city fn consul- tation with, representatives of the ship- ping interests of Seattle, on the best fog | signal to be used on Tatoosh island. The plan recommended ‘by the local men was for the instaliation of a siren whistle to be equipped with three megaphones, one to point south,” one west and ong north- east, thus covering the entire zone of danger. Numerous other dangerous places, on the ‘sound were mentioned m the talk, 7 Major Roessler announced that a siren, operated by compressed air, would be in- : stalled in the near future at Dungeness, i and that the proposed lighthousa at Point Al-Ki cannot be built-at present, as the owners of the property desired much more for the land than the appropriation amounts to. Immediately after the con- sultation was. over the two officers left in the lighthouse tender Columbine for Tatoosh. MEN OF WEALTH TO BE INDICTED Grand Jury Connects Persons of Note With Oregon - Land Frauds. PORTLAND, April 3.—The Oregonlan tomorrow will say that an indictment naming between twelve and sixteen per- sons of prominence and wealth was re turned by the Federal Grand Jury today in connection with the land frauds in Southern Oregon, which the jury has had under investigation for several days. The autherities decline to give the names of the persons, the number included, or their residences, though, it is asserted, several of the indicted persons live out- side the State of Oregon. —————— GUGGENHEIMS BUY £ RICH ALASKA MINE 'ay Half a Million Dollars for Claims on Bonanza Creek. SEATTLE, April 3.—The Guggen- heims, it Is, definitely learned, have purchased the Anglo-Klondike Mining Company and Fuller-Norwood Mining Company properties on Bonanza Creek. The price paid for the latter was $500,000, and it is supposed that the former deal involved an equal amount. This would constitute the heaviest mining deal ever made on the Yukom. Tt is expected further that the Guggen- heims are about to take over the Pa- cific Coast, Gold Hill, White Channel, Bonanza, Hydraulic and other placer properties. A few days ago they paid Melvin & Mitchell $28,000 for a single claim on Bonanza. Mining men be- lieve a giant mining merger is being formed. ————————— MAN WHO FOUGHT COLLINS IN VICTORIA TO BE PAID lLr‘lnl-inn- Will Be Asked to Appro- priate $5000 to Satisfy Law- + yer's Claim. SACRAMENTO, April 3.—The State Board of Examiners held a meeting to- day to consider. the claim of Attorney Higgins of Victoria, B. C., for legal services rendered in the extradition of Collins, the San Franciseo . attorney. Higgins demanded $8000 in addition to certain fees, and he argued the mat- ter before a recent meeting of the :)o:xrd, and was present at today's meet- ng. The Board of Examiners had no power to pay the claim, but it was decided to recommend the Legislature to pass a bill appropriating $5000 to pay the claim. —_————————— Ship Quarantined Second Time. VICTORIA, B. C.. April 3.—The steam- ship Tartar, which was placed in quaran- tine at William Head on its arrival from the Orient on March 17 and released after being fumigated several days later, her crew and passengers being detained at ‘William Head, was again sent to quaran- tine at William Head tonight. The vessel was to have sailed from Vancouver for the Orient on Monday, but Quartermaster McMillan was found to have smallpox. About thirty passengers who were booked will remain at Vancouver until the Em- press of Japan sails, next Monday. ‘or her attorneys to Indicate the nature of CONFERENCE BRINGS PEACE/WRS. LE DOUX | 10 LABOR SITUATION. BECS FOR TIHE Lawyers Appear in Court Saved From Eezema In Agon’izing—Condition far More Than Five Years. With Alleged Murderess' Entire Body Covered With a and Get Few Days’ Grace INDICTMENT IS READ| Woman Unmoved as €lerk Reads Document Aceus- ing Her of Awful Cl'lmler 1 STOCKTON, April 3—~Mrs. Emma Le Doux, the little woman’ weighing 102 pounds who is indicted ‘for the murder of her former husband, A. N.. MeVicar, weighing 180..péunds, was today -quietly. brought into the Superior Ceurt to have a time set for her arraignment. She seemed as cool and self-possessed as the lawyers who accompanied her. She was apparently unmoved when the indict- ment was read to her by the clerk. Wheén asked to make her plea of guilty or not guilty her attorney asked for time to an- swer the indictment; and the arraignment was set for the 16th inst. Then the quiet little woman was escorted back to jail without attracting much attention. Not a word has been sald by the woman the defense, but the general belief seems to be that her story will be that McVicar died by 'his own hand, perhaps by mis- take in taking the drug to counterabt the effect of “liquor, and to get out of the trouble as best she could she tried fo get the remains to her home in Amador Coun- ty for interment in the cheapest and least bothersome way. Anticipating such a defense and bellev- ing that the prosecution has no positive | evidence against her save the Eh‘cum—‘ stances surrounding the case, many per- sons are saying that she can never be con- victed. GIVES $100 BILLS AWAY AS CARDS i Mattery, Eleeding Crust— Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cured “When my son Eugene was only a baby: a' Weavy rash came on his face and'Head. " A physician told us it was a severe case of e¢czema. -In spite of care- ful, skillful treatment. his face and héad grew worse, and in three months his entire body became covered with a thick, mattery, bleeding crust ~that gave off a bad odor. The itching was terrible. He continued in this agoniz- ing condition for more than five years, and oftentimes I was obliged to give him opiates to make him sleep.’ I then read of a similar ease tured by Hood's Sarsaparilla and resolved to-try this medicine. I had used only ome-half a bottle when I could see a change for the better. The itching almest entirely ceased and Eugene slept better and had a good appetite. I, continued to give him this - medicing for three meonths, and it was then my great pleasure to see my darling boy without a sign of the dreadful affliction through which he had passed. It never re- turned and I am indeed gratefu] for e | Portland Realty Dealer Creates Costly Fad. ‘ s PORTLAND, April 3.—Autographing | $100 bills and presenting them ta| friends as souvenir cards is the latest | fad. Tt was introduced in Portland | last night by a portly man, who seemed to have an unlimited supply of newly | i | printed greenbacks and a desire to get rid of them. It requires eight figures and two commas, it is said, to express | the sum total of the wealth of (he; rotund capitalist who gives away $100 | bills with his name on them. | | He is a heavy owner of Portland real estate. He walked into the barreom of the Oregon Hotel last night with three friends and the bartender was busy for a while. After many rounds of drinks one of the party remarked that he| would have to hurry to catch the train | to San Francisco. | “Let me give vou my card -be- fore you go,” spoke the capitabist. As| he did so he pulled a wallet from his pocket, drew forth:a hundred-dollar bill, wrote his name on 'it with his| fountain pen and handed it to his friend. . “Let me give you one, t00,” he said to one of the other men. Another bill | was autographed and handed over. A third was signed and given to the third member of the party. ————— TRIBE OF RED MEN IS FORMED IN THE CITY OF PORTERVILLE Officers Are Installed by Great Sachem | A. W. Cunning of San Fran- ciseo. PORTERVILLE, April 3.—The Red Men organized here under the name of | Escanaba Tribe No. last night. Vis- | itors were present from all parts of the State. The officers installed by Great Sachem A. W. Cunning of San Francisco_were Otto E. Bashore. past sachem: W. J. Davis, sachem; Gerald | Lumley, junior sagamore; Harry Bar- bero, junior sagamore, and Thomas Howeth chief of recotds. An-elaborate banquet followed. Otto E. Bashore was appointed district deputy. “he secret work was put on by Visalia tribe. ADVERTISEMENTS. . 14 OOK inside your watch cover and seel That’s bad busi- ness, Bill! ‘What you been Eating? ‘What were you drinking? ‘What kind of Lazy Chair did you take exercise in? Now don't think it doesn’t | matter! Because, it's your Bowels that talk now, every time you open your Mouth. That doesn’t help your Popularity, nor your Earning capacity. v Besides, 2 man with bad Bowels is ina | bad way. | And, a Coated Tongue, or a Bad Breath, are sure signs of bad Bowels and poor Digestion. Co and take a Ten Mile Walk, for | Exercise! X 'Finest thing in the world for Constipa- | tion, Indigestion, or Dyspepsia, Ten Mile | Walks, Haven't time? Too Lazy? Well,—there is another Way. ‘Take Artificial Exercise for your Bowels. That's—CASCARETS. They ro the Bowel Muscles, just as a Cold Bath freshens Athletic Muscles. 'Waken them up, Strengthen them so | they Contract and Expand the Bowels and | Intestines in a healthy active manner. ! That'show these muscles work the Food along, through your thirty feet of Intes- tines, to its Finish. e ‘That's how they squeeze Gastric Juice |"into the food, to Digest it. That's how they make the millions of Hittle Suckers in the Intestines draw the Your Tongue is Coated! into Blood, Brawn, Brair and Bone. 8 No purging from CASCAR- ETS, because thére is no flood- ing of the Bowels with a waste of precious Digestive Juice;as with Salts, Castor Oil,— “Physic,” ete. . Cascarets act like Exercise, —harmless, pleasant, simple, convenient, but sure as Shoot- ing. S The thin little Ten Cent Box, carried in your Vest Pocket constantly, is sure protection against the results of — Late Suppers — Cheerful Boozing — Rapid Eating — Slow Walking —Easy Chair Athletics —And Lazy Liver. * * One tablet taken whenever you suspect you need it will insure you against 90 per cent of all other ills likely to attack you. Because 90 per cent of these ills begin in the Bowels, or exist through poor Nutrition. . Cascarets don't purge, don't weaken, don't irritate, nor upset your stomach. Ten Cents, at all Druggists. Be very careful to get the geruine, made only by the Sterling Remedy Company, and never sold in bulk. Every tablet stamped * his cure”” Mrs. Alfred Marquette, 21 Edward St., St. Albans, Vt. Hood's Sarsaparilla effects the most wonderful, radical eures. of all bleod health and strengtl. and __permanent diseases, and gives Get it today. SPECIAL. We are now putting up Hood’s Sarsaparilla in checolate-couted | tablets as well as usual liguid form. Sold by druggists. 100 doses §1. C. L Hood Co., Lowell, Mass. SEEEEESEESS | AZORSE=S: 78 That Man Pitts Steamers leave Plers 9 and 11, San_Franctsco. For Ketchikan, Wrange!, Juncau, Treadw Haines, Skagway, etc., Alaska—1l a. m., Apr. 5 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, June 4. Change to this Com-~ pany’s steamers at Seattle. For_ Victorla, _Vancouver, Port Townsend, Seattle, Ta- coma, - Everstt; Anacortes, So. Bellingham. _f 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, Bellingham~—11 a. M.. Apr. 3 June 4. Change at Seattle to this Company's steamers for Alaska and G. N. Ry.; at Sea | or Tacoma to N. P. Ry.; at Vancouver to | €. P. Ry. For Eureka (Humboldt Bay)—Pomona. 1:30 m., April 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, May 6. Corona. P._m., Apeil 3, 9,15, 21, 27, May & For Los Angeles (via Port Los Angeles and Redondo), San Diego and Santa Barbara: Santa Rosa, Sundays. # a. m State of California, Thursdays, 9 a. m. For Los Angeles (via San Pedro and East San Pedro), Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz, Mon- n Simeor, Cayucos, Port Harford (Saa For Ensenada, Magdalena Ba: Cabo, Mazatlan, Altata, La Paz Tepolobampo, Guaymas (Mex.), of each month. ALASKA EXCURSIONS (Season 1906)—The palatial Alagkan excursion steamship Spokans will leave Tacoma, Seattle and Victoria June July 5, 20, Auz. 2. For further information, obtain folder. Right is reserved to change steamers or sailing dates. TICKET OFFICES, 4 New Montgomery st. (Palace Hotel). 10 Market st. and Broadway wharves. FREIGHT OFFICE, 10 Market, st, OAKLAND, 968 Broadway. C. D. DUNANN, Generai Passenger .Agent, . 710 Market st, San Fraameisco. ANCHOR LINE UNITED STATES MAIL STEAMERS Weekly Service Between New York and Glasgow. The splendid teamers CALEDONIA and COLUMBIA offer superior accommodations— all_classes. Speeial _attention’ given to the booking of prepdid business from all parts of Europe. The. vovular waé to-London and the nent Is by the way of the ANCHOR LI Glasgow, thence via a.most charming and. in< ferestine rail ride through Scotland and the North -of England. Call uvon or write to FRED W. PRINCE. General Agent, 649 Market n Franciseo. TOY0 KISEN KAISHA (ORIENTAL S. S. €0.) 1 leave wharf, corner First and p._m._ for Yokohama and calling at Honolulu, Kobe (Hiogo). and Shanghal, and _connecting at Hongkong with steamers for India. ete. Na cargo received on board on day of salll S. S. America Maru, Saturday, ;z; ‘1 1908, g5 % 1000, Nippon Maru. Th Bound-trip tickets at Steamers will Brannan streets, Maru, Tuesday, June gkong Maru, . anmAn, aAues, NoR 9eeanies. 5.C0 S 5 L TA . o 8. ALAMEDA, for Honoluly, Saturday, April 7, 11 A M. : §A, for TAhitt, Apr, 1611 A M. £ § Ml o T A LA and Sydney, Thursday, April 19, 2 P. M. 1. . SPRECKELS & BROS. 60., Agts. Ticket 0ffcz 643 Markst, Freight Ofica 327 Markat St Pier ] Pacile it First class to nmm_:na“ upward. Sec. 288 U TGENCY FOR STATES AND CANADA, 32 Broadway s __BAY AND INTERURBAN ROUTES. MARE ISLAND NAVY YARD, VALLEJ? and NAPA ‘Napa Valley Route

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