The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 11, 1906, Page 4

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)

(AMBLERS ARE BAGGED BY LANGDON e | District Attorney Pulls Off Another Raid With Sue- cess, Taking Crap Players at 145% Powell Street GAUNTL }T ]\ THROWN | DOWN TO THE POLICE | Public Prosecutor Says He Gave Department List of | Games and That It Has‘i Failed to Take Action| R U | Attorney Langdon | e crap and sitors”™ and thereby threw down the | to the Police Department. After | District bagged players squabble with the Commissioners ree weeks ago t ict Attorney gave the departmer of places where he declared fllegal gambling was No raids clock Langdon, As-.| and Secretary Al Me- nied by !n(»—d!\ Freel a. nd T. O'Con- | a street car through a door at aring the sign, “P. | b.)A nd b( nd were mot crs sald their names were Charles Ross, John is Solo- s Cohn. o one at- s charged | man on rs throw all the & dice into a side t wa nce was recovered e was $1841.95 in cash. A left in charge of the dia- | s. If the gamblers do tables will be hauled is the backer been wn as | umor that he had rest proved un- | iers were released on visitors gave their Edward Hol- _evison, Joseph Harris, Jo- Morris, William Rob- | own, Charles Meron, Reanto, John Ander- | Lee Smith, Fred Ed- Hart MUNICIPAL DENTISTRY FOR CITY OF CLEVELAND April D, 10.—The city w stry to the benefactions 1t or. Within a fortnight | 2 r will be established in | connec | the outdoor relief work | of the City Infirmary. The city will buy i the material and equipment The work will be furnished by the Cleve- land Dental Assoclation, and 1500 chil- dren, whose parents recelve aid from | be entitied to free treat. | son given for the in- the digestion and con- health of the children be improved by good teeth. the _______DOAN’S PILLS. j 50 SOOTHING, Its Influence Hu Been Felt by So Many San Francisco Readers. The soothing influence of relief After suffering from Itching Piles, From Eczema or any itchiness the skin, Makes one feel grateful to the rem- ot Sm‘l Ointment has soothed hun- dreds. Here's what one Ssa Francisco citizen says: Thomas Christal, inspector, of 426 Twenty-seventh - street, says: “I know of a case of eczema or skin disease where Doan’s Ointment un- doubtedly cured. It broke out on the back of the ears and on the scalp, and it resisted the treatment of several doctors, who tried unsuccessfully for 2 year and a half to stop it. In addi- tion to physicians’ treatment every- thing said to be good for such ail- ments was used; in fact, all the knowledge of every one aware of the eczema weas exhausted. Doan’s Oint- ment acted just as represented. In a comparatively short time the area of the sores commenced to contract, -nd by and by they completely dried u For sale by all dealers. ®Price cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Bnflllo, ew York, sole agents for the United tates. Remember the name, Doan's, end - tgke no other. perior vessels. . Prominent Men Appeaf Before the House Committee. —— | SPECIAL DISPATCH WASHINGTON, April before the House comm! today at the hearing on Harold Sewall, the 2d operator of Bath, Me. sent most of his ships ugar from Hawaii to T iladelphia »wn as the “Cape Horn but the American-Ha- wallan Steamship Company has arranged with the Tehuantepec Rdiiroad, which was financed in London and heavily sub- sidized by the Mexican Government by means of land grants, so that beginning on January 1, 1807, Hawaiian sugar will be shipped by steamship to Tehuantepec, across the isthmus rail and thence to Philadelphia and New York by steam- ship, thus driving Sewall's ships out of business, He testified that the French subsidized vessels had Griven his ships from the grain carrying trade from Cali- fornia to Liverpool some years ago. TO THE CALL. ee on merchant marin the ship Representative Humphrey asked about the foreign steamship trust or combina- tion on the Pacific Coast, and Sewall replied that its agreement was to charge the same rate when carrylng American products to a forelgn port, but to com- pete for business from foreign ports to this country. WASHINGTON, April 10.—The expeeted mony before the House committee on merchant marine and fisheries regarding the cost of American steel at home and abroad was forthcoming today, when E. 8. Cramp of the Cramp Shipbuilding Com- pany testified at length in favor of the ship subsidy bill. There was at present, he sald, absolutely no difference between | the foreign and domestic price of steel. This statement made the steel question gne of brief discussion “As 1o the cost of building ships in this country and abroad, Cramp gave an illus- tration by reciting the bids which were recently made on @ tank ship.of the largest type. The successful bidder was a Seotch firm, which constructed the vessel for $613,000. The lowest American bid was $1,024,000. In ten years, Gramp said, this Govern- ment had expended $11,000,000 in purchasing | foreign merchant ships for war purposes, a'nd thP ships thus acquired had been “rotten.” Under the subsidy bill, he maintained, in ten years at a cost to the Government of something like $3,000,000 a greater tonnage could be acquired and the ships would be good ones. Cramp in his remarks said his firm had great difficulty in obtaining sufficient skilled workmen, notwithstanding that the wages paid were at least 50 per cent higher than in European shipyards. His firm employs 6000 men. Charles R. Hanscom, president of the Bastern Shipbuilding Company, preceded Cramp In favor of the measure. CAPTURE SCOTT'S “PAL” ON DESERT Keyes, the Half-Breed Chero- kee, Is Caught by a Constable. SPECIAL DIEPATCH TO THE CALL. SAN BERNARDINO, April 10.—Wil- liam Keves, the half-breed Cherokee partner of Walter Scott, is under ar- rest at Johannesburg, on the . desemt. He will be brought to this city tomor- row. Keyes was captured by J. J. Hartigan, the Constable at Bullfrog, in the Dezth Valley country, and taken to Johannesburg, from which place the officer wired the Sheriff in this city. The local Sheriff, Ralphs, who made a fruit- less search for Keyes in the Funeral Mountains, was overjoyed at the news. In the meantime Lillian Malcolm, Death Valley country by way of Man- vel in order to find Keyes and induce him to surrender, believing that he has been made a scapegoat of by “Scotty’'s” crowd, who involved him for the sole purpose of running him out of the country in order that they could secure his really valuable mining claims. 10.—Testifying | | | | | l . | g i * MEN WHQ TESTIFIED YESTER- l DAY AT THE HEARING ON THE SHIP SUBSIDY BILL. PAYS TRIBUTE T0 MCHLLUN President Wheeler Speaks in Eulogy of Hero .of Science Before Regents —_—— At the mgeting of the Regents of the University of California yesterday after- noon, President Benjamin Ide Wheeler spoke a few simple but eloquent words in eulogy of John Bruce MacCallum, the voung professor of physiology, who died a few days ago in the midst of his work. “I wish to call the attention of the Re- génts,” sald President 'Wheeler, *“‘to the death of John Bruce MacCallum, assistant professor of physiology. He came to us three years ago, already marked by death, and determined to make the short time allotted to him count. He devoted himself to his work with remarkable carnestness and proved a discoverer and an inventor. He was of blameless char- acter, his views were of the highest idealism, and he saw life simply and clearly. His work had already built him a monument. When the end’ came, though he had long expected it, it was suddenly and he died fairly in the midst of his work. Upon his table we found the manuscript of his last work, complete to.the table of contents, 'the last lines vlng the commission | dent [ YTH.E SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 11, 1906. STRONG ARGUMENTS FOR SUBSIDY BILL E. 8. Cramp yesterday, before the House committee on merchant ma- rine, showed that the Government in ten years had expended $11,000,000 in purchase of forelgn merchant ships for war purposes which had proved of inferior quality, whereas under the proposed aubsidy meas- ure the sum of $9,000,000 would have procured a greater to-nu'e of su- NEW PROPOSAL BY OPERATORS Suggest That the Old Strike Commission Decide the Question as - to Wages MINERS’ PLAN REJECTED Coal Barons Submit Scheme and Employes Will Study It Before Giving Reply NEW YORK, April 10.—The anthracite operators at their conference with the mine workers here today declined the proposition to have the conciliation board arbitrate all grievances submitted by the wage-workers, and made a counter pro- -| posal that the’ commission appointed by President Roosevelt in 1902 be requested to decide whether any changes in condi- tions In the hard coal region have oc- curred whi¢h require that the'award of the commission should be modified. The mine owners limited tha inquiry to two grievances—wages and a method for the adjustment of complaints—and stated that any agreement entered into must continue for at ieast three years. The miners have taken the proposal under consideration and may give the operators an answer on Thursday, when another conference be- tween the sub-committees of the parties will be held. In the meantime the miners’ committee of thirty-six will hold sessions | and agree on a reply, and the operators will remain idle awaiting developments. In connection with today's conference George F. Baer, chairman of the mine owners' sub-committee, made public a let- ter sent to the committee by the inde- pendent operators, in which they gave thelr views and expressed their firm con- viction that any “agreement to arbitrate with the United Mine Workers will be an unjustifiable surrender to anarchy and mob violence.” The letter came as a great surprise to the miners and did not tend to bring the contending parties closer together. Notwithstanding the fact that both par- ties to the controversy are now committed to arbitration, they are still far apart, but confidence is expressed on all sides that a peaceful settlement will be brought about. The old tribunal will be accepted by President Mitchell if he can induce the coal companies to widen the scope of the submission to be made. After the proposal of the operators ha:l been read President Mitchell asked whether under the plan the anthracite operators would have the privilege of ask- to reduce present | wages, and he was informed by one of the coal presidents that they had. In re- ply to another question he was told that if the operators’ plan is accepted the first | offer of the coal companies to renew and continue for three years the award of the strike commission would collapse. The members of the commission are: Judge George Gray, United States Circuit Court, Wilmington, Del; Car- roll D. Wright, former United States Commissioner of Labor and now presi- | of Clark College, Worcester, Mass.; Brigadier General John Wilson; retired, U. S..A.sWashingtopg || D. C.; - Bishop JDhn L~ Spaldinge| Peoria, Ill.: Edgar E. Clark, Cedar Rapids, Jowa, grand chief of -the Or- der of Railway Conductors; . Thomas H. Watkins,| Scranton,. Pa., formerly an anthracite coal operator bul now a large producer of soft coal in Central Pennsylvania; Edward W. Parker, ex- ! pert statistician, Washington. If the strike commission is called to settle the dispute it is mnot probable that Bishop Spalding will be able to serve, as he is said to have just passed through a serious iliness. President Mitchell did not know that the independent operators had sent a communication to the presidents of the coal-carrying rallroads, opposing ar- bitration. He first learned of it after réeturning to his headquarters at the Ashland House, but would not cam- ment on it at this time. WASHINGTON, April 10.—General orders have gone out to maval com- manders in charge of warships direct- ing the observance of the strictest pos- sible economy in the use ofy coal,” on account of a deficiency in the coal ap- propriation for the navy. PHILADELPHIA, April 10.—The Pennsylvania Railroad officials issued orders today placing the 10,000 mainte- nance of way employes between this city and Pittsburg on full time. They have been working but twenty-five hours a week since April 2. The reason given for the return to the old hours is that there is little danger of a general coal strike. It is said that the output of the bituminous mines now amounts to about 80 per cent of the normal product. e -ME - EXAMINE YOU b There is a tendency hardly dry. 1 dow’t know of any man who has exemplified more” nearly what we esteem as the highest type of the uni- versity professor.” The meeting was largely taken up by an executive session to consider the bud- get. Besides Pre-ldgg:t“ heeler there were present Regents 1, Foster, Ellin- wood, Slack, Yorke, McEnerney, Rhein- stein, Taussig, Budd and Hellman. Re- gent Guy C. Earl was in the chair. The next meeting will take place on April 2. AUSTRALIAN MAIL SERVICE 1S INDORSED BY CHAMBERY fhatice o Senator Perkins Is Requested to Work at w-u..u- mw Pay- At a meeung o( the trustees of the Chamber of Commerce of San Francisco yesterday Secretary Burks was in- structed to sefid a telegram to Senator Perkins and William M. Bunker at ‘Washington favoring the :continugnce of the present Australasian postal ser- vice as a necessity and great conve- nience, In visw of the vast trade be- tween the United States and Austral- the { asia, and also requesting active ef- lady friend of Keyes, has gone into the forts to secure additional mafl zent for the maintenance of the ’l‘}- ce. - The dispatch is signed by W. H. Marslon as president of the chamber. A. resolution was also adc House bill 345, introduced by man Denby, providing for g States District Court in China. to_aserll to treat them as such wlm u‘mlc-, emmd ! lnfl st porary benefit, if at all. rvations and practical experience I have been convinced that the N e e the ) production of disorders of. men. E s neryes play but a subsidiary role in to find any trouble in an otherwise strong man other ral lnhmmllk?n, particularly 4n those whose disorders s, o It exhausted nerve force seemed to be exercised by an {ll-treatea contracted disor present it is only as a concomitant, or titis, and disappears with its cure. mu. f\lnher, t hese treatment, for procedures direct,toward repairing the damaged gland are always rewa STRICTURE , My treatmient for Stricture is absolutely dgnlnleu. and_pérféct results can'be deperided by -the most brilliant cures. upon in every lnmncc. I do no cutting or "‘hm of contracted Femaiing, ‘snd theve Jone m"-?:'i 3 Te fan' .or work its way into the M. .CONTRACTED DISORDERS disease T treat is cured thoroughly. cured there danger that the LOSES HER SUIT | FOR BIG ESTATE Mrs. Olivia Minister of San Francisco Is Denied an| Accounting by Ohio Court Sihers o LARGE SUM INVOLVED Woman Seeks Share of Money | Whicle Has Been Invested | in Eastern Soap Loncem —— SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. CINCINNATI, Aprii 10.——Ths Ohic Supreme Court today afirmed the Judgment of the Hamilton County Cir- cuit Court In, the case of Mrs. Olivia Minister of San Francisco against Wil- | liam A. Proctor, the millienaires Cin- | cinnatl soap manufacturer, and others, | 88 executors of the estate of William | Proctor, in which Mrs. Minister nndi her brother’ Percy Jones of Chicago, both of whom are grandchildren of William Proctor, asked for an account- ing. The court refused. to grant them an accounting. ' The suit was brought several months ago, William A. Proc- tor, James N. Gamble, Harry D.-Proc- tor, David B. Gamble and.the executors of James Gamble being named as de- fendants. Mrs. Minister and Jones claimed there was due them from the -estate of their grandfather, $1,127,000 each, but that it is tied up in the Proctor & Gamble Soap Company. The pétitioners asked that the court compel the defendants to account for the sum named in their suit and to order it set aside for them, which the court in its decision today refused to do. —— PULLS BURNING FUSE OUT OF DYNAMITE Engineer’s Bravery Saves the Lives of Many Rail- road Men. SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. PORTLAND, April 10.—Pulling a' sput- tering fuse out of dynamite sticks to pre- vent them exploding and killing the work- men ynder his care was the spectacular stunt of Chief Engineer P. L. Wise of the Columbia Valley Railroad early Mon- day morning' on the grade near La Camas, Wash. The burning sticks of the explosive weré hurled into a deep cut among the Columbia Valley workers by a gang of Portland and Seattle construe- tion men. —————————— LATE SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. ARRIVED. Tueeday, April 10. Schr Tda McKay, Lethola, 3 days from Eu- reka, SAILED. Tuesday, Aoril 10. Stmr National ~City, Fregerickson, Fort Bragg. ISLAND PORTS. | p EANAAmivel Apr §—Schr O M Kellogg,' | henee Mar HO\OLULU Safled Apr 7—Schr Helene, for San Francisco. Apr 10—Stmr Hawallan, for ahuluf. f KHILOAE&B& -Apr 9—Bark St Katherine, for San Francl MEMORANDA. Per schr 1da Mc from Eureka—-Had strong NW winds for jast two days. OCEAN STEAMERS. 5O NEW YORE—Arrived Apr 10—Stmr. Ger- ‘manta, from Navles. * Saileg Apr- 10—Stmr Graf Waldersee, for Hambulg; stmr Kronprinz Wilhelm, for Brem- e strt’ Pasnarile, toe Naples, Trieste and SABLE ISLAND, N. S. April 10—Stmr Majestic, from Liverpool and Queenstown, re- ported by wireless; will probably dock at New York 8:30 a. m. Thursday. Stmr Ivernia, from Liverpool and Queenstown, reported by wireless, will probably dock at Boston about 8 a. m. Thursday. SUEZ—Arrived Apr 10—Stmr Oanfs, from Seattle and Tacoma, via Yokohama, Hiogh, j ete., for Liverpool, GLASGOW—Arrived Apr 10—Stmr Furnes- sla, from New York. GENOA—Arrtved Apr 6—Stmr Nord Amer- ika, from New York. Salled Apr 5—Stmr Luisiana, for New York. ANTWERP—Arrived Apr 10—Stmr Finland, from New York; stmr Westernland, from New York. MOVILLE—Arrived Apr 11—Stmr Parisian, | from. St. John, B., and Halifax, for Liver- Dool, and _proceeded. LONDON—Arrived Apr 10—Stmr Georgian, from_Boston; stmr Ping Suey. from Tacoma, via Yokohama, Hiogo, Hongkong. etc. Sailed Apr 10—Stmr Anubis, for California. HAMBURG—Sailed Apr 8—Stmr Abydos, for San_Francisco. BROWHEAD, Apr. 10.—Stmr Teutonic, from New York, reported by wireless, will reach Queenstown b a m Wednesday. YOKOHAMA—Arrived Aor §—Stmr Ning- chow, from Seattle and Tacoma, for Hong- kong, etc., and TLiverpool. PONTA DEL GADA—Arrived Apr 10—Stmr Cretic, from New York, for Gibraitar and Na- ples; stmr_Republic, from Alexandria and Na- ples, for New York (and both proceeded). NAPLES—Arrived Apr 10—Stmr Romanie. for Ponta del Gada from Genoa and Palermo, and_Boston. LIVERPOOL—Sailed Apr 10—Stmr Caronla, \E:r New York; stmr Lake Erie, for St. John, FREE lost vitality to luk of nervé force and ulants, resulting in but the most tem~ It is very unusual than e prostate or deep ureth- ted inthe harmrul jafaence say a complication of chronfc prosta- fncts are verified by purely local lating whatever. l(!‘!lfiu‘ ive no re- is not a particle of thnmmflhx block to rd soclal b-ntomvr moved. Elvlumum'_h‘ | ot com nb.“" n-uuuuhvlhw o Rl e el In the treatment \mz n is anly n.tun.\ .na vlol‘l cowld expert ot indaation ol amssten flmmm e e ey o have recently cured for life of such a mmm e How Good Food may / ECAY is not digestion, you know, even when it takss place in the stomach. o Food decayed in the body after being eaten is as dangerous to health as faod decayed before being eaten. Food nnurfla or poisons, just accord- ing to ho‘_rla_g it remaius in the Bowels | undigested. Cascaretsare the simplest and surest _safeguard against Delayed Digestion yet discovered. - . » - Sold in: & thin Enamel Box, half as thick ‘as your wateh, which fits inte the vest pocket or lady’s purse as if it grew there. In this rounl-qiged ‘Enamel Box are | found six small Candy Fablets.. One of these tooflisome- tablets works wonders for digestion. - Soon as placed in’'the mouth it starts the Saliva flowing, which-at once gets to work dissolving it. 3 The Saliva becomes:blended with the Candy Cascaret ® tablet,. and - from the moment they - start - geing ‘down your throat together the! sl(fl working to- gether. Now, what do they workeat? Bowel- work, of course—Digestion. * * = ost of the Digestion oceurs in the thirty feet of intestines'that connect with thé Stemach. They are lined with “a set of little mouths, that squeeze Digestive Juices into the Food eaten. The Digestive Juices thus mix with the food, just as Saliva mixes. with Cas- caret tablets, dissolving and:changing that food into nourishment, as-it passes along the channel. Turn to Poison The Intestines are also lined with mik lions of little suction pumps, that draw _the Nutriment from Food, as it passes them in going through. This Nutriment is then carried into the Blood, and spread over the Body as Brain, Bone and Brawn. But, when the Bowel-Muscles are weak, the Food moves too slowly to stimulate the little Gastric Mouths and there is no flow, or too little flow of Digestive Juice, to change the food inte nourishment. Then, the food decays in the Bowels, and in the thirty feet of Intestines. When this Decay begins the little suce tion pumps draw Poison from the Food, into the blood, instead of the Nutri~ tion it should have drawn. Now, Cascarets contain the only com- bination of drugs that Stimulates thess Muscles of the Bowels and Intestines just just as a Cold Bath, or open-air Exercise, stimulates a Lazy Man. Cascarets therefore act like Exercise. They produce the same sort of Natural result that a Six Mile waik in the country would produce, without any injurious Chemical effect. The Vest Pocket Cascaret Box is sold by all Druggists, at Ten Cents. Be sure you get the genuine, made only by the Sterling Remedy Company, and never sold in bulk. Every tabiet stamped ’ RAILWAY TRAVEL. ‘Trains leave and are due to arrive at SAN FRANCISCO Frox Mazox 1, 1906 FERRY DEPOT TEava — FOOT OF WARKET STREET. fl:!lm‘mv-uv(lle,'mmn.l{nmuy 7280 Richmond, Benicla, 8 Sulsun and Way Statio 7280 7.40aVallejo, Caltstoga, Sania. 2 = gnrl inez, Sag Ramca . 6.08» “' 7280 SaataCrus 9160 .-WAshntllhlxpmlwm-(Vl';rml)‘:‘vh). 2 ows, Biut ¥ ';‘:'m-nd. Tacoms, Seattle. 7.489 8.00A Davis, Woodland, Knights Landin, 7480 5.588 Lathirop, Stocktos, 3 ond, Fresno, Junet anford. Lemoore, Visalis, 1 mmiem.mm 7080 O 708 12.08» Knights Landing, Marysvillé and Oroyilie ’ * 2 Hayward, Niles, and Way suuou x.onp Vallejo, u:’n“m;, 4.00P Niles, y. Stockton, l.odl. 4.16p Newark, San Jose, Los Gatos ... 4400 Niles, Irvington, San ose, Livermore. 5.00P The Owl Limited — Newman, Ban: 0, Tul"\ = 8.48a 3 g:VSI ; 5, Sacramento | 1128 xeu. lp-tll. 12 ’”’W Niles -unu b4 Sua Jous '.'z m-m, D_}xofl.‘ Some N Gorsnera “‘m eeter... .ot ‘Zm 8.20p Oregon & ‘ pmests. Marywville, Hedding, oriend, puge: som ‘Somna anil Fask, 8488 mnmrvnd.l ‘and San Jose (Sun- day only).. RAILWAY TRAVEL CALIFORNIA NORTHWESTERN RY. CO Tiburom Ferry, Foot of MarFket Street. SAN FRANCISCO TO SAN RAFAEL. Vo AYS—7.N. 9:00 & m.; 12:36, 3:30, 12:50, 3: 3:00, SUNDAYS—6:05, 00, 8 9:35, 9:40 a. m.: 240, 4:50,_5:00,_5:30, 8:50 p. m. T Ia Eftect Artive l‘m-. | Oct. 8, 1808 San Fraa. Teek [ Sun- | Destina- | Sum- | Week Days. | days. | tion. days | Days. T:30a) 8:00af AR 9:00a| 9:30 Ignacio. 40 210:20 :10 p! 10 p| T 0a) SW0a 5:10 pl 5:10 p| mp’ .”_! 7:30 a] 210 af 3:40 ook (T RE W 0 130 p) 9:30 3] uma 05 p| 8:20 o 6:]0p‘ E'n and 38 310 p. 7304 04031028 e ::gl Fulton, 7:30 p} $:20p 80 pl 3: :804) 8:008] Healdabere: }um.?m:’- Lytton. 3:30p] 3:30p{ Geyserville. | 7:30 .e 320 Cloverdale. 1 TR S0 Hopied — [ eitags 3:30 p| 3:30 p| _and Ukiah. | 7:30 pi 8:30 p Wiilits and | et | 1305l emp | 5 a T felf 18 O“F Bl ve'vplo b4 8% 8, pper Lake, Valley, Jonn Days: iy Hiuville, Ore's Hot m Huie ] . lop] T ey lits for Hearst and Dlm !u B r e S Bell's fand. Dyer. Gevberviite, Camp 5. Pepperwood, Scotia and Eureka. Saturday and Monday round-trip tickets at reduced rates. Sundays—Round-trip L!ehtl to all peiats ..onm S Rafal at m.lr Cnml:l- duild- 'mcnx office, 650 AGLE! R. X RYAN. ~ “ - Gen. Pass. Agt. Gen. Manager. California Limited To Qg:-b&l:- With mm n-n-n. and jntermediate points. Limited. 3 days to Chi. <connection 7:30 3. m. 8:00 p. m. } 2 m.—California e Leaves every day. Direct oo rand — Valley Limited for Stockton, Mer— ¥ & Fremo, Hanford, Vislls, Baksrafer BB

Other pages from this issue: