The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 17, 1906, Page 7

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)

THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1906 . UACE CONCRESS T0 ANEND BIL Supervisors Petition That ubsidy Be Given to Ships Having American Crews FOUR SLAIN IN ATTACK DN A JAIL —_— £ {Officers Fire Into a Mob Fairmount Property Owners| ¢ winors in Pennsylvania, chuest Board to S.top: Which Attempts to Take Gray Brothers’ Quarrymg‘ Comrades From the Prison BLASTING IS OPPOSED rocecea b | YOUNG BOY AMONG VICTIMS OF RIOT | Trouble Follows Big Mass Meeting of Strikers, Whose Rage Is Aroused by the| Appearance of a Deputy | R A JOHNSTOWN, Pa., April 18—Four per- gons were shot dead and & mining en- | Eugene Delaney, seriously in- | a riot at Windber among the striking coal miners tonight. The place | is in a state of terror, Sheriff Bagley has | been summoned and an appeal has been | made to Governor Pennypacker for | troops. Several others of the rioters have | ned slight injuries. o dead: | PIETRO MARTINL | PAUL ZILLS ANTONIO MAZUKA. .ES FOSTER, a boy 12 years old. lls and Mazuka were miners, i and Zills having been leaders of the mob. A number of disorderly night’s meeting rs a resolutio miners had been n y. Their fellow- ered about the jail and de- the deputy Sheriff surrender The officers, reinforced by of the Fire Department, ob with fixed bayonets. pressed to the last ex- the deputies fired into the crowd. ce men and fatally injuring ter, a boy. Foster died dur- the evening. tness of the riot, in describ- | the affair tonight, said the trouble tarted at & o'clock when Deputy Sheriff McMullin went to the mass meeting held by the striking miners In a wood at the edge of town. Many of the miners had 4 the sight of the deputy | The officer was furious. by miner who 1 him. McMullin, realiz- n was desperate, fled efuge in the house s Davis. | every man who had gone to 1 2 the chase al- | on after the | ed the Davis house, it by & mob of 200 shouting, who challenged McMul- failed house and to appear the e literally again managed to escape f the Davis family fled to nearby neighbors for STREET WILL BE A CHASM. who had been on duty | of the coal com- | d of the trouble by | ded by Paul Zills, then ched to the center of the town and 4 to storm the jali and release The Deputy Sheriffs fixed | to their rifles and surround- | to keep It from the mob's | | poss: if possible. The members of | the Fire Department were also called out | to help restore order. The foreigners urged to be orderly and to leave | but inflamed by liquor they refused to listen, grecting the efforts to pacify with hoots and Jjeers. signal the mob began to close ail, shouting to the deputies ay their guns and give up the prisoners. The officers first tried to keep back the mob with bayonets, bu: e effort was ineffectual. Those were MINISTERIAL CRISIS AT HAND IN SERVIA Fate of the Regieides In- volved in the Political Unrest. will accept the point a busf- Bervian Par- , M. Patrovics, has e ym Vienna and held a ce with King Peter today. ————————— NO DANGER OF RISINGS AGAINST RUSSIAN JEWS Amerienn State Department Assured that Hebrew Race Will Be Protected. N, April 16.—The State among the ry Root positive assur- ssible precaution has ian Govern- -Jewish rising, hand indicate is not to be in outbreak reports only the governors of provinces, srdinate officials down to mu- andants and mayors, have su v responsible for the safety of their charge, and it is be the “hange in Narrow Gauge Schedule. mmencing Monday, April 16, Southern Pa- fic Narrow Gauge ferry-boats connecting with s via Alameda mole will legve this eity at nd 1o e minutes after the hour €:10 m. to 7:45 p. m. inclusive, - thereafter at 8:30, 9:15, 10:00, 10:45, 11:30 Passengers for San Jose and Santa should pote that boats leave five minutes 12:15 O interest to suburbanites is the fact Broad Gauge boats leeving San Fran- npect with trains at Oskiand Pier for heds vig Fruitvale and on to Alameda excepting those leaving at 6:40 and 7:40 Sunday) ), 5:40, m. m. Al rains leaving vis excepting ‘hat at 12:15 m. m. will run _to Alameda. themee over the Hi moute to Oakland pier, thus giving additional service to. Ala- meca L 4 ed that they would be held | e measures will prove | | of the foreigners who were closest to the jall began using knives in the at- tempt to disarm the deputies while | | others flourished revolvers. When it became certain that the little band of deputles and firemen could not stand before the howling, infuriated mob, | the officers opened fire. The deputies fired | volley and the foreigners broke in wild disorder, leaving three of | | wounded who were able to walk were hurried to their homes, while an ambulance took the more seriously hurt the Widber Hospital, Charles Foster, | died in the hospital. entertained that the strikers will make another effort to free the riot- ers ow in jail Deputy Sheri: are now guarding the | streets of Widber, pending the arrival | of the State constabulary. | | to ears are PENNSYLVANIA UNIVERSITY WILL HONOR KING EDWARD | PHILADELPHIA, April 16.—King Ed- ward of England, through Sir Mortimer | Durand, his Embassador, will receive the degree of doctor of laws from the | University of Pennsylvania on Thurs- | d at the university’s observance of the bicen of the birth of Benja- | | min Frankiin, the celebration of which | will begin here tomorrow and continue | until Friday. | The University of Pennsylvania, of | which Franklin was one of the found- ers, will confer honorary degrees upon the following persons among others: | Andrew Carnegie, Sir George Howard | | Darwin, University of Cambridge, Eng- land; Guglielmo Marconi, the inventor; | Hugo de Vries, University of Amster- | dam, and Edward Charles Pickering, Harvard University. Andrew Carnegie, as lord rector of | St. Andre will confer the degree of | doctor of laws upon a person whose | name will not be made public until the | | degree is formally conferred. A prominent feature of Friday’s pro- gramme will be the presentation of a medal to the republic of France by the United States. The presentation will be made by Secretary of State Root and the medal will be received by the Embassador. —————————— Chinaman Badly Injured. Him Sing was taken to the Central Emergency Hospital yesterday suffer- ! ing from serious injuries of a general character. He was examined by Dr. McGinty, who found him to be par- | tially paralyzed in his lower I{mbs, su- perinduced by injuries to his spine. He | was also seriously injured internally. | Later in the day he was removed to a | private sanitarium by his Mongolian | relatives. | French — e —————— Bapk Closes Its Doors, SHREVEPORT, La., April 16.—The suspension of the Merchants’ and Farm- |ers’ Bank for liguidation was an- | nounced today by its president, A. H. Leonard. The assgts amount to $687,- 126 and the labilities to $518.126. The @epositors will be paid in full. “NOT GUILTY” THE PLEA \COLDEN JUBILEE |YAQUIS AMBUSH A Wonderful OF MRS, ENMA LE DOUX| QF REPUBLICANS| PARTY OF EICHT Woman Accused of Murdering Husband Declares Innocence in Court. L STOCKTON, April 16.—Mrs. Emma Le Doux, charged with the murder of | A. N. McVicar, was brought into court | this morning to plead, she having been arraigned several days ago. - After the announcement that C. H. Fairali had bcon associated as counsel for the de- fense, Mrs. Le Doux was ordered to stand up. She did so and pleaded not guilty in a clear voice, hesitating only for an instant. The ceremony occupied only one minute, but the courtroom was crowded long before the hour arrived for bring- ing the accused before the Judge. The crime of which Mrs. Le Doux stands charged is the murder by poi- soning of Albert N. McVicar in a lodg- ing-house in this city on the 24th of March, following which the body was forced into a new trunk, which the woman had taken to the station, but neglected to check. The odor of the decomposing body was noticed by a baggageman during the evening and the trunk was forced open by the offi- cers. The trunk was traced to the woman, was arrested in Antioch two days later. BRYAN'S DAUGHTER AS A PLAYWRIGHT Differing Opinions as to the Merits of “Mrs. S. Holmes, Detective.” SALT LAKE, April 16.—More than or- dinary Interest was shown in the first presentation on any stage of “Mrs. S. Hclmes, Detective,” here tonight, be- cause of the fact that the comedietta was written by Ruth Bryan Leavitt, the daughter of William J. Bryan. It was put on at the Orpheum with an amateur company. There was a large attendance and the reception was cordial, but opin- jons are divided as to the merits of the production. The Tribune will say: “If the reception accorded the play is any criterion, the little farce will last for many a month. The theme of the playlet is new and the support excellent.” The Herald finds that ‘“‘candor compels the statement that the initial effort of the daughter of Colonel Willilam Jennings Bryan will not do. There may be the germ of a good {dea in it, but it is doubt- ful if the best professionals could have saved it in its present form. The speeches are too long. Nothing whatever is left to the imagination of the audience. And the playlet is not funny, except in widely sep- arated spots.” e Governor of Kiangsi Removed. LONDON, April 17.—The Morning Post's correspondent at Shanghai tele- graphs that an imperial decree’ has been issued dismissing Hu Ting Kao, Governor of Kiangsi, for his connec- tion with the recent murder of French missionaries. CELESTINS Natural Alkaline Water CURES Dyspepsia and Stomach Troubles The genuine is al- ‘ways sold in bottles “®2 like this Beware of Syphons, they do not contain VICHY | + WOMAN WHO YESTERDAY PLEAD- ED “NOT GUILTY' TO CHARGE THAT SHE KILLED SPOUSE. HCH OFFICIAL N BIG SCANDAL Buffalo Colleetor Charged With Having Stolen Sum of Thirty-Eight Thousand I | | I + BUFFALO, N. Y., April 16—Fred O. Murray, recently appointed Collector of the Port of Buffalo and former Treasurer of this county, was indicted by the Grand Jury today on a charge of having stolen from the county of Erie sums aggregat- ing $38,870 and of having received stolen property in a like amount. In all seven- teen indictments were handed in by the Grand Jury, which has been Investigating graft in connection with the purchase by the county of the North street cemetery as a site for the Sixty-fifth Regiment armory. Murray, with his attorney, appeared be- fore Justice Kenefick in the Supreme Court and entered a plea of not guilty to all the charges. Seven of the indictments are against Fred O. Murray and Robert S. Woodburn jointly andl one is against five men, namely, Fred O. Murray, Rob- ert S. Woodburn, former clerk of the Board of Supervisors and at present sec- retary to Representative William H. Ryan; Byron D. Gibson and Willilam B. Jackson, Supervisors, and John W. Nefr, former County Auditor. Postmaster Fred Greiner appeared be- fore Justice Kenefick this afternocon and entered a plea of not gulity on a charge of bribery in connection with the grave- yard scandal. ER T EASTER EDITION PROVES TO BE HANDSOME NUMBER 1 | The Easter edition of El Heraldo is an unusually attractive number. It is handsomely got up and presents an attractive appearance. It is filled with | stories appropriate to the season, and | thgse stories are illustrated with, cuts 'of churches in various parts of the i world, as well as many pictures along the coast, together with two beautiful pictures of foreign paintings., —_—— Will Advertise the Philippines. MANHLA, April 16.—The Philippine Pro- 'gress League has been formed by four Chambers of Commerce uniting. The league will be cosmopolitan and interna- tional in character, and its object is to ad- vance the interests of the archipelago by advertising throughout the world its pos- sibilities and attractions. Two American delegates who have been appointed have salled for the United States with the pur- pose of advertising the islands in the principal States and cities. Later dele- gates will be sent to England and other parts of Europe. ; —_———— ‘Will Again Try Matrimony. Mrs. Maud Treadwell McNutt will again try wedded life. This time her husband-to-be is George A. Waterbury Jr. This will be her third venture‘nto the matrimonial fleld, as she has already been married twice. Her first husband was Joe Nolan, and her second Maxwell McNutt. The groom, who is 30 years old, is son of G. A. Water- bury, a salesman in the George H. Ful- i Clairvoyant Prof. M. Khiron of 1122 Mar- —e Great Gathering Will Take | One Man Is Killed, Two Are Place in Philadelphia- in| Wounded and Five Missing Middle of Month of June| When the Attack Is Ended kgt Sirest Asfonishes Even BIG SESSION PLANNED PUNITIVE Forck ovr (8 Most Skepiical. Word Sent Out by Head of Company Whose Employes|fs the Oldest Established and Best the League Calling State| Were Assailed to Send an n Sser and Healer in Delegates to Convention| Armored Auto to Sonora California A SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. PHILADELPHIA, April 16.—The fol- LOS ANGELES, April 16.—For the sec- ond time in four months the Giroux Con- > Prof. M. Kbi- lowing address relative to the Golden | solidated Mining Company, with head- | ron, formerl °4 3 3 y of Jubilee Convention of the Republicald |guarters in the Braly bullding, this city, | Bombay, India, 1is party has been sent out by J. Hampton Moore, the president of the National Republican League: “In compliance with the constitution of the National Republican League, the sec- retary has just issued the call for the biennial convention to be held in Phila- deiphia, June 17, 18 and 19, 1%6. In this call that part of the constitution which recognized by press and public as the foremost and most able clairvoyant and healer in this coun- try. He rforms feats of mind which seem to the uniniti- ated to be impos- sible. has suffered the loss of lives of its em- ployes through a Yaqui Indian ambush | near the corporation’s mine in Sonora, Mexico. According to telegrams received here Samuel Willlams, an assayer em- ployed by the company, was killed and | two other members of the party were Drovides that State and Territorial | Wounded In the latest attack. Five oth- leagues shall kold conventions once every | €rs Who accompanied the expedition are | two years is quoted, together with an- | unaccounted for. other section requiring State and Terrl- | The party started from the mines Sat- torial secretaries to furnish the national & Jicisticr k. Gl 4 siplals Tt of AL | T oy LOIANE, tn Corb. the - rafireed clubs belonging to and affiliating with i * o point. About ten miles out the 5aid league on or before the first day of | Indlans attacked them. Willams' body Thie sack Yelke: e toum‘; ;n the afterncon, while the “In addition thereto the national presi- | W9 Wwounded men were picked up by a Yo 2 dent oives matice inat ho will enforce the | 54uad of soldiers who happened along the ot Whate pes Hew, Bleia e resolution adopted by the executive com- ‘trul. General Torres, Military Governor | for what mittee of the National Republican League | Of Sonora, has a company of soldlers out | at its ting held at Chicago, lllinois, | searching for the Yaquis and the missing | Pames of friends and enemies, who Is g 7 members of the party. z G | October 1, 1903, to wit: e “'‘Resolved, That the president be au- | Willlams was a young man and, 50 far as known, had no family. The thorized to appaint State officlals of the | 727 A% *noWh, F 2 - league for States where vacancies exist x company lost a mining engineer R r— x named Sayles last January through an | dates, facts and locatio through Incomplete organization.’ “It 1s intended in this so-called off year | dttack of ‘Indians, and officlals of the {tee n advance, corporation state that they are deter- | 5 to hold a great Republican jubilee in the | city of Philadelphia and to @emonstrate mined to make a thorough Investiga- | satisfaction is g tion. The company will soon have an | arty is still alive. that the Republican party is stil armored automobile on the ground to | BeSS, health, law. love, marriage, di- Since the glorlous victory of 1304 we have | armored sutomobile on the & o | one through strenuous times, challeng- S: . s officers an -3 . o | men who are forced to travel from the | YOr°® 2@ all domestic Without any pre- vious knowledge and having no natural KHIRON 1122 Market St means of knowing who you are, he tells your name, age, you came. He tells you | true and who is false. Tells whom and when you will narry, giving names, | taking no accepting none unless advice on busi- and financial vital difficulties; remews youth and | force; locates mines and valuable ores; reunites separated; personal magnet- | ism quickly developed; Khiron is dif- | ferent from other clairvoyants because he does what they claim to do! things that are beyond ordinary understand- ing. things that seem Impossible; he | gives you information, relief. success, satisfaction, power and control of any character affecting any one or any thing, past, present or future. Ing e Loyl o A O ke, States of | mines to the Carbo station. |the Cuon. e e e and for that | SEATTLE UNION MEN spenn S ot et | SEG MOYER CASE s 7roa s raee | = - ) in the historic old hall in Philadelphia In ‘Committee Will Be Selected | party coraummated hee Vara tox ve | to Attend Trial of Ac- Pt o cused Miners. SEATTLE, April 1&—Under the leader- ; ship of Dr. Hermon F. Titus, a soclallst | “The Republican clubs of Philadelphia have formed an alliance for purposes of | reception and entertainment and have ar- ranged a programme which will continue | Mr. Khiron's charges for advice and consultation on a tter are $1.00, which is the fee c by all compe- for four days, opening with a Fremont- | service on Sunda: June 17, and closing with an excursion to Atlantic City, June 20. The Republi- can State League of Pennsylvania will enter into the occasfon and hold {ts con- vention, with delegates to the national | convendion as welcome guests, at Bel-| | mont mansion in Fairmount Park, the| site of many entertainments in which | George Washington participated. These | exercises have the cordial approval of the national Republican committee, of which the Hon. George B. Cortélyou is chair- man, and assurance is given of tbe at- | tendance of the great Republican leaders of the United States. “It is fitting that the formal call of the secretary shall be accompanied by this word of greeting from the president of | the National Republican League, who, |in this instance especially, in the name lof a city famed for its hospitality, and | on behalf of their comrades throughou | the great commonwealth of Pennsylva- nia, urges a rousing rally of the s}‘alwut young Republicans of the nation. WILL WHICH FAVORS HIRED MAN UPSET Document Providing for Em- ploye and Church, Ignor- ing Relatives, Annulled. KANSAS CITY, April 16.—A jury in the Circuit Court here today returned a ver- dict annulling the alleged will of Mrs. Sallle J. Davenport, & ploneer, bequeath- ing property valued at $50,000 to her hired man, Willlam Van Wageoner, to ‘whom she was not related, and to the Church of Christ, of which she was not a mem- ber. Undue influence was the ground upon | which the verdict was based. | At the time the will was executed Mrs. | Davenport, who had been blind for twen- ty-five years, was fatally ill. The will was { written by H. L. Pulliam, a trustee of the Church of Christ, who, it was brought out at the trial, allowed neither the rela- tives nor the witnesses to hear its con- tents read. Pulliam was a frequent vis- jtor at the Davenport home, and Van Wageoner and he, it was alleged, had sought to estrange Mrs. Davenport from her relatives. The will gave twenty acres of valuable land to Van Wageoner and ten acres as a site for Pulllam’s church, which is an offshoot of the Christian church. Lincoln memorial | | | | | | I | —_————————— Private Car for Hanrahan. ST. PAUL, April 16.—John J. Hanra- han, grand master of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, will be married here tomorrow morning to Miss Kath- arine M. Sullivan, daughter of former County Auditor D. M. Sullivan. Presi- dent Hill of the Great Northern has tendered Hanrahan his private car, in which the wedding journey will be taken to the coast. —_—————————— American Woman’s Daring Journey. LONDON, April 17.—The El correspondent of the Daily Mail says that Mrs. Laura Fitzgerald, an Ameri- can, with an organized expedition, left Mogador on April 9 to explore the great Atlas Mountains in the region of the Gundafy Highlands, the scene of Cun- ningham Graham's capture by Moorish brigands years ago. orator ‘and writer, there is being organ- ized a committee of union men to attend T tent members of his profession (and by some who are incompetent). His office | of how many kinds of medicine I tried. hours, 10 a. m. to § p. m. Sundays, 11 to 4. Please remember name and num- out. the Moyer-Haywood trial in Idaho and | to report on the testimony given against | the miners. Titus has just returned from | Bolse and will go back again to be pres- ent at the hearing. In an impassioned | appeal to a large crowd he declared that | Moyer and Haywood were not getting a | fair trial, and the presence of a commit- | tee of union men was necessary for their | protection. | e Drunkard Breaks Neck. Christopher Anderson was drunk In his room, 511 Brannan street, at an early hour this morning. He fell from | a_second-story window and broke his neck: Anderson was a member of Ce- | ment Workers' Union No. 1. | —— ADVERTISEMENTS. PILES 14 YEARS ber or cut this adv. | Terrible Case Cured Painlessly With | o Fop Lo Anesies (via San Fotre oot om Only One Treatment of Pyra- | terey, San Simeon, Cayucos, Port Harford (Sa3 mid Pile Curé. | blepo) Ventura and Huezeme: Paagor e A I ey Ly Free Package in Plain Wrapper Mailed | Magdalena Bay, San Jose del =~ SRV W S W —— Cabo, Mazatian, Altata, La Pas, Santa Rosalls, I have been a terrible sufferer from Guaymas Ofex.), 10 & m., T8 ?iles ’!lozhgourleen (14) years, and dur- | of each wtl.m“ prE S ng al i = s time you can have an idea : g { But 1 found no relief whatever. I felt there must be something that could cure me without having to undergo an ope- ration which might kill me. “Now, after trying but one treatment of your ‘Pyramids, I am free, free to | tell all sufferers from this dreadful dis- | ease to try this medicine—the Pyramid | OAKLAND. 968 Broadway. C. D. DUNANN, General Passenger Agent, 10 Market st, San Francisco. Pile Cure. fall. Sincerely yours, George Braneigh, Schellburg, Pa.” Any one suffering from the terrible torture, burning and itching of piles will get instant relief from the treat- ment we send out free, at our own ex- pense, in plain, sealed package, to every one sending name and address. Surgical operatipn for piles Is unnec- essary and rarely a permanent success Here you can get a treatment that is quick, easy to apply and inexpensive, and free from the publicity and humil- jation you suffer by doctors’ examina- fon. Pyramid Pile Cure is made in the form of “easy to use’ suppositories. The coming of a cure is felt the moment you begin to use it, and your suffering ends. | Send your name and address at once to Pyvramid Drug Co., 2489 Pyramid Building, Marshall, Mich., and get, by return mail, the treatment we will send you free, in plain, sealed wrapper. After seeing for yourself what it can do, you can get a regular, full-size package of Pyramid Pile Cure from any druggist at 50 cents each, or, on receipt of price, we will mail you same our- selves if he should not have it CURE SICK HEADACHE. TOYO KISEN KAISHA (ORIENTAL 8. S. C0.) It will cure when all others | _ AMERICAN LINE. (—Sou mpton. pr. 28, May 26, June 23. July 28 i New Yor! A St. Louls. May 5, June 2. June 30, Aus. & | Philadelphia. . May 12. June 9, July 7, A: St. Paul....May 19, June 16, July L | Ph Haverzord 29(Westerland | ATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINE. NEW YORK—LONDON DIRECT. _Apr. 28, May 26, June 23, July 2% May 5_June 2. June 30. July 28 [ May 12. June 9, July 7, Aug. 4 ...May 19, Jume 16, July 14 Aug. I LINE. New Twin-Screw Steamers of 12.300 tons. NEW YORK—ROTTERDAM, via BOULOGN® Sailing Wednesdays as per Salling List. N Amdm. Ap. 25, 5 am| Potsdam, May 16, 10 am Stt'dam, May 2. 10 am| Noordam. May 2%, 3 am Ryndam, May 9, 5 amiN Am’dm. May 30,10 am RED STAR LINE. N.Y.. DOVER, ANTWERP (LONDON, PARIS) | Fintdnd. ....Apr. 25, May 28, June 3 Aus. 4 Vaderland. May 5. June 2. June 30, July 2= Kroonland. . ... May 12 June 9, July 7. Aug. 18 Zeeland......May 19, June 16, July 14, Aug. 11 WHITE STAR LINE. NEW YORK—QUEENSTOWN—LIVERPOOL. Oceante. .....Apr. 25, May 23, June 20, July 18 Teutontc May 2. May 30, June 27, July 3% Cedri: Way & June 1, June 29 Julv 27 { { Mesaba HOLLAND-AMERICA ! i | May 9. Ju July 4, Aug. 1 May 16, June uly 11, Aug. % jay 1S. June 15, Julv 13. Aux. 10 EENSTO LIV L. pr. 26, May 24, Junme 21 _May 10, June 7. July 3 NEDITERRANFAN s pomi FROM NEW YORK. .May 10. 10 a. m.; June 21, Aug 4 C. .My 1. 3 p_m.: Oct. 18 Nov. 29 FROM CRETIC.. REPUBLE BOSTON. _..April 25, 1:30 p. m.: June 3 CANOPIC..May 19, § 2 m.: 30, Aug. 11 C. D. TAYLOR. Passenger Agent Pacific Coast, 21 Post st., San Prancisco. ROMANIC Deeanies.5.C0. F -.' SONOMA, for Honolulu, Samoa. Auckland . - Tharsday, April 19, 2 P. M. ALAMEDA, for Honolulu, Saturday. 28, 11 A M. MARIPOSA, for Tahiti, May 22, 11 A, M. SPRECKELS & BROS. G2, Agrs Tickat 0z 63 Omca 327 Markst SL., Pier 7 Pacide St

Other pages from this issue: