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12 the: M gf^( JA L WORLDf SUMMARY OF THE MARKETS. Produce Exchange not in session. No foreign or Eastern quotations. Hay continues weak. Potatoes slowly weakening. Onions drag. Butter. Cheese and Eggs lower. • Market overstocked with Hens. Dried Apricots firmer. Nuts and Raisins unchanged. Vegetables in good request- Hides firm. Provisions fairly active. Hogs weaker. Beef and Mutton unchanged, Citrus Fruits as before." Apples In light supply. PRODUCE EXCHANGE HOLIDAY. Yesterday being Good Friday the Produce Ex change was closed, hence quotations for all produce dealt in on the Exchange are omitted. WEATHER BUREAU REPORT. TjNiTrn States Department of Aoßrcuir tube. Weather Bureau, Saw Francisco, April 12, 5 p. Synopsis and general forecast: ■ The pressure is highest in Wyoming and lowest In Oregon and Arizona, with a slight trough-like depression extending through the Interior valleys of California. The skies are partly cloudy through out the coast States, but no rain has falleD. Con" ditions are favorable for scattered light showers in the extreme northern portion of the State by Satur riav evening. ' The following are seasonal rainfalls this year as romr.ared with the same date last year: Eureka 39.02. last year 60.25: Red Blurt 26.89. last year 19.15: Sacramento 22.74, last year 13.85: San Francisco 23.37. last year 16.10: Fresno 12.63, last year 3.93; Yuma 2 97. last year 2.16 Inches. -«r'. San Francisco data: Maximum temperature 68 deg.: minimum. 47 deg.: mean. 68 deg. Forecast made at San Francisco for the thirty honrsendmg midnight. April IS, 1896: For Northern California— Fair, but becoming somewhat threatening on the northern coast; nearly stationary temperature; fresh southerly winds, changing to westerly along the coast. For Southern California— Fair; stationary tem perature, except slightly cooler on the northern coast; fresh northerly winds. ■'_ .: -'-.." For Nevada, Utah and Arizona— Fair; nearly stationary- . temperature. For san Francisco— Fair; probably slightly cooler Saturday evening: fresh to brisk 'westerly winds. W. H. —AXXOX, Forecast Official. OMAHA LIVESTOCK. MARKET." OMAHA, Nebr., April 12.— Cattle— Receipts, 1300; market, shade stronger: steers, $4 25@4 50; bulk, $4 Bo_6 90; cows and heifers. SI 25(&4 25; bulk, $2 85<&3 75; stockers and l-edirs. $2 50& 4 15; bulk, $3{_>3 40 DUN- REVIEW OF TRADE. NEW YORK, X. V.. April 12.— R. G. Dun ft Co.'s Weekly Review of Trail-, which issues to-morrow. will say: Progress toward better business con tinues, but it Is slow and amid many obstacles. In speculative aspects and in wholesale demand for goods the week shows improvement. Money mar kets are undisturbed and a little more active. But among the chief obstacles is the anxiety of opera tives to secure better wages, even while many manufacturing works are running . without profit and others at a risk of loss. In a number of establishments better wages have been conceded, thus increasing the purchasing power of the people. But strikes have largely overbalanced settlements several of Importance having thrown about 12,000 workers out of em ployment this week. Retail trade las improved on tne whole since March, as the approach of Easter brings more business; but distribution to individual customers still lags behind purchases of jobbers and such demand for products as springs from building- and other investments looking into the future. Crop prospects will greatly affect the course of trade for some months, and the Govern ment report had little influence to discourage. For consumers the worst feature is the rapid advance in meats. '■■' ■ For the first time in a lons period, prices of com modities average a shade higher than a year ago. and in Great Britain also, owing to different causes, : a slight advance occurred in March. On both sides of the ocean the lowest level ever known may naturally be followed by some rise. Cotton is. on both siues. more buoyant than any thing else, except meat and petroleum here, crude oil having risen to $1 80, the highest price for over seventeen years. Nothing supports the advance of an eighth in cotton the past week, except the im pression that the next crop will be short, for re ceipts are large, and about 150,000 bales more than the largest crop ever grown have already come into sight this year. Wheat has yielded nearly a cent although Atlan tic exports for two weeks have been 3.706,643 bushels, flour Included, against 3,599.688 bushels, last year, with Western receipts only 2,083,467, against 4,223,434 bushels last year. Receipts of corn are about half and exports about a fifth of last year's. Decrease in receipts of cattle are ex aggerated, 659,406 having arrived at Chicago against 769,543 to date last year, and the prevalent Opinion is that Western packers are helping nature to some extent. The output of pigiron April 1 was 158.312 tons weekly, practically the same as March 1, with a decrease of 1080 tons in unsold stocks during the month. .: Doubtless heavy stocks were taken up by manu facturers In anticipation of a strike in coke works, but the apparent consumption is larger than at any other time for some months, and only a sixth less than in March, 882. Bessemer iron has advanced a little further— $10 75 at Pittsburg— but there is no change whatever in prices of finished products during the week, and while the demand continues good for structural forms and a little better for oars the 'marked decrease in the demand for wire, owing to the scant purchases of farmers for fenc ing, affects the outlook. It seems. probable that pigiron must recede, unless a larger demana for lini.sh'-d product is soon developed. Sales of wool are particularly interesting, amount ing for the week to 6.030,200 pounds, and for five weeks previous to 25.621.200, against 25,277,376 In the weeks of ______ In brief, sales are close to tbe quantity required for a full consumption, and the long delay in placing orders and the lateness of the season make the proportion of mills at. work larger than usual. No improvement in prices ap pears, and domestic wool does not respond to re cent advances in foreign markets. The low price encourages manufacturers to com pete much more vigorously with the foreign goods of many kinds than they had expected, and for the medium and cheaper grades of goods they have more than the nasal demand, because purchases of consumers have for two years been comparatively slim. The better goods fare not so well, foreign competition being more effective, but there is a good demand for.dress goods, in cottons con tinued strength appears, with further occasional advances of a Vi and an Vs in print cloths, and the aggregate is fair. .Many agents are sold well ahead. Failures for the week were 207 tn the United States, against 218 last year, and 27 in Canada, against 14 last year. BRADSTKEET'S REVIEW. NEW YORK, N. V., April 12.-Bradstreet'3 to morrow will say : The feature in trade circles is found in the price movement, more particularly those for cattle, dressed beef and petroleum. Drouth, low prices and "hard times" within two weeks have resulted in a shorter supply, of cattle, prospectively 30 per cent less than last year. Live cattle are -.160 higher per | 100 pounds, than last year, and ?1 higher than the lowest point this year. Dressed beef is 21/2 higher than the average last year, the highest since 1885. ". The compara tive-scarcity of.high grade cattle is emphasized by the fact that present 'quotations,- when made in previous periods of scarcity, have never failed 10 bring a supply when one existed. Petroleum sold at $1 57% on Thursday. 62 cents higher than on January 1 and 55 cents 'higher than a year ago, which is more than three times the lowest price in 1892 and the highest quotations since 1878. Reduced production and increased consumption indicate the former bas been overtaken, which, with reduced stocks, pro duces excitement in the market. Other advances are of leather, hides and footwear. Shippers of anthracite coal to New England points ask more f. o. b., and at the West bar and manufactured iron have recorded advances in actual transac tions. Bard is higher and cotton is up 3-16 c. Recent gains in prices for Bessemer pig and steel billets are maintained, but the request at Pittsburg I and Chicago is checked. Coffee and sugar are. firm at. previous prices, while the list 01 reactions in cluded fractional declines only In wheat, corn, oats and pork, the latter on lower prices 0:1 hogs. compared with February, March returns of gross earnings of 130 railroads may be construed as fav orable, the increase over March, 1894, being 2 to 1 per cent. This is contrasted with February de crease this .year from last of 2.3 per cent a"nd of the January falling off this year from last of one half of 1 percent. ; When it is recalled that gross railway earnings in March, 1894. tell off 13 per cent from the total from that month from 1893, an increase last month from March, 1894, of one-fifth of 1 per cent ac quires significance. . if •. . Exports of wheat from both coasts of the United States this week, flour included as wheat, hold up to a high average, 2.934,179 bushels, against 2,853,932 bushels in the previous week, 1,955,500 bushels in the second week of April, 1894, 2,948, --052 in the week in 1893, 2,910,356 bushels in 1892 and 2,456.080 bushels in the second week of April, 1891. -':■.-'. ■-,-" --'..'--. ■: ;.-. v ;.-, ■: The maintenance of a generally higher range of clearing-house totals, an improved outlook for man ufactures In the staple line, the -spread of a feeling of confidence that the volume of business will In - crease in the near future, and an Increased outlook In-, Western and Northwestern grain : States, are among the more significantly favorable features. - - . . The weather ; has been unfavorable' ' throughout portions of tne Canadian Dominion, with the nat ural effect on trade, although the outlook at Mon treal and Toronto is encouraging. . BANK. CLEARINGS. NEW YORK, N. Y., .April 12.— following table, compiled by Bradstreet's,' shows the total clearances at the principal Cities and the percentage of increase ar decrease, as compared with the cor-. responding week last year. ;.,■.-. Percentage Cities. Amount. Inc. Dec. New York $523,028,281 10.5 ...... Chicago 83,131,233 2.1 Boston 88,110.119 9.2 Philadelphia 61.734.043 3.6 Sf.Louis 25,671,919 12.2 ...... San Francisco 12,101,695 8.6 Baltimore 13,429,172 9.9 Pittsburg. 15.337.482 11.0 ...... Cincinnati 14.063,900 5.0 Kansas City............ 9,988,314 ...... 3.8 New Orleans 9.312,701 25.3 ...... Buffalo. 3.779.797 6.0 v._'."._l ! Milwaukee 4,613,932 12.9 ...... Detroit 5,985,430 3.5 Louisville 5,790,122 Minneap01i5............ 4,575,810 23.4 Omaha • 3,272.937 ...... 40.2 Providence 5,919,600 3.9 Cleveland 5,435,995 8.6 ...... **Houston 6,159,095 32.4 ...... j St.Paul 3,631,068 21.8 ...... I Denver 2,673,305 .. ' 15.6 Indianapolis 4,107,593 11.4 ...... Columbus 3,813,400 8.2 . Hartford 2,162,505 2.4 ...... I Richmond 2,280,713 1.1 ...... Washington 1.963,705 1.31 Dallas 2,195,440 2.8 I St.Joseph.. 1,564,052 ...... 6.3 ! Peoria 2.027.615 16.6 Memphis.... 2.252. 43.9 ...... j Portland. Or 1,038,557 16.1 1 Rochester 1,364,610 ...... 11.7 New Haven 1,422,172 3.1 ...:.. Savannah 2,085,607 23.9 Spnnghetd, Mass 1,288,109 7.1 i Worcester 1.251,195 ! Portland. Me 1,273,670 10.2 ...... . Atlanta ' 1,148,167 1.9 , Fort Worth 1,638,140 78.3 **Waco 2,433.839 60.4 Syracuse 931,818 16.6 DesMoines 1,241,441 4.0 ...... Grand Rapids 836.610 6.8 .:.... **Beattle 525.525 16.6 Lowell 607.418 ...... 19.3 I Wilmington, Del 689,202 9.0 i Norfolk 898,301 3.1 Sioux City 557.898' 23.5 } Los Angeles 1,207.055 5.2 Tacoma 502.933 5.6 j Saginaw, Mich 383,969 26.1 ! Spokane 329,446 6.1 I Jacksonville 421,064 26.2 j Lincoln 374.347 22.7 ; New Bedford 453,472 ! Wichita 451.479 15.3 Birmingham 331,913 Topeka. 317,722 17.4 Lexington. Xv 348,634 2.6 Bingbamton 299,800 9.6 •Bay City. Mich... 294,534 20.4 *Fail River 759,792 12.4 I *Akron.Ohio.. 226.257 18.3 ...... rfield.OMO 212.796 89.2 ■• an ton. Ohio 228,700 29.5 •Sioux Falls 71.336 67.9 •Fremont. Neb. 60.495 28.6 •Hastings. Nebr 57,646 37.3 •Chattanooga 334.000 50.8 •Fargo 136.112 16.2 •Nashville 1,087,980 16.0 ••Galveston.. 6.036.610 19.5 Salt Lake 1,043,100 2.1 Rockford... .' 298,766 11.1 Helena 427,810 11.9 Scranton 688,587 2.4 •Kalamazoo 258,217 Littleßock 401.604 Totals, V. S $953.741. 7.7 Exclusive of New York 430,713,09S 4.3 DOMINION- OF CANADA. Montreal $9,563,348 2.5 Toronto.. 5,429.529 27.7 Halifax • 1,130,590 13.7 Hamilton 729.071 13.1 ...... Winnipeg 731,382 7.0 Totals $17,593,920 • Not included in totals because of no compari son for last year. **Not included in totals because containing other items than clearings. PORTLAND'S BUSINESS. PORTLAND, Ob., April 12. -Exchanges, $193, j 264; balances, $43,050. HAY AND FEEDSTUFFS. BRAN— SI 3 50® 14 50 ft ton. MIDDLINGS— SI7@I9 f) ton. H' V FEEDSTUFFS— Ground and rolled Barter. $15 50@16 50: Oncake Mea la the mill, $25 ft ton: Cottonseed Oilcake, $24 ~? ton. HAY— Soft and in good supply. Wheat quotable atsß®llso ton: Wheat and Oat, $B®ll '0 I ton: Barley. $8 50@10: Oat, $B®lo 50: Alfalfa, $8 50 0.9 50: Clover, Compressed, sß SO® 11; stock, $6@7 50 r ton. STRAW— 7O@BOc %i bale. > POTATOES, ONIONS, VEGETABLES. POTATOES— market Is liberally supplied ! and soft. Receipts of new were 267 sacks, selling at l@l%c (5- lb. Merced Sweets, $2 50 ft ctl; : River Sweets, $I@l 25 ft ctl; Early Rose, 30® : 40c: River Reds, 25®30c: Petaluma ana Tomales I Burbanks, 45@60c: itlver Burbanks, 40@50c; j Oregon Burbanks, 50@80c; Salinas Burbanks, 75 @$1 %> ctl. 1 ONIONS— Weak at 60— 80 c for good to choice and 25® 10c for cut: Oreaons, 90c@$l 10. VEGETABLES— There was considerable varia tion in a small way. Mexican Tomatoes, $2 ft ■ small box : hothouse Cucumbers. 50c®$l is dozen. Arrivals were 798 boxes Asparagus, 588 boxes I Rhubarb and 274 sacks Peas. Asparagus, 75c® $1 75 1* box for ordinary, $2 for No. 1 and 5® 8c fi lb for fancy ; Rhubarb, 25@65c <3 box for ; ordinary and 75c fi box for fancy; Green Peas. 2%®3%c Ifor common and 4®sc for sweet; String Beans, 12y 2 @2oc: Dried Okra, 1 " 15c "$ lb; Green I Peppers. 12y 2 @lsc: Dried Peppers, 12 1 j®15c; Marrowfat Squash, $20 "& ton; Cabbage, 50®60c ft ctl; Feed Carrots, 30@40c; Garlic, 4(_»sc ft lb. BUTTER, CHEESE AND EGGS. BUTTER— The market is %c off again and weak, \ with heavy stocks and a slow demand. i • Creamery— Fancy. 13%@14c; seconds, 12%@ I 13c t lb. Dairy— Fancy, 2 ®l2c: good to choice. 10® i lie: medium grades, 7 %@9c %t lb; store Butter, j 6@7c f! lb. - CHEESE— Dealers quote still lower prices and j report a weak and heavily stocked market. Fancy mild new, 6y 3 @Bc fi lb: common to good, 4y ®6c; I Young America, 7®flc tt lb; Eastern, 12y 2 @14%c, j latter figure for cream: Western, B@loc ft lb. EGGS— market was %c off again and weak I and quiet. Duck Eggs, 16@17c: Store Eggs, 11% ®12% c; ranch Eggs, 13@14c ft doz. POULTRY AND GAME. POULTRY"— Hens are in heavy supply, neglected and demoralized, and there are still some Eastern left unsold. Young stock continues in light supply and firm. Turkeys are weak. A few dressed came In and brought 12V2<&14c. We quote California stock as rollows: Live Turkeys, 9(6>10c for Gob- I blers: Ufa, for Hens: Geese, f, pair, $1 50—2; ; Ducks, Ss@7: Hens, $4(3)5: Roosters, younir. $7® 8 fl dozen; do. old, 54@ 5 ft doz: Fryers, 86 50; ! Broiler- 85 ,">fiao for large and H_4 for small; I Piteous, $ 2(_2 25 for young ana $1 75_,2 for old. i GAME— Hare, 75c@-?l; Rabbits. .1 50 for Cot -1 tontails and $l(_sl 25 ft doz for small. DECIDUOUS \ AND CITRUS FRUITS. ORCHARD FRUITS— Apples quiet and in light supply at $2 60@3 ~$ box for choice to fancy and 50c(d.$2 for common 10 good. BERRlES— Receipts of Strawberries were 28 chests, selling at 60@75c f* drawer for Longworths and 40@50c for Sharp! ess. - CITRUS FRUITS— Pour cars were auctioned as follows: Fancy Navels, $1 85@2 60; choice do, $1 60@2 15: standard flo, Sl-25(a/l 85: .choice Seedlings. 95c(*.?l 30: standard do, 80c@?l 20; lemons, 25c@Jj;l 10: Malta Bloods, SI 50. Oranges continue firm. limes are .weak and Lemons steady. California Navels are qnotable at $1 75@2 50 f, box: Seedlings, 75c@$l 50: I Sicily Lemons, $4 %i box; California lemons, $1 '■ @1 75 for common and $2@2 50 for good to choice; Mexican Limes, $3 5()@4 %i box: Bananas, $1 25® ; 2 %) bunch; Pineapples, nominal. DRIED FRUITS, RAISIN'S, NUTS, ETC. DRIED FRUITS— Good lota ol Apricots are In demand and firm. Prunes, four sizes, are quotable at 4y z l3 /ic 3* Jb; larger sizes, 6@5V3 m It: smaller sizes, 2%@4c 'r l . It.: Apples, 41/2 C't'ic for quartered. 4iA(S5c for sliced and s@sV2 cfor evaooratea: Bleached" Peaches. 4@6c; Apricots, 6(p.7c fair to choice and 7 V2(giBc for fancy Moor p&?K: Pears, 4@4%c for evaporated halves, S@4c for Quarters and lV2@2c for Inferior goods;.' Plums, 3y2^i4V2C for pitted and IV^^Sc for unpitted; Figs, black, 3c for pressed and lV2@2c for un- i pressed. •.•?..■ .-. . . • ] RAISIXS A^D DRIED GRAPES— RaisIns-4- i -crovvn, loose, are quotable at 4c f* Jb; 3-crown, ; 2V2 C %* lb: 2-crown, 2c fi ib; seedless Sultanas, 3c: seedless Muscatels, "_'c; 3-crown London layers, $1 35^145.^ box; clusters, $2 25@2.76: Dehesa clusters, $2 50: Imperial clusters, 935; Dried Grapes— li/2<*i : f : 1b../ i ■' ■-'■■. '"■ — Chi-sinuts are quotable- at 'C@7c «1 Ib; Walnuts, for paper-shell and softshell, and 6(d.7c f* tt> for hardshell; Almonds, '2@2y 2 c for hard shell, s@6c f, ib for softshell, and — for paper .shell: Peanuts, s@6c for Eastern and 4@4y s c for j California: 1 Hickory Nuts, 5(3.6c; Pecans,; tic for rough and 8c for polished: Filberts, B@9c; Brazil- Nuts, 7!<j~ "- c ; B>; Cocoannts, $4 50@5 50 100. • IIONEY— Comb, 9fgjlli/»c: water-white extract ed, 6y 2 ®7c ; light amber extracted, 5y 2 @6y4C; dark amber. s@sy2C 1* Ik- .--: . . . ••:-. ,-■..- :* ,-v ■-■%■- ■'■-; BEESWAX— 2S@27c ft lb. , PROVISIONS. ' CURED I MEATS— The outward movement con tinues good at firm 'prices.* Bacon,' By @9c " lb for heavy and 9%c f>. l lb for light medium: 10c": for light, 10y 2 @llc »■„ for extra light and 12@14c ft Ib for sugar -cured: Eastern Sugar-cured Hams, 12y 2 c: California Hams, 11^4c; Mess Beef . sl(d>~ 50 %<bbl: extra mess uo. $B®B 50 ; family no, $1 0@1 1 : ; extra prime Pork, $10_u0 50; extraclcar, $17 60rtj 18 t* bbl; mess, $16.-16 60%) bbl; Smoked Beef, 9y 2 @ioc^ m. ; -. ••. ■-;■-. -. : „- -.-' LARD— Eastern.- tierces, .is quotable at 6%@ 7c t* lb for compound and 8 3 4 c%i lb for pure; pails. 9y 2 c; California tierces, 6c for compound and 8c lor pure: half-bbls, By±c; 10- lb tins, BV_c it lb; do 6-Ib,9c %. lb. '/- COTTOLBNK— 73,4 c_i „in tierces and 8y 2 c » _in 10- lb tins. _______: HIDES, TALLOW, WOOL AND HOPS. HIDES - AND (-'_. INS— Heavy salted MM, 7@ 7 „c;niedium,6@6Va'-;light,6_6Vac; Cowhides, 6_ .-/. :■:■ ' - '-....■ '. ,1..».TL THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1895. 6%c; salted Kip, 4y_@sc; salted Calf, 7@Bc: salted Veal. 6@7c: dry Hides, usual selection, lo%@ lie; dry Kip,-9c; dry Calf, 12@13c; prime Goatskins, 2u(s36c each ; Kids, sc: Deerskins, good summer, 80c 1* lb; medium, 15@25c; winter. lO_tl 6c; Sheep skins, shearings, 10(ii!20c each: short wool, 25® 36c each: medium, 30(545c each; long wool, 40@ 60c each ; Culls of all kinds about %c less. .TALLOW— No. • 1 rendered. 4%<i;j4u>c: country Tallow, 4@4%c; refined, 6c: Grease, 3@3y 2 c '# lb. WOOL— Quotations for -the ■: Spring; clip are: Choice Northern,, 10@llc; San Joaquin, year's staple, 6®7c i* II,; do. seven months'. 6@Bc; Cala veras and Foothill. 8 __10c. HOPS— Choice, 6%@7c; common to good, s@6c .^ lb. i ■ ''' [ 'y-'y GENERAL MERCHANDISE. BAGS— Calcutta Grain Bags, 4 1 , _@43/ 8 c spot and 43/ B @4%c for June and July delivery; Wool Bags, 24@26c. COAL— Wellington Is quotable at $8; New Wel lington. $8: Southfield Wellington, $7 50: Coos Bay, $5; Wallsend, $7 50; Scotch, $8; Brymbo, $7 50; Cumberland, $13 50 in bulk and $15 in sks; Pennsylvania Anthracite Egg, $12; Welsh Anthra cite Egg, $9; Cannel, $8; Hock (Springs, Castle Gate and Pleasant Valley, $7 75_8; Coke, $12 In bulk and $14 in sacks. RlCE— Chinese mixed, new crop, $3 30; old crop, S3 16; No. 1, $3 6,V,_3 75; extra No. 1, $4@4 25; Hawaiian. $4 50; Japan, $3 70@3 75 $> ctl. ' SUGAR— The Western Sugar Refining Company quotes, terms net cash: Cube, Crushed, Powdered and Fine Crushed, all 63/ 8 c; Dry Granulated, 4%c; Confectioners' A, 4%c; Magnolia A, 4i/_c; Extra C, 4y 8 c; Golden C, 3%c; D,35/_c; half barrels %c more than barrels, ana boxes %C more. SAN ERAN CISCO MEAT MARKET. Hogs are weaker, but no lower. Beef, Mutton and Lamb show - no further chance. ' Wholesale rates for dressed stock from, slaughterers are as fol lows ■'■ •':'',;{'';'_. "■■'. . Vzf'-^V'y :Vvi*''-'"-'i : { BEEF— First quality, 5%@6c: choice, 6y 2 c $ lb; second quality, 4%@5c; third do, 3@4c f, lb. VEAL— Large, 4(<s6c: small s%@tic <_l lb. MUTTON— Wethers, sc; Ewes, 4@4y c # lb. LAMB— Spring. 6@7c p lb. PORK- Live Hogs 3@3%c for soft, 4%@43 4c _} tt> lor hard and 3% _. 4o "4> _ for feeders; dressed do, 6<_.7c %4 tt>. _. , • v_y_ _,"■_ ■FAMILY RETAIL MARKET. Butter and Eggs are cheap and plentiful. The Meat market Is kept well supplied with all varieties. Fish Is also in good supply. Hens are offering in very large quantities, but young Poultry is rather scarce. v ■- r ■ Strawberries are now coming in every day, but are still dear and not very good. Arrivals of sea sonal Vegetables are about average. New Potatoes are coming in freely. Following is The Call's regular weekly retail price list: ■ '-.'" COAL— FKR TON". • -.•'."•."' Cannel — ®10 00 1 Wellington. @10 00 New Wei- ' Scotch — (<Uo 00 lmgton.... — @10 00 1 Coos Bay... 7 00® — >'-."..-:'' dairy PRODUCE, era . V"V' : iti Butter, fancy, $ [Cheese, Swiss 25@35 square 35@ — ! Common Eggs t*dzl5 _ — do, %. roll 30<$— Ranch ?<dz. — @20 do. choice 25@ — Eastern Egg 5...... ® — Ordinarvdo 20® — Honey, comb, $4tb. — @15 Cheese, Cal 10i_il2 do, extracted.... 10t_J12 Cheese, Eastern... MEATS— POUND. Bacon 16@17 Pork, fresh —(312 Beef, choice ...12@15lPork, salt... 12 5 . '. 6 do, good 8(a)10iPo.k Chops.. 12® 15 Corned Beef B®-^ Round Steak t_&10 Ham, Cal — <SlslSirloin Steak...l 2y 2 (&15 do. Eastern — fa-lb Porterhouse, do. ..17®'-'0 Lard 12&1 5 Smoked Beet — <g)ls Mutton B@lo l Pork Sausages .... — (o)20 Spring Lamb 10® 1 2 , Veal 10® 12 POULTRY AND GAME. Broilers, each.. 60._ 75' Ducks, each... 75® 85 Hens, each 60® 75 Geese, each 1 50&2 00 Young Roost- Pigeons, "r pr.. 60S 66 ers, each 75® 90 Rabbits, $ pr„ 25® 40 Old Roosters,' |H are, each '20to — each 60@ 75 Wild Geese, ea. 25_ 30 Turkeys, %» _.. 15® 181 •y'ty) FRUITS AND 3JUTS. ''k.Vy- Apples, "$ Ib. 4® BiOrange3, ■ d0z....15®40 Almonds, %* _.....20@25;Raisins, _* lb sftj.ls Bananas, %* doz... 15®20 Strawberries, Cocoanuts, each,..lo®l2j %* basket 15@25 Lemons, V- doz....2s®3siWalnuts, «i lb 15® — Limes, "$ doz 1 5® — ■ :V-:i" .VEGETABLES. V'XlVi'" Asparagus, • 1b... sta>lo Unions, ft lb 2(a) 3 Artichokes,'sdoz..2O@so ( ok r,i, dry, ?_.... — ®25 Beets, vi doz 12@lfi Peppers, dry %* 1b..20®25 Beans, White, )l lb.— ® s,Pepper .green, ft lb. — ® — Colored, %< 1b.... 4® 5 Parsnips, "$ d0z....15®20 Lima, '^ ft big 6 Potatoes, $ ft 2® 3 Cabbage, each 5® S, Do, New, %i 1b... 4® 5 Cauliflowers, each. MB 6 Do, Sweet, $ lb.. 3® 4 Celery, 9 bunch. . . 5® — i ßadi9hes,f»dzbchs.ls®2o Cucumbrs."t»dz,loo@l 50 Rhubarb, # 1b..... 4® 6 Cress, fl bunchs.2o@26lSage, f! tt* ...2E>®3s (Garlic, _% tt> B®loString Beans,?* 1b.20®25 Green Peas, t» lb.. 6® BMarft Squash, f: tb —(a! 5 Lentiis.f^lb 66$ «T livinc, f, lb ..20®30 Lettuce, ft doz.,..ls®2oTurnips, fi d0z....15®20 Mushrooms, ?. Tomatoes, ft lb 15®20 ■-"'.,'•'■' FISH— PER POUND. * Barracuda :.10®12 Sea Bass — (ffi — Carp B®loSmelts — ©10 Codfish B®loSolee B®lo Flounders 6® 8 Skates, each....... — fa.lo Halibut Ha 10 Sturgeon — ® — Herring 6® STomcod ...12@15 Kiugflsh _.... Br-.loiTrout. 20®25 Mackerel — (a, — IClams, ft gal... — ®76 do, Horse B®lo Do, hardshell, ft Perch B__lo 100 50® — Pompano 60®76,Crabs, each 10® — Rockflsh 12C_15iDo, softshell, ft dz.25®35 Salmon, smoked.. .2o®2s Mussels, ft qrt..,..10@15 Salmon, fresh 10® 12 Oysters, CaL« 100.50® — Shrimps „.... B®lo Do, Eastern, ft dz.25®35 Shad B®lo THE STOCK MAEKET. ; Things were lively in the stock boards yesterday. Large orders were sent In, many of them on Vir ginia City account, and prices advanced sharply under heavy transactions. The heaviest list of sales was that of the noon informal session, as usual. The highest prices of the day were:' Con. Cal. A Va., $3 30; Best A Belcher, 99c; Mexican, 99c; Ophir, .1 90: Sierra Nevada, 95c; Hale A Norcross, 1.1 50; Union, 62c; etc. After the adjournment of the boards the market weakened off, and the close was lower all around, as will be seen below. NOTES. The Mayflower gravel mine has shipped .2000 in bullion. Private letters report a good outlook In the Con. Cal. A Va. The ore output is to be largely in creased, and the ore Is said to be of high grade. The Morgan mill is to be started up at an early date ou an accumulation of ore. - The F. _■;. Belden Mica Mining Company of New Hampshire will pay a monthly dividend of 25c per share on April 15. The Consolidated Stock and Petroleum Exchange of New York has admitted a number of new stocks to the list, including the Daly Mining Company of Utah, the Batopilas Mining Company of Mexico, the Molly Gibson Consolidated Mining and Milling Company and the Argentum Juniata Mining Com pany of Aspen. Colo., and the Portland Mining Company and the Isabella Mining Company of Cripple Creek, Colo. BOARD SALES. Following were the sales in the San Francisco Stock Board yesterday : • KEfItJUB MORNI.ro SESSION— 9 :30. 1050 Andes. „3o|3oo C P0int. ..65i200 0ph1r... 1.80 200 8e1cher... 69200 G AC... 54 1100 1.85 700 11 A 8... .97100 561.800 overmn..l4 1000 96.100 05300 Potosi ....57 50 Bodie. . . 1.351200 57:600 Savage. ...40 100 8u11i0n... 23750 HAS,... 1.451100 39 100Caledonia.l0 750Mex 95i100 S B A M.. 350 Ch011ar... 57 100 961200 22 150 ....... 59500 ........... .981600 Nev.... 90 200 .............581100 97|150 91 700 CCAV. .3.20200 0cc1dt1....12|800 Union 60 1600 3Vi ! 50 ........... .13150 V Jacket. s7 AFTKRSOON" SESSION— 2 :30. 100 Alta 25 100 HAN.. 1.45H00 Savage... .88 400 Ande5.... 29 100 Kentuck .06 100 Scorpion..os 100 Belcher. ..69450 Mex ..... .98 100 S I. A M..22 300 B A 8.... 99 200 Occidntl . . 12 200 S Nev . . 93 300 Bodie... 1.10 150 Ophir... 1.90,500 Union C..62 50 Ch011ar. ...571300 overman. 15200 Utah .....08 660 CCAV...3.30100 16200 V Jacket.6B 400 C P0int.. .67 100 Potosi ....66;200 ..............69 350E8A8..0_'150 . .....67 l Following were the sales In the Pacific Stock Board yesterday. ," "'- _ - _ REoui-AR SESSION— IO 500 Alpha ... .09 200 Challng C.46 650 Ophlr. . .1.80 200 Andes. :..2*lo() ('hollar. . .57 650 ..........1.85 200 ...'.........29160 .....:.. 58100 .......1.87V-. 200 .30 100 C P0int. ..65200 17/ 8 300 8e1cher. ..69300 . .......... .64'300 . .. .... . 1.90 100 B A B. ...88 200 .....66 450 .....;.1.82Va 100' 93,300 O A C. . . .54 100 Overran. ..l 4 350 951350 HAN. .1.40200 Potosi 57 250 97550 ..........1.45 600 Savage. 200 iiodte 1.32 1/2 100 Justice... .lsl2oo ......... .. .39 200 8u11i0n... 22 100 Mex. ..:.:, 92,200 Seg Bel.. .21 100 C C AY.2.95 50 ............97 100 Sierra 90 300.. ...... ..3.00 200.. 98100 91 100 3.05 ......... ..95 200 ;;.... ...... 93 500 ..3.lo|2ooOccldtl... .131000 ...........92 100 .......... Si/ 8 1200 ........12y 2 600 Union C..55 300 ......... .3.151200 Ophir... 1.70 ............58 650 ........ 3.20 200 1.67 Vis 200 V Jacket.. 100. .... 3.22y_!100 ......... 1.65) i-:AV AFTERNOON SESSION— 2:3O. " •- - 100 A1ta.... . . .2&350 CO-V2.72 1/ 2 |300 Mexican.. 9B 200 Andes.... 3l 350 ...........3Vi 500 .....:. ....97 100 ...... ...'".. 301700 3.30 500 Occ.dtl.l2y_. . 50 8e1cher....69 150 ..:. 3.32 V 2 100 0ph1r... .1% 100 ....... :.... 70 750 3.35 1200 1.90 100 8A8. ...991100 .......3.22V 2 ...... 1.95 700. ........;'.9S 100 0 P0int... 67 100 1.85 200 80die... 1.35:300 .............66 300 S B A M..22 300 (hollar. . .67 600 HAN ..1.45 100 V Jacket..69 -.60 Confid . . .6011 Justice... . 15' ■ _ - - CLOSING QUOTATIONS. I C • ; DAY, April 12— 4 p. 'ti."V Bii'.AsktKl., - Mid.Asked Alpha Con 09 10 Jackson-.....; — 35 A1ta............ 24 '''26 Ju1ia. .......... 05 07 Ande5.......... : 30 31|Jn5tice... ...... 14- "16 8e1cher:....... — 70Kentuck. ...... 04 06 Best ft Belcher. 97 • 99 _ady Wash.... — 04 BentonCon — , 60'Mexlcan. ;..... .97 99 80die.... ......1.35 1.40M0n0 — 26 Bullion... 22 23—.. Diablo 20 - — Bulwer .-16 — Occidental.'..*.. •' 12 . x-» 13 Caledonia 09 10 Ophir v. .v...;. 1.85 1.90 Challenge Con. 49 SOOverman ::...., 15 16 Ch011ar......... 66 68 P0t05i.......... 65 '56 'Con. Cal. A Va. ".20 3.30 5avage. ........ '37 39 Con. Imperial. 01 04;Seg. Belcher... 21 22 Confidence.... 1.50 —Scorpion..:.... 05 — Con. New York. — 06 Sierra Nevada. 93 94 Crown Point... 66 67jSilver Hi 11.:... 03 ' — EastSierraNev — 05 Syndicate...... — 05 Exchequer..:.. ,03 OSjUnion C0n..... 62 , 63 Eureka C0n.... 80 —Utah..'.........' 07 09 Gould A Curry. 65 '67 Yellow Jacket. '67 69 Hale AN 1.45 1.50 ' ' " _ STOCK AND BOND EXCHANGE. . FRIDAY, April 12— 2r.M. bombs..' ma. Asked.', Sid. Asked. C 8 4s coup..llli4 — i Banks, Commercial- US 4s rej_... llli/k '■'—'■ B_TC. — ; — 1 Ca!-stCbless.lo9i/4 — lAnglo-Cttl ... 5634 — r I Cal Elecß 68.107 ■> ; — Bank of Ca1.:219 ' 223 i CntraCWSs. 99V 102 CaISD&TCo.. 40% I — ■:'■■ Dpnt-stex-cp 88 ,91 i FirstNationl.l77Valßs E»lsnL_tP 65.108 — Grangers.... — — F_CH 8865.104 — LondonP_A.l23 126y I Geary 107 — . _ondon_SP. — 32 _osAnt.__6s. 97y 3 — Merch Ex.... 15 — Do,Unted.6s.lol 103 Nevada...... — —-. : Mkt-stCble6sl22 — ißatherßCo.. — — NevCNgRSs.- — 110 Banks. Savings— . NPCEK6s.IO2 — GerS_LCo.l7s(i — NBy Cal 6s. 97 .' 10iy 2 HumbS_L.looo — NRyCalss. — — Mutual...... '37 — Oak Gas ss; .102% — isl'"Sav_:nlon497i/_BO2y 2 Do, 2d lss ss. 1003. — JHavcfe Loan.. 110 150 . 1 Oranltrus6s..ll6i4ll7 Security ':— -32 5 PacKollM6s..loiy a — ,j Union Trust. — 760 I Do. 2diss6s. — . — Street Railway— J P&O By 65.110 120 California — 107i_ ! P&Chßv6s. 95 100 Ceary-st — -90 Pwl-st.KK6s.llO — Market-str... 37% — i 1 Beno. WB<feDlo2 105 Oak,Sl_iHay — 100 RlverWCofa — 100 Presidio ..... 7% — . SF_NPRRSs .-■— ' 100 Sutter-st — — ' bPKKAri/. 6s BIV2 87 i Powder— • ' SPBRCal6s..lo7_ — • Atlantic D... 14 17 \ SPRRCaISs.. — 88 California.... 75 ~,V Do. 1 consul — 90 > Giant 14 1-% SPBrBCaiGs, — 86 [Judson.. — ■.—-■ SVWater6s..l2o 12034'Vig0nt....... 45c ' 75c SV\Vater4s... 9734 98' _ Miscellaneous— : Stkin(;_E6sloo ' 105 BlklX'oalCo. — ... *« SunstT&T6s. — — CalCotWL—-.. — — , Sutter-5t855.109 . — caiin-vDocit. — ~ ! VisaliaAVC6sloO 105 Edison LlgbU 97% 981 A stocks— Water GasConAssn. . — ■ — . . Contra Costa. 53% 57 ;HawC_SCo.. 5V 3 «V_ : Marin C 0 ..... — 60 HutchSPCo.: 12%- 13 San Jose :. — 100 i.ludsouMfgC. — — SprlngValley 98 98y4|Mer E.xAssn — 105 Gas— OceanlcSSCo — 25 j Capital _ — 50 PacAuxlTA. 12 1 Central ...... 95 ' — IPac Borax... 99 — OakGL_H. 46 — Pacl&NCo. — 30 1 Pac Gas Imp. 86% 87% Pac Roll Mill 20 — Pacific Bight. — 50 Part PaintCc. — 9 SanFrancsco 72s_ 72% PacTransCo. — 27 Stockton — 30 l_T_fCo — 60 Insurance— |SunsetT_T.. 20 — I FlremansFd.l6s — UnltedCCo.. — 25 ■ j Sun — 78 •Vl'iVs,-. MORNING SKSSION. . i . Board— 6o Edison Bight' & Power' Co, 98 _11 I Giant Powder Con, 1414; 6 Hutchinson S P Co, j 12%; 26 do, li-Syi. >:*;" .It . AFTERNOON SESSION. Street— S V 6% Bonds, 120%. WITCHCRAFT OF SALEM, It Was Introduced Into New England by West Indian Blacks Professor John Fiske of Harvard Tells How the Epidemic Spread. Professor John Fiske of Harvard College occupied Rev. Jenkin Lloyd Jones' pulpit at All Souls' Church yesterday morning, delivering a discourse on "The Witchcraft of Salem Village," says a recent issue of the Chicago Tribune. . Professor Fiske traced the history of witchcraft from the year 1670, when the provincial parliaments of Normandy condemned a dozen women to be burned and who were pardoned by Louis XIV, much against the will of his people. Then he spoke of the time when early New | England was aroused by the delusion, : when, the people : had a firm belief in its reality. In the course of his remarks he said : "Unquestioning belief in the reality of witchcraft has been shared by the human race from prehistoric ages to the end of the seventeenth century. There are tribes of men whose minds are so little developed that travelers have doubted the existence of religious 'ideas among them, but none have been found so low as not to have some notion of witchcraft. One of the most primitive, shapes which the relation of cause and effect assumed in the savage mind is the assumed relation between disease or death ami some malevolent per sonal acencv. The conceptions of natural disease and natural death are attainable only by civilized minds. To the savage all death is regarded as murder, either at the hands of a superhuman power that must be propitiated or at the hands of some human being upon whom vengeance may be wreaked. "Among educated people the belief of witchcraft is practically extinct. What has caused this remarkable change in our mental attitude toward witchcraft? Surely not argument. Some powerful cause has made our minds insuperably inhospitable to such sort of evidence. That cause is the gigantic development of physical science since the days of Newton and Descartes. The minds of civilized people have become .familiar with ' the conception of natural law, and that conception has simply stifled the old superstition as clover chokes out weeds. It has been observed that the ex istence of evidence in favor of witchcraft closely . depends upon the disposition to believe it, so that when the latter ceases the' former disappears. Accordingly; we find no difficulty in understanding the uni versality of the belief until quite modern times. The disposition to believe was one of ,the oldest inheritances of the human mind, while the capacity for estimating evidence in cases of physical causation is. one of the very latest and most laborious acquisitions." '..- . , ' -Speaking of the introduction of witch craft into Salem village; Professor Fiske stated that in 1692 there were circnm stances which favored the outbreak jof such an epidemic in that place quite apart from any personal influence. War liad broken out with Louis XIV and had been going badly with the colonists; the great expedition to Quebec had come home crestfallen with defeat; the devil was be stirring himself, the fuel for an explosion had been gathered and it needed but a spark. This was provided by the servants, children and their visiting playmates of the household of Samuel Parris, the min ister of Salem: village. Parris had come to Xew England from the West Indies and had brought with him two blacks, one male and one female, the latter assuming to be the wife of the former. She taught the children and servants how to enter trances, and _ from : her they soon learned to believe in palmistry and fortune-telling and became quite proficient in talking gibberish. This hag was known as Tituia, and it was not long before the young girls of the minister's household, over whom she seemed to wield such an influence, became the talk of the village. In fact, they came to be known as the "afflicted children."; Professor Fiske added : ...","' "„ .' ." "We may . suppose that the minister's West. lndian servants began by, taking ' Indian, medicine and teaching its tricks j to his daughters and niece; then the girls of their acquaintance would naturally be come interested and would seek to relieve the monotony of . the winter; evenings by taking past in the performances. Their first motives are most likely to have been playful, but there was . probably ra, half shuddering sense of wickedness, a slight aroma of brimstone; about the "affair, which may have; made ,it , more at tractive. I feel sure that sooner or later some -of these ' girls would . find *; them selves losing' control over , their spasms; and : thus getting more than they bargained for would deem themselves be witched by Tituia and John Indian,' and, especially "if | they found j themselves taken ! to task by their parents, the dread of pun ishment—perhaps of church discipline," wherein Parris was notably severe— be sure to make, them ; blame the Indians in order to ; screen themselves. V- If : Cotton Mather's preferred methods had been fol lowed the affair would have been hushed, and "the girls, isolated < from each other, would have j been , subjected .to | quiet and soothing treatment, and thus, no doubt, it all would have ended. ".; But when Parris made the affair as public as possible, when learned doctors ; of i divinity and medicine came and watched these girls and declared them bewitched, what more was needed to convince their young minds that they were really in that -dreadful ';, plight? Such a belief must of ? course have added to their hysterical condition. Naturally they ac cused Tituia. , "Such an explanation accounts for . the fact \ much ' better than \ any such violent supposition as ! ' that ' of jj - conscious y con spiracy. - Our . tit attitude i of mind toward it is pity for all concerned, yet the feel ings of horror and disgust are quite legiti mate,. for ' the , course" of the affair twas" practically, the same 'as if _it had been shaped by deliberate and conscious malice. It is on the whole the most gruesome epi sode of "American history. Few instances of the delusion - have • had the ; details 'so fully, preserved. It 'J. was ]■% the % last witch epidemic recorded in the history of fully civilized nations. 'It looms up in our mem-, ory and ; is sometimes alluded to as if it were in some way a singular or exceptional instance :of superstition. : Yet in Europe only a few g years earlier the hanging of nineteen persons for witchcraft in a single village and in the course of a single sum mer would have called forth no special comment; The case of ; Salem village may help us to form" some dim conception of the stupendous wickedness that must have been wrought by the terrible delusion Jin the'days of the. "stalwart -Prime when vic tims by the hundred were _ burned at the stake, and we cannot be too grateful that the gaunt specter has at length been exor cised forever." * HOTEL -AERIVALS. PALACE HOTEL. R Effey, Santa Cruz Sirs J F Dunne, Cal }■; I' McCornack, Salem JI) Sproul. Clii<"o F T Baldwin-, Stockton Mrs Baldwin, Stockton .T WiUker. Portland Mrs Walker, Portland J F Crank, Los Angeles S A Gibson, Kalamazoo O D Taylor, Tlie Dalles Flt Appletou, X V B A Wanlell, Gilroy (i F FferjfUßOn & w, N V S Cutler # \v, Boston J McNeil, Stintu Cruz T H Leggett, Bodie W A Graham, Stanford Mm W Caldwell, Alamda H J O'Neill, Minn C A O'Neill. Wis H A Pearsons & W, Chgo Fit Daniels, Worcester P B BCcCabe, Ariz W B Taylor, St Paul C M Dickinson, Fitchbrg Mrs R 3 Curry, Dlxon Miss F Allison, Fltcliburg S B JMkius, Wash H W Bret hour, Canada Mrs Elkins &m, Wash Ci P Case, Detroit D Elkins, Wash Miss J Fisher, Detroit R Elk-ins, Wash Miss B Garl, Philadelphia B Elkins, Wash J A Weir, Los Angeles X Klklns, Wash W J Kirk, Kansas City Miss E M Bird, Wash W Harris, N V L P Munroe, Racine W 31 Ruth, N V J MoLelland, Chicago F M Brown, N V Mrs O 11 Morgan Mrs W Anderson, N V M Hale & \\, Albany C C Howes, Miles City GRAND HOTEL. W H de Valln.Sn Rafael C W Pendleton, Los Ang T L Harrington, Seattle R H Brown & wf, Vallejo P Hortou, Alameda J Lodge, Sacramento L R Vance, Vallejo Mrs E Bary, Eureka Miss L Nelson, Olema P McDonald, Trin Center C Teague & wf , Fresno A A Reardon, San Jose J H Millzner. Tucson J M Quilter. Seattle O W Curtis, Seattle O F Arwood, Stockton P A Buell & wf.Srockton (i Williams, Palo Alto l: W Bender, Bennont T McLane, Angels Mrs E \V Risley, Fresno M J Kurtz, Chicago J B Campbell, Fresno J D Biddle, Ilant'ord A Russell, IjOs Angeles E B Cann, San Jose E C Houseworth, Cal Miss F Nason, Aiitioch \v L Witherbee, Sacto J S Maude, Riverside G G Seymour, Hischland N L Kohn, Placerville Q W Kimble, I'lacervlile Mrs F M Rahm, Woodlnd Mrs M Rahm, Woodland C II Bentley, Sacramento LICK HOUSE. . " -_' J B Gordon & Victoria Miss A Wey, Victoria C J V Spratt, Victoria Mrs Ballard _ d, Seattle Mrs WE Miiler_d,Seattle MrsHßHidwick.Tacoma O F Casper, Tacoma 1 Mrs Flummerfelt, Victor Mrs O M Jones, Victoria Mrs Blaiklock, Victoria W 11 Redwood, Victoria A B Robertson, Victoria FMcMullen, Victoria S Bieber, Washington A Metzner, Hamilton F' - A Schneider, College Mrs F M Miller, Fresno Park . .-" T C White, Fresno D B Jackson, Seattle MrsF.Flsher&s, Vacaville Dr Downing _ f, Suisun Miss Ida Gullespi, Suisun LA Robertson, N V N 8 i ierrells, San Jose FA Molyneaux, Ponoma J L Delano, Rockland • J F Seymour, Fresno Miss L J Phillips, Sac Mrs Crawford, Napa - • -yiy-V;- RUSS HOUSE. A J Gootnet, N Mcx HS Williams, Raymond II IC Ward & w, Seattle - _ A Baker & w, Seattle J G M Birch, Tacoma CF Clancy, Seattle .- Mrs M Craston, Seattle H A Transom Tacoma C A Tubbs, Port Costa C F Flempfer Conn G Thompson. Cal - H C Banham, Cal . - »/' ■ J Gillett, Cal, E Graham. Modesto J S Morrison & w, Wash Mrs A D Chittenden, Cal I 11 Buck, Chicago, T W Thompson, 8 Cruz Mrs J-l B Donsmore, Cal Miss F Donsmore, Cal J S Donsmore, Cal CI Willis, Wash Mrs B Tomper, Cal L Llnkes, Cal II Marten, Cal W Watson, Ukiah S Crandle, Sacramento R M Johnson, Ukiah B W Stevens, lowa A Waddell, Santa Cruz W Patterson, Wash . -: y : . ■ ' '"" BALDWIN, HOTEL. /-' =K : : J Conn, Pleasanton N Zlmansky, Sacramento 11 N i>'adbetter<_ w,N- Y Prof O R Gleason, Denver L Heckman <fe w. Den N S Beaver, Albany, N V Ira Beaver, Albany, NY O Schreck,' Albany, N V H Fredrick &w, Reno H Casidv &w, Reno T Bach, NY -.-' A B Dowdell, St Helena E Ricks, San Jose • Wll Norton, Napa Mrs A J Sink _ da, N V A J Frank, Boston G Rothermel, Boston • , 4-:,- f THE CALL CALENDAR. April, 1895. Moon's Phases. 3 April 2, | First Quarter. 7 12 tf * April 9,' Full Moon. 16 " c ■ April 16, Last Quarter. 21 30| April 24, New Moon. OCEAN STEAM Dates of Departure From San Francisco. STEAMER. DESTINATION | SAILS. | PIER. luroua Peru.... .... North Fork. Humboldt... 5c0tia....... •Truckee'.... Columbia... Alee Blnchd Walla Walla Eureka ..... Farallon.... Santa Kosa.. Arago.. P0m0na..... | Weeott...;.. C010n........ I State of Cal i Coos Bay :.. I Umatilla;;:. San Diego..... j 'China & Japan! Humboldtßay Humboldtßay Yaquina Bay.. Portland P0rt1and. ...... Portland ! Vie <fe Pgt Snd 1 Newport ...... j Puget Sound.. i San Diego.:... Coos Bay .. j I Humboldtßay i Eel-River..... I Panama ...... j i Portland...... I Newport ...... | I Vie Pgt Snd I 'Apr 13.11 am Bdw'y 2 Apr 13, 3pm PM SS Apr 13. 9am: Miss 1 Apr 13, '9am Washt'n Apr 18, spm Miss 1 Apr 13, 4pm | Vallejo Apr 14,10 am Spear ; I Apr 15, spm j Vallejo [Apr 15. 9am I Bdw'y 1 Apr 15, tlAMJßdw'v 2 Apr 16.10 am Miss'n 1 Apr 17,11 am: Bdw'y 2 j Apr 17,10 am Va.lejo Apr 17. 2pm I Bdw'y 1 Apr 17, Bam [Vallejo Apr 18,12 m.. [PM S S Apr 1 9,10 am! Spear I Apr 19, Bam Bdw'y 2 Apr 20, 9am Bdw'v 1 STEAMERS TO ARRIVE. S .MEII i "•"ara110n. ."...'.. I Paget Sound ......:. Mice Blanchard j Portland ......'.."....:.... Eureka. Newp0rt. ................ P0m0na.... .... ' Humboldt 8av.....:.... A'ee0tt.. . . . ;.'... I Eel River .* Santa Rosa. San Diego ." Willamette Val. i Mexico Pr0gre50. ..:.... I Panama............:..... Hate of Cal: I Portland J mat ilia ....... { Victoria <__ Puget Sound _rAg0.'. ........ , Coos Bay Areata.-....';:.'..' Coos 8ay........... .003 Bay. : ; ; . : .". Newport/. .' : Crescent City. . . I Crescent City.;.... Jlty of Sydney. j Panama.........:..." Humboldt ...... Humboldt 8ay....'...... C0r0na .". .". ..".'. .'. j Ran Dieg0.'. .'.........:... forth F0rk... .. | Humboldt Bay Vustralia.-. .::... I Honolulu ; April 13 April 13 April 13 April 14 | April 14 j April 15 ; April 16 i April 16 i April 16 April 16 I April 16 April 16 I April 17 April 18 April 18 April 18 April 19 April 20 SUN AND TIDE TABLE. Small. [Large. 4.27r, 1.24 A Mgp a.OOA .mall. 'Large. 7.67p! 8.41 a 9,0'2p 9.36 a .3. 14. .4311.44P ■44' o.ooa HYDROGRAPHIC; BULLETIN. Branch Hydrography Officii, V. 8. N.,"» ' ..'-■ ; ' Merchants' Exchange. , > '.--.• ,';. ;- i". San Francisco. April 12,1895. ) ' The | tlm« -ball •on Telegraph Hill was dropned exactly at noon to-day— c., at noon of the 120t_ meridian, or at exactly 8 p. m., Greenwich time. .:;;-'' : >...;--' - ; •-'-"-.. a. F.I -CHTEIiKR,-- ' ' Lieutenant U. S. N., in charge. SHIPPING INTFUiLIGKNCE; Arrived.' ■ rV-VVVVV FRIDAY, April 12. • | Stmr Greenwood. Carlson, 15 hours from Whites boro; stavebqlts and lumber, to LE White Lumber CO. ,'..'.•:'-.?' ." -.. ■'. :■■■■: > ■:■:■•,:.-■■ >Z~? Br stmr *• Coptic, Lindsay, 25 ' days from - Hong kong,'* via .Yokohama 18 -days 15 hours 44 mm, pass and mdse. to O „ O S S Co. ; . Stmr Homer, Paton, 49 hours from Coos Bay; pass and mdse, to J D Spreckels & Bros Co. Stmr National City, Anderson,* 30 hours from San Diego; ballast, to C A Hooper.* Co. M Stmr Del Norte; Stockfleth. 86 hours from Grays Harbor: pass and . lumber, to E X Wood Lumber Co. :■::■' :':-:■■■.,. -,- ■ - ■;• , -•.- -.- -. ■- :• ■- -,-, ■-. g Stmr Whltesboro, Johnson, 16 hours from Green wood ; lumber, to L E White Lumber Co. t Up river direct; :"> •- -.';•-- •••■.-':' .V- ■'-:' y---:,~ -,--''. .-.-"■ .■■■■* :'::. 1 HB M stmr Nymph, Huntingdon!, 14 days from Honolulu. : I ;.:-•- .- "- .■■'--. ..--. - ■-■.■ .-■,.-. » Schr Reliance, Jensen, 15 hours from Fisks Mill; 8600 posts, 45 cords wood, to R A GUbride _ Co. w Schr Seven Sisters, - Stenbom, 7 days from Coos Bay ; lumber, to Simpson Lumber Co, -- •-• Schr Nettie ■ Sundborg,-; Johnson, 3 days from Mendocino; < 95 M ft lumber, to Mendocino.Lum ber Co.'-' --;-.- * '.*■; ..•"-■''.. '•'.,•.-■•-■ ':.' ■'■.•.-.'.•• '.'- Schr Fannie *Adele,;Murchlson,« 16 days from South Bend 277 M feet lumber, to Simpson Lum ber Co. .• ■/-■-,■■ .-,-■■> -, ■ :'■-.'.-.'■• f/> '''.-.-'.'->" 'v .- '•" " Cleared. • •■-_ ~<V : xViV:v'~V , 'V ,'■•■ -.- . . " ' FRIDAY, April 12. ■ •-' Stmr Humboldt, Edwards, Eureka; M Kalish <_-. Co. --;•,;-...; •,-::-• - : Stmr Afognak, Nlelson, Pyramid Harbor; j Alaska Packers' Assn. - ---■-. if Stmr North Fork, Nlelson, Pyramid Harbor; Chas Nelson. -. .-■■"•- -' < '/;.:< .-■■! ;:: Bark- Alex : ' McNeil, --orgenson, Bristol Bay; 'Alaska Packers* Assn. ,.: , ,•■-■'.-' ?-. P Bark Chas .B.Kenney,. Anderson, Bristol Bay; Alaska Packers' Assn. ; '.- Schr Alice Cooke, PenhaUow, Honolulu ; Welch _Co.; -.■-: \-V-'' v -: ■-;.'.;••' ■";. i-% -Sailed. ■'....':.' .\V]-' .•■"''■ : :.- - : ': ■■"■ FRIDAY, April 12. ' Stmr City of Everett, Bucknam, Comox. „-,. "" Stmr Alcazar, Gunderson. - . « . ..>'■'-"■' ;" Stmr GlDsy.Leland; Santa Cruz. ; Stmr Tillamook, Hansen. ... Br ship Sllvercrag, Thomas, Queenstown... "*■■.' '.'- Schr Rachel, Wilson, Bihlers Point.* •'■■"■ '; Schr Sailor Boy, Petersen, Champerlco. -■'•:-. I : Schr Free Trade. Lund, Navarro. Schr Mary Etta, Wetzel, Hearns Landing. Schr Czar. Hutman, Mazatlan.'; '-■;'-' ':.;.'"' : • Schr Bobolink, Fandricks. Mendocino. • : Schr Mary Buhne, Rainselius, Eureka. Schr James Townsend, "Wilson, Fort Bragg. VyVVyV'- Movements, of Vessels. ' ; I Yesterday the ship Dashing Wave was towed to Berry street and - the schr Marion 'to Fremont street. : '". " . ..'■'-■. -.'-'.'::.■■■'.'.''' .•:■: The stmr Walla Walla was taken to Beale street and the bark sc Allen to the seawall. . The schr Olga was towed to Oakland Creek, the Garden City to - the stream and the J B Leeds to Main street. . :' ' - ■:•'. •.-•.":: ' . To-day. the schr Jessie Minor will -be taken from Mission street to sea and the Alice Cooke from the seawall to sea." - : • ■ -. ' < .■- .'.■• The stmr Walla Walla will be taken from Beale street to the seawall and the bark Chehalis from the Merchants' drvdock to Howard No 2. To-morrow the bark Eureka will be towed from Channel street to sea and the ship Yosemite from Beale street to the stream. .- On Monday the ship Sierra Miranda will tow to Balfour's "and the bark Prussia from Mission Bay to Folsom No 2. ' ~. "■- s ■'.' ' i Charters. The Haw bark Leahl loads mdse for Nicolaefskl. The Br ship Lvderborn is chartered for wheat to Europe, 25s— Is 3d less direct, or option of July loading at 27s 6d— ls 3d less direct. ]) "■',. Telegraphic. POINT LOBOS — April 12-10 p m- Weather clear: wind SW: velocity 6 miles an hour. Spoken. , . VT> Mar 25—16 N. 26 W. Br ship Port Patrick, from Antwerp for Sail Francisco, Mar 30— 30 N 31 W, Br ship Osborne, from Ta coma for Hull. Apr 12—30 miles W of Point Reyes, ship Jabez Howes, hence Apr 9 for Nanaimo. Apr 12—40 miles Wof Noonday Rock, schr Wm Renton, from Seattle for Newport. '.- vi?': *•>' '.'■. I>omestio Ports. UM PQTJA— Arrived Apr 10— Schr Louise, from San Pedro. 11— Schr Una, from San Pedro. MENDOCINO— Arrived Apr 12 — Schr Corin thian, hence Apr 7. GRAYS HARBOR— Arrived _tpr 12— Schr Sadie. from Kodiak. ':■••.'. REDONDO— SaiIed Apr 12 — Stmr Cleone, for Hueneme: stmr Navarro, for San Pedro. . NEWPORT— Arrived Apr Stmr Cosmopolls, from Fort Bragg. COOS BAY— Arrived Apr 12— Stmr Arago, hence Apr 1 0 ; schr Daisy Rowe, hence Apr 6. Sailed Apr 12— Stmr Areata, for San Francisco: bktn North Bend, for San Francisco. CASPAR— Arrived Apr 12— Stmr Caspar, hence Apr 12. ;-v'.- .:'■: -.-'■.".;■• - : . -'■.'-;■--. . FORT BRAGG— Arrived Apr 12— Stmrs Albion and Novo, hence Apr 11. .-: . s>* ASTORlA— Arrived Apr 12— Schr Hueneme, fm Redondo: sehr Letitia, from San Diego, TATOOSH— Passed In Apr 12-Stmr Queen, hce Apr 10 for Victoria and Port Townsend; bark Can ada, hence Apr 6 for Tacoma: Br ship Blairgow rie, from Valpaaalso for British Columbia,' ' Passed out— Ship J B Brown, from Nanaimo for San Francisco: bark Kate Davenport, from Port Blakelcv for San Francisco. SAN PEDRO— Arrived Apr 12— Stmr Westport, •from Fort Bragg; ship Louis Walsh, frm Nanaimo; schr Salvator, from Seattle. >.; Sailed— Stmr Westport. PORT GAMBLE— Sailed Apr 12— Schr Halcyon, for San Francisco. ;■..'>' PORT LOS ANGELES— Arrived Apr Stmr Alcatraz, from Greenwood. yy . : ;./: .'.Foreign Ports. ■'*•'_'* FLEETWOOD— Arrived Apr 11— Br bark Gray con, from Oregon. . • ■■* ■ . - • HULL-Arrived Apr 10— Br ship The Hlghfields, hence Nov 16. FALMOUTH— SaiIed Apr 11— Br ship Arpan more, for Hull. i HAMBURG— Arrived Apr 10— Br ship Kent mere, from Oregon. , IPS Arrived Apr 10— Br ship Siren, from Oregon, - :■*-..' ■'.'.;■ LIVERPOOL— Arrived Apr 10 — Ship Baring Bros, hence Oct 5. Sailed Apr Br ship Laomene, for San Fran cisco. . QUEENSTOWN— SaiIed Apr Brship Clan Galbraith, for Dublin. SUNDERLAND— Arrived Apr 10— Br ship City Of S.Madras, hence Oct 30. HONGKONG— Arrived Apr 11— Stmr City of Pe king, hence Mar 14. YOKOHAMA— Arrived Apr 10— Br stmr Vic toria, from Tacoma.* ;''.."--:' Sailed Mar 19— Br schrs Charlotte G Cox, City of San Diego, |Umbria, Viva, Geneva, .Vera, schr Rose Sparks. 10— Br schr Sadie Turbel. 20— Br schr Agnes McDonald: schrs Ocean Belle, Bow head, M M Morrill. 22— Scbr Ida Etta. 23— Schr Jane Gray. All for a sealing cruise. .;.;-. ; Movements of Trans-Atlantic Steamers. NEW YORK— Arrived Apr 12— Stmr Venelia.fm Stettin, Copenhagen, -etc; stmr Saale, from Bre men; stmr Siberian, from Glasgow. 11 — Stmr Werra, from Naples. • GENOA— Arrived Apr 11— Stmr Kaiser Wilhelm 11, from New York. . BREMEN— Arrived Apr 11— Stmr Trave, from New York via Southampton; stmr Willehad, from New York. QUEENSTOWN— Apr 12-^-Stmr Adri atic, from New York. SOUTHAMPTON-Arrived Apr 12— Stmr Berlin from New York. . NEW YORK— Arrived Apr 12— Stmr Brittanlc, from Liverpool. .... , . - : Importations. MARSHFIELD— Per Homer— sßo tons coal, 14' bxs butter, 4 pkgs blankets, 47 sks potatoes, 1 air brake valve, Ics cond milk, 6 bdls hides. ... • ; -.; • Coos Bay— l pkg mdse, 57,197 ft lumber, Ics mill goods, 1 bdl peits. --. -- - -- GRAYS HARBOR— Per Del Norte— 4 tons sand, 41 pkgs woodwork, 335 Mft lumber. '— - t- "^•»- ~ Consignees. '' Per Del Norte— San Francisco Transfer Co; E X , Wood Lumber Co; R Benney. Per Homer— J D Spreckels & Bros Co; Bandon Woolen Mills; Dairymen's Union ; H Dutard: Ed Weill: Smith's Cash Store; Well man, Peck & Co; W B Sumner & Co; Simpson Lumber Co; Thomas Pascal; Thomas Loughran ; P A Buell _ Co. For Lute Shipping Intelligence See Fifteenth Page. iS, OFFICE FURNITURE Gg| AND FIXTURES. ||£' : gj|y C. F. WEBER & CO., j^S-__- to 306 Post mmm cor. StocVton OCEAN STEAMSHIPS. PACIFIC COAST STEAMSHIP COMPAQ DISPATCH STEAMERS .'ROM SAN AsA Francisco for ports in Alaska, 9 a. m. ,___£££_[ April 5, 20. May 5, 20, June 4, 9, 19, 24. . . For British Columbia and Puget , Sound ports, April 6, 10, 16, 20, 25, 30, and every fifth day thereafter. - - "• ••.._*>:,. For Eureka, . Humboldt . Bay, steamer Pomona, every Wednesday at 2 p. m. For Newport, Los Angeles and all way ports, April 3, 7, 11, 15, 19, 23, 27, and every fourth day thereafter, Ba. m. ' For San Diego, stopping only at Port Harford, Santa Barbara, Port Los Angeles, Redondo (Los Angeles) and Newport, April _, 5, 9, 13, 17, 21, 25, 29. and every fourth day thereafter, at 11 a. m. For ports in Mexico, 10 a. m., ,25th of each month, steamer Willamette Valley. & ■: t' Ticket Office— Palace Hotel, 4 New Montgomery street. GOODALL, PERKINS _ CO., General Agents, . 10 Market st.. San Francisco. OD & l_3 TO PORTLAND _.___££, 1-1. AND ASTORA. STEAMSHIPS DEPART FROM SPEAR- street wharf at 10 a. m. every five days, con- necting at PORTLAND with direct rail lines to all points in OREGON, WASHINGTON and IDAHO. State of California sails March 30, April 9, 19, 29. Columbia sails April 4, 14, 24. Until further notice rates will be REDUCED to «13 CABIN. , -. *6 STEERAGE. For through rates and all other information apply to the undersigned. GOODAM,, i'KRKINS _ Co. FEED. F. CONNOB, Gen'l Supts.. - Gen'l Agent. 4 New Montgomery st. 19 Montgomery at. IE CE..ERALE TRA!-SATLA_fTIQIE French Line to Havre. COMPANY'S PIER (NEW), 42 NORTH _«_«* River, foot of Morton st. Travelers by _£__§_ . this line avoid both transit by English railway __f_i - the discomfort of crossing the channel in a small boat. New York to Alexandria, Egypt, via Paris ; first class $160; second class $116. ' LA NORMANDIE, Capt. Poirot. April 13, 6:00 _. _. ; LA GASCOGNE; Capt. Baudelon _......... ;.;.. ILA BbuRGbGNE.'Cap.! Leboneuf. ". . ri . . 2 °.' ._*°° n ! LA CHAMP AGNE.Capt: Lauren. 2 . 7 \.7 00 J ** i' _ur - '" '•••-••••••••"•"••.......May 4, Noon JJ£_T For further particulars apply 'to - ! '•■" ' : ■'_ ''t _ ->' FORGET, Agent, ■-;•-'- No. d Bowling Green, New York av_■,-a^^^ CO •^ Agent^<^^ €Ui.ARD LISE. New York to Liverpool, via Qneenstown, from Pier 40, North Itiver. ». FAST EXPRESS MAIL SERVICE. M Lucania. April 20, 1 £ Lucania, May 18, Noon Etruria, April 27, 8 am] Etruria, May 25. 3pm Campania. May 4. Noon Campania. June 1,11 am Lmbrla, May. 11. 8 a MlUmbria. . __r_ 8. 3pm __? « ?_. _ .-- age I™ and upward; . secona cabin, Woo. $40, $45, according to steamer and accommo- dations. , ; Steerage tickets to and from all parts of Europe at very low rates, g For freight and passage apply at company's office, 4 Bowling Green, New York. . I VERNON H. BROWN <& CO., General Agents. Good accommodation can always be secured on- application to WILLIAMS, DIMOND „ CO..' -Agents, San Francisco. ROYAL MAIL STEAM PACKET COMPAQ. STEAMERS ; LEAVE ASPINWALL ,*>«_» O fortnightly for the West Indies and *___■ Southampton, calling en ' route at Cerbourgh, France, and Plymouth to land passengers. '■-?- i --* • Through bills ! of i lading, iin connection with the Pacific Mail S. S. Co., issued for freight and treas- ure to direct ports in England and Germany.' > ; Through tickets from San Francisco to Plymouth, Cherbourg, Southampton.- 1 First class,- $195; third class, $97 60. . For further particulars apply to FARKOTT _ CO., Agents, 306 California _. ■ ; OCEAN STEAMSHIPS. ; OCEASIC STEAMSHIP COMAIY. .jgßgSS_iß&k_ Coolgardie gold -fields ■ ___^!_r*9^-31-.i (Fremantle), Anstra- JW*!? H O Ki^» *■« rr lia '- 5220 firat Class, A^<^JJ!z3qL UU U * $ 110 steerage. Lowest Jgjjv .j^_Js22^w~r ■ ■ rates • to . Capetown, SCoolgardie gold fields (Fremantle), Austrar lia; 5220 first class, 1 $110 steerage. Lowest rates to • Capetown, South Africa. ' <^_a_v' i ~^__S^P'^ Honolulu and Auck- land Thursday, May . , 2, at 2 p. M. Special Parties to Honolulu, April 27. Reduced 1 excursion rates. "* 1 Ticket office 138 Montgomery street, r 'ivi^oD^nWi omce 327 Market street. [ J. P. SPRECKEi_S A BROS., General Agents. RAI_ROAP TRAVEI,! ! _iS_«oTm CMC RAILWAY CO. 1 Tihuron Ferry-Foot of Market St. San Francisco to San Rafael. WE £?o P v to* « 7 , : °' ~»™< U:o ° A -*-: 13: 35, 1 atll'4np\? :3 ET- M ; T »»rsdays-E._tratri- • and 11:30 m dayS_Extra trips at 1:3 SUNDAYS-8:6o.*0:30, 11:00 am- 1-TO *•<_, 1 . 6:00, 6:20 p. it. ""a.m., ' dv * S.SO, San Rafael to San Francisco. WEEK DAYS-3:25,.7:55, 9:30, 1110 a _r . 12:45, 3:40, 5:10 p.. Saturdays-Extra trl^i ■at 1:55 p. m. and 6:3$ p. m. • a tnp " ■ SUNDAYS— B:IO, 9:40, 11:10 a.m.; 140 s-4.n 5:00, 6:25 p.m. * Wl d ' 40 ' , : Between San Francisco and Schuetzen Park same. schedule as above. ' Leave In effect Arrive ~* San Francisco. • £ovVl San Francisco. . Wekkl Sun- D es.in_Mon ' Son- i Week" Days.) pays, destination. DAYa |.- &AYa 7:40 am:8:00 am| ' Novato, 10:40 AMt 8:50 am: 3:30 pm 9:30 am! Petaluma, 6:05 pm; 10 :30 am 5:10 pm 5:00 pm Santa Rosa. 7:30 PM 6:15 pm - i . Fulton, I 7:40 ami Windsor, 1 10:30 am; Healdsburg, Geyserville, 3:30 pm 8:00 am Cioverdale. 7:30 pm| 6:15 pm; -■ - • • I ~~~\ Pieta, I Hopland _ 7:40 am 8:00 am Ukiah. 7:30 pm 6:15 p_ 7:40 am; ' j 10:30 a 8:00 am Guerneville. 7:30 pm, 3:30 j - ■ - [ 6:15 p_ 7:40 am 8:00 am j Sonoma j 10:40 am 8:50 am 6:10 pm 5:00 pm and 6:05 pm 6:15 pm . | [ Glen Ellen. 1 | 7:40 am 1 8:00 am, __v__t.._.i 10:40 am 10:30 am 3:3QPM;S:OOPMi pebastopoi. | 6;05 pM [ 6;15 pjc Stages connect at Santa Rosa for Mark West Springs. ..;- ;-* .-;: ! : •:. ; '• . . Stages connect a' Geyserville for Skaggs Springs. Stages connect at P'ieta for Highland Springs, Kelseyville, Soda Bay, Lakeport. Stages connect at Ukiah for Vichy. Springs, Blue Lakes, Upper Lake, Lakeport, Booneville, Green- wood, Orr's Hot Springs, Mendocino City, Fort Bragg, Usal, Westport, Cahto. Willetts, Calpella, I *omo, Potter Valley, John Day's, Lively's, Gravelly Valley, Harris, Blocksburg, Bridgeville, Hydesvilla and Eureka. -.:»■■....- Saturday to Monday round-trip tickets at reduced rates. On Sundays round-trip tickets to all points be- yond San Rafael at half rates. r;V. -. y-, ■ Ticket Offices, corner New Montgomery and Market streets, under the Palace Hotel. :-- : '■ -y H. C. WHITING. . R.X. RYAN, ■■ , . Gen. Manager. Gen. Pass. Agent. \j2r SAUSALITO FERRY. From Jaki-RT 14, 1895. , Leave S. F. WEEK DAYS. Arrive S. T. 7.00 a.m. Mill Val, Boss V_.,Su Rfl 6.45 a.m. 8.00 a.m. • " " " S_n<_tn. T.Joa.m. 9.15 a.m. " " " &45A.M. " . " " 9.35.V.M. 10.30 a.m. '•* " " San Qtn. 10.50 a.m. 11.30 a.m. M " " . - 11.50 A.M. 1.45 p.m. " " " SanQtn. 1.80 p.m. , ".25p.m. " ■". " 3.10 P.M. 4.30P Jl. " " " San Qta. 4 50p.m. 6.15 p.m. •• • ."; " 5.55 p.m. - 6.15 p.m. m " , " . " " -." S»n Qtn. 7.30 p.m. ■ 11.30 p.m. Ross Taller and San Rafael ... 8. 00 a.m. Tomales, Casadero and Way Stations 7.30 p.m. ' |1.45 p.m. Tomales and Way Stations ....... x 10.50 a.m. . _ _1.4ap.M. , . '_ ■■„■•■ " . .-_ _. " t ... "II.SOA.M* ■ - §Except Tuesdays and Thursday.. * ' X Monday only. ■'-.'' ''.'- * Wednesdays and Fridays only. SUNDAYS. .. . . . . . . Ross Taller and San Rafael. 7.40 a.m. 8.00 a.m. Mill Tal., Ross Val., Sin Rfl. , San Qtn. 9.15 a.m. 10.00 a.m. " " '• " 11.15 a.m. 11.30 a.m. " " " " 1.15 p.m. .' I.3OPJU. " " " " ........ Ross Valley, San Rafaf J, SanQtn 2.45 p.m. 3.00 p.m. Mill Val., Ross Tal., San Rfl., Salt Qta. 4.20 p.m. *.30p.M. " " " " 6.55 p.m. 6.15 P.M. " " " .:........ :....;... '*• ** ■ " SanQtn. 7.80 p.m. ' 8.00 a.m. Point Reyes and Way Station* . ..... 7.30 p.m. . -O-'A-fKRN -"ACIKJC' COiIfPANT. "!.'. (PACIFIC system.) .'.*:■■*£&•£: ■ ■ Traisn leave anil nrc doc to arrive al V„yV.i- SAM FKAJi.!K.i:o. • -I.EAVZ — FitOM Ami- 13, 1895. — Aiirtiv_| *6:30.\ San Leandro, Haywardsft Way Bt'ns oTI 5_ 7:«0a Atlantic Express (via Martinez and Lathrop) Ogden & East .' 7:1.1 A) 7:00 a Port Costa and 8enicia......:...... 1 0: 1 ■>_ •7:0O A Peters and Milton ,«7:l.j_» 7:SOa San Leandro, Haywards- Way St'ns 1013 a] | 7:3oa Napa, Calistojra and *.Santa Rcsa ; Vacaville, Esparto, Sacramento, and Redding via Davis ; Martinez • and San Ramon 6:4Spj 8:30 a Nile;-. Sau Jam, Stockton, louo, ''Vi :.-.-' Sacramento, Marysville, Red Bluff : > •' " ; : , '.'" '•S; :• •■ and *Oroville. 4:1.".M 8:»0a Port Costa.Bcnicla and Way Stations «:l.">p| iil:OOA San Leandro, Hay wards- Way St'ns 11:43aj . 0:OOa New ; Orleans lixprcss, Raymond, ' V-- v (for Yosemite). Santa Barbwa, Lot Angeles, Demrnfc El J'aso, New Orleans and East s:lspj 10:00 a San Leaudro, Haywcrds and Niles . . -I : 4s pi Sao Leandro, Haywards A WaySt'cs v 2:43rt 1 :00p Hikes, San Jose and livermore B:<_s.vj *I:00p Sacramento River Steamers. .....'...- *!»:««»pj <tl:3op Port Costa and Way Stations .»:»;.pj . .:t:OOp San Leandro, Haywards- Way St'ns SrJ.'.pj I 4:00p San Lcardro, Haywards -Way St' C:43» 4:00p Martinet, San Ramon, - Benicia, -Vallejo, Napa, Calistoga, El Ver- ~ auo and Santa Rosa ............. 9:lsa' 4 :OOp Vacaville, Wooilland, Kuiglita ' •■•'">_'-• ; -.' ■::'.' - Landing, Marysville, Oroville and Sacramento ................... 11:45a\ - 4:3opNilea. ■ San Jose, Livermoro and I Stockton 7:l3pj « :OOr San Leandro, Haywards & Way St'ns 8:43p) S:OOpLos Angeles Express, Fresno. Ray- ;.r. ; . .;-.t"*_C".' mond (for Yosemite), .Bakersfield, Santa llarbara and I, os Angeles. . I_:l3a. SiOOp Santa Fr Route. Atlantic Express J '■'■-■' for Mojave and East '. 10-.1!. a) _:30p European Mail (via Martinez and Stockton) Ogden East 10:13 a fi:OOp Ilavivards, N'iltsnnd Wan Jose 7:4.-.vi }6:00p Vallejo ......: 18:43p U 6:00p Oregon Express (via Martinez and Stockton) Sacra— Maryavillo, * 'Redding. Portland, I'ugot , Sound > V - aud East. •••:•••_._;•• 1 0:43 A.. 7:OOp San Leandro, llaorards&^ay Stm lf}:.»Op 9:<M»p Sanl*andro,Hayw_'dstWaySt'Ji9 ItJ2:oo.v! ttllzlgp SanLcandro,Hftywaril3-^ay St ns ««:15__| ' SANTA: CHtlg UIVMON (.>nrro<T t.augcj. j 17:43 a Sunday Excursion for Newark, fcan Jose, Los Catos, Felton and Santa ; .*yy .'--•■ Cruz ;—__! ... 8:0S * 8:1 3a Newark. Ce.iterv;il.^ : in.tow.Felton, Bonld.rCreck,SaiitaCruzandWay . ''''Stations Bl3or> •B:a3p Newark. CeiYterville, Sail .Joso, .New Almaden Felton, Boulder Creek, Santa Cl — I and Principal Way Stations.. V?H*', .V?H*' 4:45p Newark, Sail Joso, Los Gatos... »:-'.Oa COAST. IUVIMON (lliirii A Towiiseuil Sis.) '■ «:43a Sau JfrvTNtiW Almaden and Way, . ) 5tati0n5......... '.. " > :45_»i ' •:I»aHbo Jose, 'ires Piuos, Sauta Cruz, ' Pacilie Grovo, I'aso Robles, .Han Luis Obispo and : Principal Way Statious..... 7:oSpj 1O:40a San Jose and Way Stations "»:<)0i» 11:15 a Palo Alto and Way Stations 3:30p •a:2oe Han Jose, Gilr.y, Tres Piuos, Santa . Crux, Salinas, Monterey and Pacilie v ;« : ? Gr0ve ........:....:..............'. *IO:40a. • «8:SOp San Jose and Principal Way Stations 17 a ' *4:23pPa10 Alto ami Way Statious *8:0__ 5:10p San Jose ami Way Stations.... *S:1»a ■ 0:30p Palo Alto and Way Stations 0:33 a. f11:43p Palo Alto and Principal Way Stations 17:38p . CREEK -ROUTE FERRY. .l-rom SAR FRANCISCO— Foot of Market Street (Slip 8)— •7:00- 8:00 0:00 *10:00 11:00 a. . •12:30 - - U'-OO ' *2:00 '-'. 3:CO •*:00 " B.Otf *6:COi'.M. ■' ' Pram OAKLAND— of Broadiray.— *6:00 *7-oo 8:00. .*._.. 10:00 *ll:0O. A.M., 112X0 •12:30 '■'--'■ 2:00 «3:20 . 4::0 *S:CO p.m. A for Morning. .. , . P for Afternoon. . ! * Sundays excepted. .' .-.-"I Saturdays only. § Thursdays only. I Sundays only. . It Mocday, Thursday and Sat- v nights only. ATLANTIC m PACIFIC RAILROAD. r_> SANTA FE ROD .E. rpRAINS ' LEAVE AND ARRIVE AT BAN J- Francisco (Market -st. Ferry) : * < D ai_v. } WAR CrI 11, 1895. ~ " { jg«J" -6:00 p.. Fast Express via M0jave..;..... 10-15 a 8:00 a.. Atlantic Express via Los Angeles'" 6-45 p 1 - Ticket Office— .50 Market st., Chronicle bud* tog, S.F. "-" :,- '. c. h. SPEERS, uu . vl ' ' ■Ass., Geueral Pjiasenger _se__t»__