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Shipping News and Gossip of the Water Front Fire on Steamer Curacao Defies Steam and Burning/Cargo is Jettisoned \u25a0XVhen the hatch cover was taken off th>« ateamer" Curacao's fore hold early yes terday morning it was found that there was- still fire among the cargo. v The -fire was first discovered about 1:15 o'clock a.m. Monday, when the liner was at sea heading for this port. Steam was turned into the hold, but while it held the flames in check," the steam did \u25a0not extinguiish the fire. The hatch Was kept closed all of Monday, with steam pouring in continuously all day and all night until early yesterday morning. When smoke told of fire still there the steamer was towed from the wharf and anchored In midstream, where the hatch cover was taken off and the burn ing b&les of hemp thrown overboard. It was the work of a very few min utes to clear the hold of the bales of fiber into the heart of which the flames had, burned their way. The damage Gone by the fire to the cargo was com paratively slight. The steam ruined a shipment of pinoche. As far as can be found out the vessel itself suffered no harm that cannot be covered up with a coat of painL After the burning bales had been thrown overboard the Curacao returned to the wharf and be gan discharging what was left of the Shipping; His O\\ a Crew Captain Spivey, master of the British ship Pythomene has refused to pay bWod money to the sailor trust and is shipping his own crew. The blood money now amounts to about $50 a ; tnan. The skipper who pays it usually is given a liberal percentage as his personal commission, and it is this .willingness on the part of the foreign skipper to make money for himself at his owner's expense that makes the <-s&llor business possible. Captain Splvey has refused to pay the blood money, not wanting any of it himself, and is engaging the men direct. He will have a full cargo in a day or two, . In addition to having caved his owners '?300 or more and bis 3 0 men the 5200 advance that would have gone to the sailor trust. He will have the satis faction of knowing that the members of his crew are all sailors. City of Topeka Damaged While discharging cargo on Monday afternoon at Oakland long -wharf the steamer City of Topeka was run into by the steam schooner Coronado. The Topeka was struck on the port side forward. The Coronadb cut through the Topeka's gnard and damaged three of the latter's plates. Towed to North Beach The naval authorities at Goat island yesterday towed the raft of Joseph Call, the China basin squatter, who was shipwrecked on Yerba Buena, to Xorth beach, where Call will change his raft back again into a house. Pensacola Leave* Goat Island The. receiving, ship Pensacola has been, towed from Goat island to Oak land lonsr wharf, to make room at the training- station wharf for the new training ship Intrepid. WATER FROST XOTES S. O. Pasqufnucci. the boat builder, has' returned from Italy, after an ab >i?v.-c of- mpnths. • T'.'u: Jcpane«« liner Nippon Maru ar nA<? yoßt.'r<say at Hongkong.'' !>.» FacJfic Mail liner Peru left San i;is*-.Ji!;ic- -3 for this port. • ;il<;i-fj*pts of. lumber yesterday by sea -a!n«ur.t<-i2 to .1.676.000 feet.. \u25a0 Tiic Pad fie Mail liner Manchuria will tie taken off Hunters point dry dock tills week and towed to' the Union iron works, where repairs will' be completed. COAST SHIPPING NEWS Hems of Interest to Mariners v - of the Pacific ' ' PORTLAND. Ore., July '2.— The coastwise lumber shipoienis are* falling off, and that there i< litlie demand for bottoms to rarry buildins •msterial to California at present was illustrated ' tliJs morning vrhen the steam schooner Joban . Poiilscn ws« chartered hy W. T. Carroll to rarry a cargo of wheat from -this port to Port "Th* Portland and Asiatic liner Arabia sailed for Hongkong this taomlng. The Norwegian 6teataer Fian finished disehars "•ing cement thin aftpraoon and will lcave^for * Tucotna' tomorrow mnrnlng;. • -The British bark Jordan Hill Is still In the stream. MfCMM . Pi!ot W. H. Patterson «>UTwJed the river going flown to A*tnri* on . the torpedo boat destroyer John Paul Jonen and found an excollent chan nel of 25 feet at dead low water on the \u25ba <•«»'* *nd bars. J«bn McNulty. snecessor to W. A. Ledhetter la <*h«rKe nt the Irft-al braorh of the hy<3rr»ffraphic «"Bo*-. arriv»Hl here from Potsdam, X. V., this mnroicg* and . Immediately took charre nf the •nffir». MeNulty has' b^f-n conn«vt«»d with thf :<-bllege: <-bllege of <-ngrn«vrtnif of late and. was formerly •in-.th» nnval service."" With a light freight, but Its passenger list •"full. d»c steamer -Alliance arrived here this .morning from Coob Bay, having made the rotnsd trip la Iwu-tbsn a week. The \u25a0rteamor Rnanoie, Captain Dunham,, ar - rived from San Pedro at 7 o'clock this ciornlns, bringing 200 passenpprs. ' Tb« Columbia arrived up this evening. • "nONOLULU, July 2. — The British battleship \u25a0 Mocmoutb, having on board Prince Fushlmi of Japan, who is returning from his trip to Europe, arrived b*r« today from Vancouver. : ". SAN PEDRO. July 2. — The tug Eedondo ar rived this morning irr>m RfMlondo, having In tow <b«> schooner Wlloert L. Smith, Captain Ross, which will discharge the remainder of a lumber •cargo «t this \u25a0f.ort. The scho^ncr'M. Turner. Captain J. W. Manke, arrived this xnorning, six days from Willapa Harbor, with 12.000 nilroad tlm consigned to "'the Southern Pacific railroad company. ... . . The Merchants* independent stoatnship com pany's eteamsblp F. A. Kilburn, Captain M: ' l>elJafl. cleared tonight for San Francisco and way ports with ft good freight list and many ; paf>s*ngers. The. steam Rchtfonem South Bay, Captain Paulson, and the Alcatraz, Captain Frederic ion, finished discharging lumber car?oe» and j cleared today, to reload, the former for Eureka • and "the latter for Greenwood. .' '• The «cnooner fiaflie, Captain Johnson, finished ilischarsring » lumber cargo for the Korckhoff • Oirner mill and lumbw cbopany and vailed in ballast fnr Umrujna river to reload. ' Tbe steamer Blgnal, Captain Sears, will finish . A iacharclnc a lumber cargo tonight and is sched uled to clear tomorrow for Eureka to reload. The German ship R. C. Rlckmers, Captain Walsen. la now out 62 days from Hamburg with 30,000 barrels of . cement ' consigned to James 'Marnird Jr. of I/O« Angeles. - • • ' Tbe schooner M&mir. . Cs ptnln Asmnssen, nas «rriveiJ at Redondo from Oak bay with a cargo of lamber con«igned to wholesalers at that port. The steamship Nome City, Captain Hansea, '•from Astoria, "via San Francisco, and the steam ship - Georg* \u25a0W. Elder, Captain " Jesson, from Portland,, via Eureka and San Francisco, are 'ttue to arrive tomorrow morning. • . - ASTORIA,- July 2."— Th# steam schooner Wand arrived' last evening from San Francisco j aud iiroceeded to . St. -Helens, where it will take a 10. d of • lumber for California. \u25a0, -. .» The Hsxriman liner Colnmbl* arrived 'today from fi»n Francisco with frtignt and passengers, sjkl after dlscharsrinj psrt of her csreo pro-^ c«*ded to Portland. t _, V * V The "steam schooner Kxcclslor r arrived today from Ssn ' FranrtHon and proceeded up . the river ! to load « lumber , cargo for California.". Tbe two masted schooner Lattetla. arrived to. d«y from \u25a0 California.-- »nd wlllgo.-np the river tomorrow to load a cargo^of lumber for Cali fornia. v * \u25a0 \u25a0-''\u25a0-•" '•' •"\u25a0"\u25a0- - '\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0- The steamer Sue H. Klmore has - arrived - here from TUlamook with frHtcat and passomjera. \u25a0* Tt« steamer-'. Csico sailed tonight -for Call fcmla witli a lumber cargo. -' "" The st>iim- BChoonrf .Xewberg- Mllcd- -today, for California with a cargo of . rai Iroad r , 1 1^. Tb* onenwl liner Arabia sailed this .after noon . for • the . orient With .a ' gencr* I cargo."; ,; . Toe ' oil » tank .- steamer -\u25a0 Mavericks \u25a0 departed this \u25a0 *»*nlng for California -. wi tU tbe oil \u25a0, barge Ko. 81 In* tow. . ,-~ Array Transports Tie Bon»i4».l«"«t Seattle! .V -, Tb« ' Boford . •rrlT«d *at Manila Jnne 6. The Crock : uiled from Honolulu June 28 for Th« D!x left Honolulu June 20 for EeatU*. \u25a0 Th« Kllpa trick i«'«t Newport News, Va. Tin Lcftn ttilefl Jose 26 for NagtwU. The Meade in at Xew York. Out of commission. The Inpalls is at Newport Xews, Va.. pairs Sheridan ie »t Mare island undergoing re nnt^on^ulTI 11 IS l 0 |K>rt " Dd Wl " M " forMa - M»a h i?a ThOmBS B * lledi frotn G uflm :June;2B.: June;2B. for The Warren Is in port. , V. TLe Overdue IJat !n^ r! V Xh ™ llll) mism - "IW> days from Caleta Co losa, for Hamburg. C per cent. • T,t» V ? Sh » lp F- S - < - iau >i»». 175 days from Port xaibot. for Iquique, S per c»nt. r-f , s]l bark Amul rP«. 1C« dsys from Tocopilla, for Falmouth, 6 per cent. - Argentine schooner India. 114 days from Ma deira, for Plata, 25 per crnt. „- » nHi'lTiiißiiiin Hi'lTiiißiiii hi ii 1 1 - ok *\u25a0 XEWS OP THE OCEAX Lumber Charters . Chiron m 1 I?°ber1 ?° ber charters reported are: : The Seioi £! Ii V EE i lcmrt «* ! Soler - on I*3J?et sound, nrfor to rr7 cl . Par SlßO>S lBO> ror orders - chartered S»J ? n 2 '"\u25a0'*"•: barkentine John Talmer, it foV o^«' m Oni Gra r« Harbor, to Valparaiso, a?Hr,l- « i« tR , apUa ranee - at 47s 6d.priot.t6 f^!f V BrlMßh \u25a0*«*»«\u25a0 Sandown, on Pnpet !hf^-iwJ n mi L tin P s to Anstralla.- The PuVen chartSS? 1 ?' °i n H Ket 80und> P r "»ously, reported ?n^? M i°f lamber to Valparaiso, is free/, hav ing missed her canceling date.- \u25a0 Shipments for South ' to fl»ii f \ tlS A, * teatse , r Sueila, which put in here to fluKh loading, sailed yesterday for Valparaiso il^!i l^ ! ™«^andlßt. at this pert: For Pern. <mn rai!r T»<l ties, valued at, $4,000: for Chile, 300 cs saiiaon, valued at $».0S0; for, Bolivia aOMr» I W« goO(J?< , 14 ° mats Reworks and ' S° r *«road ttt»s. valued at $7,938 1 i« AO,"A 0 ," also had 17,251 railroad tips,; 1.163.000 ft lumber, 2.1>00 posts and bOQ poles FT"? 8t JBlJ 81 - 864 - laden on^ pt and ai fcureka and consigned to ports in IVru. The Mnrlposa's Cargo T.Tm S!r,l mer Mari P° s: » sailed on llonday for » «ift^i h a /«" nera l merchandise cargo val«pd at ?40,S0rf «nd includln X - the followlnR: 1,971 1& ti° Br< o^ , ctls barle^- 25 ctls wheat. 10 194 lbs beans 250 lbs peas. 4.3.5S lbs bran. M bale« ih ' * -^ 1S f*i? wlne - 20 casks « n^ 2 " beer. 507, lbs candy. 4 843 lbs sugar. 31.580 lbs rlee. 15.038 His bread, 34 pkjrs eroceries and provisions, 9 ps bating powder. 090 lbs codfish, 050 llw drlwl l^ ' 8 rasslnß . 21 Pk»s fruits and vege tables^ 93 pkgs potatoes and onions. 3-"5 lbs Rar i-'Lv^w «» clieese. 130 lbs butter. 8 ps efrss, «,425 lbs salt; 1.473 lbs mlllstuffs, 723 lbs prarl barley, ,60 lbs tea. 5.505 lbs lard, 302 cs canned (roods. 23G cs and 19 pfcgs salmon, llf>,3*o ft lnmbpr 140 bdls shineles. C 3 pkps pickets, 10 bdls laths, 52 pkes nails, 31 pkps dnips, 20 bbls cement 3 pfcg* tobacco. 7 rolls learlier. 10 l*l>ls l**S« pkFB P*P er ; 13 ~ bls «oap. 34 btlls pl.w. 5 bdls and 4 pcs steel and iron. 50 pks« paints. 1.8.. lbs putty. 93 bdls ba K s, CJ cs and 2 bbls oils, 20 cs coal oil, 5 cs turpentine. 10 cs sew ing machines. 13 cs arms and ammunition. 172 pcs and 31 ptg* allhvork, 10 Wls brooms. OS pkgs ilry Roods, IT cs boots and sho«>s, 49 coils rope. 1. bales twine. , 13 bdls oars, 5 bales onkum, 42 pkgs wagon material, . H pkgs sad- Xotlce to Mariners Captain -Thomas Fenian- of tbe American steamer Colonel •E. J,. Drake report* to the branch bydropraphlc office, Kan Francisco C.il «s"rt J an *,-~ " 7 * 1907 - In J*t»tnde 24 degrees 41 minutes north, longitude' 116 de grees 10 minutes west, be passed within about t T?i. l^L e8 of wh at appeared to be a coral rect, with the sea breaking on It. The weather was calm and the wj smooth, with tbe exception of a small swell from the north. It was just awash on both ends and its center about 10 feet above weter; it appeared to be about 400 feet long. Alijos rocks bore from it about north 43 degrees, east (true distance) 27 mile*. The above position Js near to be In* correct, as next day Captain Fenlon passed dose to Gnadalupe Island and found bis chronometer correct. SHIPPIXG IXTELLIGEXCE ARRIVED _Stmr Maatlalay, Lufstrom, 50 hoars' from San vicgo. ''$?&<(£?&£ ' '\u25a0-''• i Tufsiay, July 2. bar Plant ' XcI ? oa ' M hours from Ccos « Stmr Centralia," Erick'son, 63~ hours from "Grays HRrbor. ; Stmr Buckman, Wood, 64 ii, hours from Seat tle. .\u25a0 • ... \u25a0 Stmr Xararro, Hoffman, 34?bours from Cres cent City. . .j . . . 1 Stmr Hanalci, Ravens. 51 boors from San Pedro ' • \u25a0 • ". . \u25a0 . • . Stmr 'Costa Rica. Mason.- 51 hours from Port land,' Tla Astoria 40. hours, ; Stmr Coos Bay. Zeh. 62 hours from, San Pedro. Stmr -Argyll, Johnson, 30 hours from Port'Har ford. . \u25a0 Stmr Daisy Mitchell,. Smith, 65 hours from Willapa Tiarbor. \u25a0 .. ,•. Barge Santa Paul*, Ollle. SO hours from Port Harford. In tovr stmr Arpryll- Power schr Monterey, Bash, 70 hours from Co quille river. . .-.• . \u25a0 - CLEARED v ' - • '.--,:. Tuesday, July ' 2. ' Stmr State .of California, . Alexander, , San Dlejro and iray ports; Pacific Coast steamship company. Br stmr Cape Breton," Warden, BellinKbam: J. J.Moore \u25a0& Co. ' . SAILED Taesday, July 2. Stmr Coqulllp River. Sanpherc.' Fort \u25a0 Brags. • Stmr Arizonifcii, - Tapley, , Honolulu via Seattle and Tacoma. ' \ ' * Stmr Northland,. Sorenson, Astoria. - Stmr Berkeley. Hi^slns, Mondocino. . .' ' Stmr G. C. Llndaoer,: Snndman,- Grays Harbor. Stmr Scotia. Kelson, Albion. • •: - • Stmr Fair Oaks,- Peterson,, Grays Harbor. Stmr Mandalay. Lofstrom, Crescent City. , Br stmr Cape Breton. Warden. Bellinirhatn. Br stmr ShPila. OjrilTy. Valparaiso, etc; •,•< :\u25a0 Fr *tmr Amirai Joareguiberry, Jounn, Vsncou rer. B C. Bark General Falrchild. Strain. Puret soutd. OCTSIDn BOUND IX Stmr. Daisy Mitrbell; stmr Arpyll, .'Trith-darse Santa Paula in totr: \u25a0 \u25a0 ' spokex :;> \u25a0Per bark Pactolus, " at Port Townsend—^On Jcne IT., lat 41 <lep 43 mm. lonjt 127 deg 15 mln, bktn Everett G. Grigps, from Tacoma, for-An tofasasta. >.-'• • - - ' t ' \u25a0 TELEGRAPHIC • -.. • \u25a0 . ' POINT LOBOS, July 2, 10 p. m. — Weather, foppy; wind," southwest; velocity, 8 miles per hour. I - . . . -.-: . . DOMESTIC PORTS- ,' MONROE LAXDlXG— Arrived July 2— Stmr Point-Arena, hence. July l. ! < SAX DlEGO— Arrived. July 2 — Tng Dauntless, from Astoria, with log raft in tow.-; -•• > : • BELLING HAM— Sailed July . 2— Br ship County of Llnllthgow," for Valparaiso; Ger stmr Gennanictfs. for Port Pirie. : -. \u25a0 , ... Arrived July 2 — Stmr Tallac, from Tacoma. " PORT LOS AXGELES-^Sailed July 2— Br stmr Strathnairn.«for Portland. . '. Arrived July 2 — Stmr.Quinault, tence June 30 POUT HAEFORD— SaiIed July; 2— Stmr Bo nita, \u25a0 for. San - Pedro;: scbr Coulianza, for- San Francisco. ' \u25a0 t .:: \u25a0 \u0084:. Arrived July 2 — Stmr Whlttler, -- from - San Diego. - KORT BRAGG — Arrived Jnly 2— Stmr Arctic, hence July - 1. \u25a0 ' - \u25a0• \u0084;-.-. \u25a0. : TATOOSH— Passed In July 2 — Stmr.' President, j hence ' Jnne 30, for Victoria and • Puget sound '• ports. \u25a0 . EUREKA — Arrived July 2—^-Slrnr Lakmc,' from San Pedro. . V.,. . '_!'•- .'\u25a0 • .-" Sailed July ,2— Stmr Xewport, for. San Fran cisco: stmr Pomona; for San Francisco. .. ! Sailed- Jnly 2— Stmr; North . Fork, , for San" Francimro* \u25a0 . . .-. SEATTLE-Tflalled July -, 2— Stmr Atlas, ' for San Francisco; stmr City .of \u25a0 Puebla, \u25a0 for • San Francisco. - . " - - . • - . \u25a0.., \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ...•; Arrived July 2 — Stmr ' Watiion. hence June 29 " ' \u25a0 REDOXDO-r-Arrived July 1-^Schr Samar,' from Everett.' \u25a0 " \u25a0 • ASTORlA— Arrived July I—Stmr>1 — Stmr> Tlioman 1^ Wand, hence June 28. July 2 — Stmr Columbia, hence June 30; stmr Excelsior, hence June 29. • Sailed July 2— -Stair Casco, for San Francisco SAN PEDRO^- Arrived June 2— Sehr Wilbert L Smith, from Hadlock. •'\u0084 *J:. . ' '\u25a0- Sailed July- 2— Ship. Columbia, i for . Xewcantle AUs: -stmr Aleatraa, for San Francisco;- schr Willie R. Hume, for Port Townsend; stmr F. A : Kllburn \u25a0- anC .stmr > South Coast, ' for San i Fran- Cisco. ' " \u25a0 - - " : '.. -^..V',- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-':\u25a0.. : PORT LUDLOW— sailed July 2— Bark Albert, for Hllo. \u25a0 ? J £^gWßiifflß4,»lflil'|»|iiUMtfe>-- \u25a0- "\u25a0 ABERDEEN— Arrived July I— Schr Ethel Zane. from San Pedro."?S<i>flK3WQ'imijfeB ••\u25a0 *• ' \u25a0 - POINT REVES— Pas*od. June 2— Stmr Vpasa dena. from S^n Ppflro.'for Albion. - .. PORT -TOWXSKXH— Arrived Vuly I— Eark 1 Pactolus. hence' June \u25a0\u2666. -' -r Passed. ln. July 1— Schr Defiance, frotn San Pedro, for nf-iliugliani.. - ' \u0084 'Arrived ' July 2— tfriic* v ;Csrrt<>r " - Dote, , from Eleole : ' ' schr "W. - I\ . GaMns, j- frotn .- Saa- P*dro* bark Charmer,^ lience - June : 18; * bark . Paetolus r bence'June 4. •:-, - - . * -ISLAND- PORTS:' .. ,-\u25a0 HONOLTJLU-^Sailed July - 2— Ship Alexander Gibßon.*for:Eleelc : ' . : . ... \u25a0 Arrived' July 2— H B^M- stmr' Monmouth/from Victoria. ' ' -?'-•: j-V .*.-\u25a0-' -1 KAHULDl— ArrlvedJuly 2— Stmr Texari.'frotn Honolulu/ \;*'iCT^** l "l>TirY« < BllTTliT|TißLilt II II UBWHB' \u25a0-. n-. : -V FOREIGN POUTS' : ' • • SAX. BLAS-^-Sai led June- 2S— Stmr Ptru, for San ; Franciwo.-'' -.--- •- \_ .•.,.\u25a0'.-... • ? HONGKONG^Arrlv«rl . July 2— Jap slmr Nip." ponMani. bence May 31." --' j:'- -.- \u25a0--. -\u25a0 , : VICTORIA-f Sailed ' July.7l— Hr '.-. stmr'i Georgia^ Jor: »»uayn»« «.'*\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0 \u25a0". ' "\u25a0•' " .".'• '-? \u25a0 .'\u25a0 Sailed July 2— Br Ktmr Georgia,. for Guaynias. -^Arrived July.2 — Stmr Lyra;, from Nome; stmr Tr<«ident," 1 hence -'Juae,."iO.-- . ; . .. . •-i- Railed : July \u25a0 2— Strar \u25a0 City «.f Puebla, - for ' San rrsMcisco.; -. : ; -, \u25a0..:..-. .- \u25a0 y .._-. - ; -^ >\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. DUXGEXESS— P»ssrd June :;o— r r bark Sully, .trotn . UsmbDXK. tot Sou l^rajicisco.?; :" : , .\u25a0". '-'y : :%. ~'\ flfe-SA^^^ Weather Report 'Uniled • States Department ' of : Agriculture— "* Weather. Bureau," San ; Francisco, \ July 2,r1907.'" \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0••'.' RAINFALL v DATA v • ..' ; : . Past . Seasonal \u25a0; Nor-^ Stations — i ,24 hours, r to date. . - mal. Eureka ....:.........; T. 0.00 0.01 Red , Bluff ....:.. T. 0.00 ' 0.00 Saeraniont" ........... 0.00 V o.oft .i-0,00 San Francisco x....:.. ft.OO' 0.00" 0.00 Sau Jose .../.....;.;: 0.00~ .0.00 \u25a0•*• ' 0.00 Frasno ..'............. 0.00 0.00 'vo.oo San ' Luia ' Oblspo . . .". . . ' 0..00 0.00 • v 0.00 I.os Angeles .... '. . 0.00 . 0.00 ' ,0.00 San : Diego ...... .V. . . v 0.00 , 0.00 . V 0.00 STATIONS., i I ..H. .H \u25a0\u25a0,: ..?•.:. |"2 Baker ...... ..29.84 86 52 S Cloudy .00 Boise '.:.-.~.29.74 90 fitt NE Clear - .00 Eureka . ......30.02 5S G4-W" Cloudy T. Flagstaff ....... 29.84 .S8 44. SW Pt.Cldy'.OO Fresno : . '.. . 29.84 100 'C 2 • XW Cloudy; .00 Independence ..29.56 J>2 «4 W ' Pt.Cldy .00 Kallspell .....29.90 SO 4tf SR -Pt.Cldy .00 Los Angeles A .29.80 102 CS SW- Pt.Cldy .00 ilt. Tamalpals. 29.97 76 G6 W Cloudy. -.00 North Head . . . 29.P2 62 54 X W " Cloudy :00 Phoenix. ...... .29.02 114 -7G 8W Clear .00 P. Heyes Light. 2o.o2 73 'SO N Foirgj-*^' -°3 Portland ... .. .29.50 SO 00 NE Rain 'T. Red Bluff -...--20.60 80 C 2 NE . Cloudy/ T. Reno ...... r. .. .2».8S - S6 . r>o SW Cloudy T. Roseburjr .....29.80 78 .r»0.. r »0. S'" Cloudy - .OH Sacramento ...29.02 '86 P. 2 S Cloudr .4*o Salt Lake ....29.90 92 CO X Clear, .00 San Diego ... .29.82 72 C 6 SE Cloudy V. OO San Francisco. .29.94 73 C.2 W Cloudy .00 Ran Jose ......29.94" 78;- M-NW Cloudy. .00 S. LulsObispo.29.B6 '92- 52 *XW Cloudy .00 S. E.- Para110n. 29.95 ,58 'SI XW Cloudy • .00 Seattle .:.... .29.8S ,"78 54 W -; Pt;Cldy .00 Spokane ...... 23.88 'S2 52 NE Cloudy .00 •Summit ....*.. .*.;. GO 48 S Cloudy ' .00 Tatoosh ...... 29.94 \ftfi W) S '• Cloudy -T. Tnnopsh : . . . .'.2P.SS S6 66 Nfi ' CiOud.r .00 Winnemucca . .29.84 88 40 SW Cloudy. .00 Yuma ..... . . ; .29.08 110 78 \u25a0 SWVClcar .00-, \u25a0 'Snow on gmond.;l3 Inches. : X' . SYNOPSIS . • "v There; has- been an uu'usual amount of cloudi ness over. California, for this' time of the' year. There has been uoraiu except sprinkles .In; the extreme X northern; portion of. the. state -and" In the \u25a0 mountains. _ Condition!) are favorable \u25a0• for afternoon -thunder storms in the Sierra. The weather Is . cooler at liearly all points ' In; Cali fornia.- A moderate depression over -Oregon may move southward and cause southerly winds 'and Ipossibly light ' showers over the 'interior .of * the , state. 1 - - . ' . \u25a0 - v. "- .--..- ..... ... . ... . . . * FORECAST San Francisco, and- vicinity— Cloudy unsettled ; weather Wednesday ; fresh > west . winds . in , : the afternoon. | . .-. .. - 1 ;' »i *\u25a0'\u25a0 J Santa Clara valley — Cloudy Wednesday; light northwest winds. , - v . .. - Sacramento valley— Cloudy Wednesday, pos : slbly showers in the foothills -and mountains; 'light south winds. \u25a0 .. ' \u25a0 \u25a0-. - ' , San Joaquln valley— Cloudy . Wednesday, pos sibly showers in the Sierra; light north. winds. > Los Angeles and vicinity— Cloudy. Wednesday, not so, warm;. light northeast .winds, changing to west. .- :-\u25a0-. r -. • A. G. McADIE, District Forecaster. Movements of Steamers : - TO ARKIVE- From | Steamer 1 . Due ' Portlnnd & Astoria..... Cascade .\u25a0....;. July 3 San Pedro ............ Tamalpais .....' July 3 Humboldt ...:..: .Pomona July . S Hilo .................. Enterprise. . ....! July ' 3 Honolulu Sierra \u0084 '.. . - . I July. S Crescent City ..:..... DvT-N0rte ...... July 4 (J rays Harbor ........ .Santa Monica... July . 4 Ran P«dro ............ V. KDburn .... July 4 San Diego & Way Ports Santa. Rosa .... July .4 Point Arena'& Albion.. Porno .-. , July 4 Xew York, via Ancon.. Peru „'.,:.:...;. July 4 Arcata ..;:.. Xorth Fork . . . . July 4 HuniUoldt ...V.......: City, of Topelta. July S San Pedro ....'........ Cnehalis.v.-.v:. July 5 Pujfet Sound Ports. Clty< of Puebla . July . 5 Ilnmboldt Kurcka • . . , . ».' July 9 8 San Pedro :...-........ a.- W.-E!der.V: : . July . 6 Xpw York,* via • Ancort . ~. Xewport - « : . C Ti .tJuly 6 F>l: niver Ports. :.-..-.» Argo;. ,r. :; r.i. July « Humboldt ». . i ......... Vanguard \u25a0 . «,. . . July 6 China & Japan....*. ...America Marul. July 7 BeUlngham .."'.. . . .'. : . . Italtfler'/V; . ..... July 7 Portland & Astoria:'.;; Colombia ' . i S . /. July . T Mendocino & Pt. Arena. Sea Foam : .. .«. July 7 Kalina Crnz ......v.; ; Mc^lcsn 1 -....-.., July 8 Portland & Way; Ports. Hoanoke ' ....... July 8 San Pedro & Way, Ports Bonlta ;...:... July ' 8 San DJeyo & Way PortslStite of CaKvr. July S Ran. Pedj-o \u0084..'., ;. rt ...|Han«lel ..•...,\u25a0. July S Honolulu - .... . -.JAlameda \u0084..,. ..JJuly . 9 Se«ttle.'&; Tacoma....;. j Watson /"...*... .;.|Jnly, 9 v -.\u25a0;-> \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0-- .v^^TO. SAIL^,. ~i'y \u25a0;\u25a0',>\u25a0 .r-.' ':\u25a0".; - ' Destination ; - ? | •• Sh»«mer V7 I Sails |pjw I job ' Anfcelos Ports/.. A Ohai.'. JfeUon 2 pin '20- Ijns Anpples Ports..:,:. Cascade- i... 10« m 2 Humboldt. .„./........ F.ureka.-. .... 9 am 13 Coos Bay ..."..,.:.;..*\u25a0. M.^F.PUnt. 4pm '• 8' Coqullle« River ..... ..'..' RHzaheth '..':. spm 16" nonolulu ' : ... . . . Hilonlan % : . . 12- rai.io Grays Harbor ..::...".; Tamalpals :".-. " 2 pm - 2 Point Arena. ..j. \u25a0.:..-.- Sea \u25a0= Foam!: . 4pm 2; Los- AucJcs. Torts-. ...-. Hanalcl- ;..*. 5 pm 10 I \u25a0 • July Ar- , \u25a0• : ".\u25a0\u25a0; . •".; \u25a0•; ..'•""• : \u25a0' '\u25a0 \u25a0 •"' San Diego & Way FortslStafe of Cal. 10 am 11 : July Rv^.;. \u25a0\u25a0;:\u25a0<\u25a0\u25a0 -J >,-^; ; .-,-* \u25a0\u25a0',\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0-. Grays Harb<ir ..... Ccntralla <\u0084.!. j 3- pm '. 10 ' Grays ..Harbor ; -. .-. . . .".v CMifhalis.. » .« ',^. . :. 2 • Humboldt ............. Pomona \u0084.'„ l.?0p 9, Astoria & Portl«nd..;^. Costa: Men/.- II am 2i- Pnget Sound Ports. .'. ,. Sohom»';W.. 3pm » \u25a0 San Pedro & Way Ports Coos! Bay.^.J 9 am 11 \u25a0 July C — \u25a0 •\u25a0; \u25a0 :\u25a0 \u25a0 -v j.-. .. : •. \u0084. . ---; Willapa Harbor .. ...'.•!>. Mitehell.. . T . rtumboldt ...:..'... .I.jnavalll :.".; snm 2 Portland & Way Ports. |G.W. Klder 1.30p 13 Humboldt ;4....."..;»„.; 4 ... .."..;»„. North, Fork.. ' ,V pm .20 Xew.. York., via Ancon:. City /of. Para. 12V ',tn 40 Los Angeles Ports:. I . i\ F. -Kllburn. . : fi'pm 10 Point/Arena &*Albloni: Pom*f>,»,<:; to ftm - 2 Xome & St. Michael... Indiana; .... 12 m . Seattle & Tacoma...... Buckman >ir . a.3op 20 \u25a0July 7— > ' •< ¥\u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0, -^_i, r Humboldt \u25a0......:....'. City rTopetaT; 10.30 a 9 Mexican Ports . . « .'. . Curacao ' :I.\ 10 am 17 San Dlejro"& Way Ports City Puebla. 10 am 11 . .July'B— \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0;.• ' .-;\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 .;.;\u25a0\u25a0 , •;••\u25a0:.-' Astoria i Portland.. .. Xome' dtyi .' :;'. ' • I«uget Sound Ports..'.. Santa' Rosa.. 11 am *O Jam Anceles. -Ports.;:. Roanoke-... 2pm 13" Grays Harbor i ......;. R.. Monica..'. .: . : ;: liel River P0rt5. ....... Arg0:....;.. 5 pm *i 6* July 9— :.• \u25a0: .-... . . ; China * Japan..:.. ... Tforea ...".'.'. Ipm A2\ Humboldt .;...- ; Vanguard- : . spm 2 TO SAIL FROM SEA TTUS ' "s Destination ' \u25a0' .t..j -v; | - '-> Bteamer \u25a0\u25a0-.; | : Date \u25a0 Skapway & Way Ports. DirlßO ....... ..IJuly ' 5 Valdes & Sewnrd. . . ... Santa Clara; ... Jnlr *8 Npm»^& St. Michael.".'. Pennsylvania -.. Jnly \» X<vne^Ai*t.. Michael... Lyra :.......... JuJj 10 X^le k St Michael..: Ohio i. .t...~. . Jnly 10 Xome:&'St."-Michael.v. Seward-... ... . . July 10 Valdez-& Reward... ":. Portland .:..•. ;- -liilt 10 Skajrwiy &'.Way Ports. Spokane ........ Jul'r 12 Xome & St." Michael. .". Pleiades C .v. . ;. July ie Time I nail United, States Branch ;nydroßraphic Office,; Mer . chants' Exchange, : San Francisco,: Cal., July v 2;- ITO7. - ;---.v-.r".:'.-;\u25a0;; ---.v-.r". :'.-;\u25a0; -"- . v- \u25a0-.:\u25a0'.,. ;,»\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0 '\u25a0,;-, •*\u25a0 The;tlme ball on the tower of the Ferry" build in* i was dropped i today exactly at ; noon. - Pacific Standard Time (120 th Meridian); or Sh. 00m/ 00s Greenwich Mean Time. ' . \u25a0\u25a0\u0084-:, , \u25a0'\u25a0 ' - 3. C.BDnNKTT.;. - . .. . - - Lieutenant. Ur S.', X.~,'i ln Charge. \u25a0 \u25a0 Son" and Tide United Sutes Coast isndGoodetic Surrey—Time .and Heights of Tide <at Forts Point; - For city front (Mlsslon; street wharf); add 25 minutes. :.\u25a0\u25a0; \u25a0:-\u25a0.-\u25a0 WEDNESDAY. JULY' 3 ' .--; r^' \:- Snn: risps^ ........ .4 :Sl|f»un - sets -\u0084'.. ;..;. r.7:53 i Time • - ' Time . ' ITime • \ Time • - J'ly »Ft Ft —^— *Ft: '- ' Ft' \u25a0\u25a0•' flTw| f;:.-JH W :^;|LIW J H:W }™f 3.. 0:18 1.0 6?15 ;4.0 U*:S.- ri?6 6:40 ~574 4.. 1:20 1.5, 7:33 4.0 12:25 ',2.2 7:24 ;55 n" 2:14 1.0 8:47 .4.1 1:15-2.6 8:04 ..<« :«.". .3:04 ,0.0 9:4G ;4.2 2:04 29 8:40 50 7.:13:45 0.0 10:40 2:.%4 ; a!o 9:14 ;"s'B 8-| 4:24 -H).3111:321v-;4.5 3:40);;3.3 9:48 \u25a0\u25a0',';'•• U.'.S^Brancli^Hydrosfraphic,, Office; _A branch" of .'the .United States Hydrojtrapiiio Office, loc^ted-^at the :Mercl)antß'. Exchange is maintained Id . San -for. the - benefit of mariners, .without:regard 1 to;nationality: and free °^:.: .'t?lit nse- i« x »'rl»f»toni are • cordially., inrited;to .visit \u25a0 the offlee.v where * complete . sets' of 1 chartn and:sailing directions;of the*.world'arekeDt at hand, for comparison: and reference,* and^ the lat-' est Information can always be obtained regarding lights,; dangers; to navigation 'and. all- matters of interest to ocean;commerce. • • •:'•\u25a0• - , v ..-\u25a0-;-: J. C/BURNKTT, ~: Lieutenant, U.S. N.r In Charge.; '\u25a0•\u25a0' PEBlM— Passed . July ' 1-^Br J stmr j indramayo. from lYokohanm.* for New .York - ~ \u25a0•\u25a0 .-> , VINCENT— Arrived -f June ;4a B r- stmr Strathness.from Barry,.- June o— Brstmr Slrath •allan.. from : Barry, for Vancouver," via , Acapulco. : flailed 'June ; s— Br. Btmr ,' Strathness, for ; Gu»y mas.'': \u25a0 :'\u25a0"' [J' - :\u25a0:'-\u25a0..\u25a0- .. --• \u25a0 -: s;* *.-.-,.; ; -SHANGHAI— Arrived July I— Br.s'tmr kirkice/! from : Russ ' Btmr \u25a0 Sclenga, ; from : Astoria . TOWPILLA— Arrived J June <\u25a0 2*l-Br < Wa vertrep.-ifrcm-BellinKbam. ,\u25a0 ..• \u25a0-\u25a0- .»" : . » Z,- -. \u25a0-•' r, LI VEKPOOL^-In s port*. June i 1 9-^Br shin Se-' gnra. ... for t Salina >; Cruz.r, ; vl« r-\ Wales : 44 < Fr »< bark Charles Oouno<l3 forj San • Francisco. 1 * via ; Cardiff ' '.- USHANT— -Passed $ JunegSO— FrSßtmr"?Amlrai Ejeltijans."= hence'ilarch;-!; 1 ! 1 for Havre '•\u25a0 \u25a0 -~i*- •- »i •^:.HAMHURO— SaiIed June 29^-Ger BtmV Hethor foriSan -Francisco." '\u25a0"".'•>"-\u25a0-.- -~ .„ . _.MOLLl?NDO— Sailed^ June 7— Nor »tmr. Thode"! Fagelund, "-' for , Kan .* Fraucisco, 1" ,via"> Newcastle, ' -•"ROTTERDAM— Sailed . ' June,, 23^-Br Vsh'to ' l Crown • of -. for : Sun > Francisco *;'' x - -' > June -12^Ger itmr 'si-' I latls,'!for 'Hamburg.'; "• \u25a0.-.-; v-.^-; \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -n r -\u0084\u25a0..-\u25a0! r- SANTA * RQSALI A^Sa lied f June -C2— Schr MIV- ' doro. ' for "Port UTownsend."'— ,'•;..- : -.-'\u25a0 •\u25a0 \u25a0' .-- -- ' . ' •--\u25a0„' -\u25a0' ;'--'>.; '--'>. OCEANJ STEAMERS ':"\u25a0•'.:" «'-'.'>«-'.- ; . XEW;/ YORK^Arrlved a July,'v"2-r^Stmr 5 Staten-' dam,', from Rotterdam; stmr. Furneala.l from Glas gow^ ;/ stinr,> Mlnneapol ls,T:". v from j, London ; A ctmr Halls, from[Xapli'«. I ..-;.ThWrc* are^still^SOiooO^OOO ; : miles1 f of I terri tor y;-on" this ?rM>*\ which jhavelridf I been explored.^* *\u25a0 -i .-\u25a0 -- ( CLEVELAND BLANKS CHICAGO CHAMPIONS Scores SHutoiit in Opening \u25a0; Game of Series on - ; :[ > Home Grounds ;' : :V* AMERICAN LEAGUE*** 1 \u25a0 . ... . ;Cliibs— .' Lost.". 5 " Pet.' Chicago. „.'.............-./... .41 ',- 22 "•".BOl Clereland . i. ..... r...'.. ...:.. . .141 24 <J«n Philadelphia '..........:..... ..?.5 i»S < .556 Detroit ..P.:.......::.."..:..... 3S 27 ; ,030 New York.:".'. ...".TT.T.'.'.TVr..; SO -'-. 30 ' '".."JOO St. « L0ui5. . : ..:. ... . . . :".T. . ... 27 - '39 ' ,'\u25a0 .W.i 805t0n •".'.:.«.....-..'..\u25a0.. ...;.... 23. ~. 4<l . : - .S«5 Washington ........ ". ;".". ....... 19 " 39 .' :. " .328 I,, CLEVELAND. '•' Juljr : 2.— Clereland opened' its series with Chicago by : shutting : out !the'chi.i» pioDM. Score:;.* \u25a0?•-•-'>':>.': r --'. ,---' :\u25a0•.\u25a0:•\u25a0' .-\u25a0;\u25a0 .:; \u25a0' \u25a0 \u25a0: - •-.-\u25a0. .n. h. , c. : ClcreJand .:..: ...... ... 1. .:...:..: 4 . ;«• 1 Chicago '. .\u25a0.-.'..\u25a0.'.'..'...\u25a0:....:... ...\u25a0;.' o. -7 - 1 \u25a0'.' Batterieu— Joss "and Clarkj .Walsh' and Sulli van. -:.- \u0084 ,'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-,; . \u25a0'\u25a0/: \u25a0'\u25a0. \u25a0-\u25a0 ' : \u25a0 \u25a0-. ;\u25a0\u25a0• -• \u25a0 - ' DETBOIT. July; 2.— Neither pitcher : bothered the batters rery much, but ' Detroit (tot- to Powell at ; more lelllnsf ; times," while- St:- Louia " missed seyeral good chances. h Score:? .', ;\u25a0;:•; \u25a0-/•:. :-;.:..;-'. . '\u25a0\u25a0: ' v .-..:.. '.:. '; R. H.- E. Detroit ......7.......:. 8 12* 2 St. ' Louis . ..................... 5 12-3 \u25a0Batteries — Donoran • and - ; Bchniidt; .Powell, ; P«lty and Spencer.:: . • >"4 \u25a0\u25a0'- ". • \u25a0\u25a0 ; - • .'; - '\u25a0 .- . . 'BOSTON, July' 2.—^Washington.; won", today's icame =In the \u25a0 third •by -* batting Tannehlll ; freely. \u25a0J*core:- : -- \u25a0--\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0".--.. .•..\u25a0.\u25a0•\u25a0.......-: : \u0084;..•• \u25a0 '\u25a0 '" \u25a0 ' ' ' \u25a0\u25a0 - Tt ' R V ' Washington ...... . ": * ... . . . . ... ... ft' 12* \u25a0 1, Boston -.-.... :.;: ....;. 2 -7 !2' t'Batterfes— Patten,' Hoghes and Warner; Taa nehill,''Prujtt and Shaw. .' ;;••\u25a0. ' - \u25a0 - ;. • - NEW. .YORK, July 2.— Timely • hitting by .Keeler and , Chase ': enabled ' New York,. to be.it Philadelphia today in the tenth Inning after an uphill fight. v. Score: :: . y-%.~ \u25a0;- \u25a0;'\u25a0; \u25a0 -\u25a0\u25a0 ": :-. - . :' r \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0•' ;\u25a0\u25a0.:.•.•:, ' ---R. -.H.---:E:' Philadelphia 7 . 14 v 0 New ' .York. .-.\u25a0;. '.'.'.:':"...: .....8 15 '2 - \u25a0 Batteries — Waddeli; * L Bender. Dygert : • and Schreclt; Kit Eon and Thomas.^"-: : NATIONAL LEAGUE . . Clubs— " Won. .Lost. Pet. Chicago ...................... 49 16, .754 New York 37 23 . ..617 Pittsburg .;....:.....:........ 35 . 2t? .574 Philadelphia .............:.... 34 US . .54S Cincinnati............... ..29 30 .446 Boston ..;. .... 27 /-M ' .443 Brooklyn ........:......\u25a0....:....• 2« S8 .406 St. Louis .................... 16 52 .235: Ci CHICAGO; July : 2."— Two - errors and both ' cf Coakley'B passes were \u25a0 followed by hit*, which gate the : locals today's game. Score: 1 • • • R. H.. E. \u25a0! Chicano '.".-. fi - 10 .0 Cincinnati :.:..... .;.:....;...... ...S :7 2 Batteries— Lundgren.OTerall and Kling; Coak ley, : Mason,' McLean and Schlel. Umpire^— O'Day. j '<\u25a0 BROOKLYN. July 2.— Brooklyn outplayed Nev» v York today.- Score:".;.:- -. . \u25a0; . '--, - -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-. -\u25a0.•-••\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 . •n. h. c. New York 2 7 1 Brooklyn ..... :. ; : . . . :v: . v.V". ........ 8 . 12 » 0 I Batteries— Ames. Lynch | and Bowerman ; Scan lon and Bergen: Umplres-^-Klem and Blgler. , - PITTSBUBG.i' JuIy ( 2.—ln 1 close' and- clean jtame today Pittsbur^. defeated St.- Louis because Gibson made .* threp, bABe -hit %in • the sixth innlaj, arltlng two runs across the plate.- Score: -- - - -* - - "\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0 R. rl. .-L-. pittrturn .:-...::*....:....•....../.-. •*• s \u25a0 .1 St. Louis -.:.". '.v... ..-..:. ....'"v... 3 .9- r 0 Batteries — Camnit* and. Gibson; .Beebe- and Noonan. Empire— Carpenter. .' ; . \u0084 . . • . :. ' PHILADELPHIA; ' "July -. 2.— Boston , defeated Philadelphia today- by hitting ' Moren hard, while Dorner held: the locala safe throughout.' Score.: :\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-'.. .\ ..-.-.-.',.. \u0084\u25a0. 5, X- *H.V;B. 805t0n.... ."....'.\u25a0;'...\u25a0.-.'.".' 2' >8, 0 Philadelphia ?V.V. :.'.:;... ......1 .•' 5 - 0 Batteries — Dorner^and'v Brown; j (Moren y. and Doom. t?mpirer»Emslly> . -.'y ,*- • . i.--i> -,;,; \ SOME CURIOUS STRIKES THAT HAVE TAKEN PLACE Scarcelyfa^ Class iit Wprker3 Tha^t^Has iNot: Partici- - 1 \u25a0The recent sCrlke^r the Lohdon;Tnu slc liall- artists v bs,lls '\ attention>toith« fact I tliat * there -ii Scarcely Vclaes ; of I workerß,-r; from r to "executlo'efs, from v lawyers. "to -beerVc drinkers; "x arid 1 from "parsons to choir boys* which? has not at one time \u25a0 or/another 'asserted f its rights I and^avenged- its wrongs in a 'similar j, way,*;/. •'-. ; .^.-^,i --^>^j : V-: Hr : '\u25a0"\u25a0- Not .long"- ago Spain ;was « the; sc^he'.,of a' combined)i|tf ike 'of 'actors 'throughout its , length: and jbreadth, -which; arose -.as a seq.u«ir to - thej popular Indignation at the H election : : « of "an ; a ' arch bishop: aßValericia. j'i.The Vpqllce '.6t ; Maf drid took i thefextreme h st*p;"of ' closing the Zarzuela theater.- and arrestlngr. sev eral lot ' the; actor's | for; sirigins'political | songs f directed^ against Hhe;Kovernment: and-i the '.unpopular,: prelate.-;.rln- r conse-. quence \of .. this;, indignity ; the V whole theatrical -world s arose *In V arms, arid Ik meetingiof^the. Spanish .actors';, asso-: elation- was ; lield.": at which- a universal strikeJarid th«>closlng of^all theithev aters^invthQ, country; were;pr6claimed. ; -l-The-barristers;, of St. Amand;-in the department \ of Cher, : when "''.-. lectured?,by th.e v judge *fj the district ;?ourtion" thftir habit otiStirrlngVup'rlltlgation aftdi"s«t; ting * the v peaceful Inhabitants "; of r.the to wn : by- the i ears,',V- left the Ccourt slna a. body and'; refused to > enter; it • again iun- 1 til : the Vjudge^made ; an . ample for; his andiwhen-at thejtrlb unal Qf ..Sens ; another ;. Judge "".thought fit to reprimand orie^of : the { lawyers- for the >and; had-himt ejected from tiie* courts all:" his ; fellow-/ barristers^tb" a mm 1 ; signed ' a^ protest '; and \ announced their Intention never ;to plead again .be^ fore^him^untll'ihe'had^niade "suitable amends^for-hisTconduct. . * ; : ; X; At.Cracow.iriotilong ago, the doctors refused to; attend -theif ipa'tients, unless their*." 1 remurieratlon'.' was^ increased; \% In New; Zealand jtwhen- a poll tax^as] irif stitutedj.whichypressed .heavily! on ' a the trade \ agents iebming 5 f rom ".; Sydney, + the commercials; travelers,*: onev and- alVide-^ terminedttOfbojj;6tt';the|couritry.§untn the Soffenslve*f impost s"was?' removed % or modified; sand :^in 'i Cantoris the l|execu-' tioners *^ once \u25a0 point "iblank> to : outloff any; more \ heads! unless. their; fee wasfdoubled.'^ Thejofflc{al'toswhom,;the t : announceirient Jywas^Tiriade 'declined %\o concede?• the s extra* pay;- butVeoriiforted the ; petitioners] with \u25a0 the assurancothat their / business Ewould soon ; be \u25a0 brisker than iit $ had been.; ;j. ; ! - Strikes i* among V choristers : are - far. f rorii |uncommon.^? Toj give 5 but ; two fax-* ; amples/r^the^Choirboys at vStA^ John's? Chatham.twalked ? In « a "i bodyi'out of i the church " lri^ the *\u25a0. middle V o f - the'i Bervl ca "brie- Christmas 5 day;; arid in'.Yorkshlre;Btruck;because.thelr]slng^ lng\was I marred* by.'the "efforts of ja',well ; . meaning jbut;Unmusicalimem-T ber .\u25a0', of s the : congregation.?, ' \u25a0;\u25a0.\u25a0 \u25a0 ": • --*7.;"^; \u25a0'\u25a0!?. in '.the, world ! of athletics strikes' areKby sno Z mearis;i uncommon;! 'jiThere .was* a,"} formidable j strike] ot? footballers at i Criwe,^ and"j no t ; , lon gC&go £thej mem" bers of a* famous' Scottlshiteamv refused to; play,{unlessha\Jreporter,Cwhose|re marks f bads displeased^ .them; ;3yas !j ex cluded.' from X~ the ground.'— J?t.\; Louis Post-DispatchJ'^ .. -, * V ! -- - ' ' " k- -- ; INTER VIEWING ROCKEFELLER £jt John]; D.^f Rockefeller lia {him self yqulte § f reelyj to • the 1 1 interviewing' habit inoWadays.'i^ndlhejseemtirtoterijoy; i talking J,wlthHhe|>eporterßrasTnlirch|as' hej hadi pf evlouslyiappeared 1 to! hate] and avoid ( it. % Presumably^ he] had^begunUo' feellkeenlyXthejßeemln^Jlu^wUlfofUhe" ; public % toward : is him £a,nd 'il would :3 place himself ton9bett«c[te>nii} 4 with^theipublic . by,>l*ttlng| 1 1 j know|mpfe 5 about %hi mself and»hls],Vlews]on", r queßtionsTwhjchthave becpin«fo^ v laf g^l public* JnterestJfjNorj is .ther6|r,<sasori]|to>suppoße^thls|wni§not' ; "btf" thte\elteq .t "fof jj hi s j morej approachable attitude.'— Springfield ißepublicah.^ Ju '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0-- : SunllKhtri will -penetrate ;; very -clear Seals Play National Game Like Shoe Makers Mending Watches W. J. Slattery The five defeats that the Angels in flicted.\u25a0:-\u25a0"on/,the\u25a0}} Seals ; in :,the i southern .townj took -a"t, bunch 'of i;out of them, *if - their Twork ; yes terctay' against the :.oaks; across *; the .bay,; tells a%base-"" ball . story. H-They /could - not hit. their work in : the field |was a;^oke; and when' It; came ; to running! bases the f ans'were willing^to I say,73 good ; night; *- Oakland strolled*injan<inhe flnishiwas's to 0. ' •>r Eddie i Quick,") the • Seal I pitcher. V.i re ceived : the ''worst , drubbing ; that' : has been ": his % lot ? sinee \u0084' he"! became ; one 'of the', local > ; contingent. — The "^ wallops which;the \u25a0 Oaks registeredlagainst; him came in j finks',' and' wheh; they did come they ; generally [ counted . some. But the four ; which San FranciscolCcollecteiJ were .strewn along the \ nine innings ; of action. ,' Each i one" loomed .up; like a feeble sort^of Cattempt and '• none* <qf them' caniefnear - counting. ; . '\u25a0' ' "•• \u25a0 .. ' ;; .-Wright pitched : the - real mysterious ball f or.^ the ' Oaks."; : In every - f round he held the Indian sign .^s'o high over the Seals • that L ; theiri admirers i closed -t their eyes and .waited ' for,' some 1 one to tell them ;what had j happened. , . These ' hap penings ; we're ' so I numerous \u25a0 that ? most °f sh oae who ; hoped for "the 1 success. q#* .the7Seals wished that. "Wright had. lost his ;\u25a0 home before playing time rolled round.':; :> . - , -;.•\u25a0/\u25a0\u25a0,'\u25a0.- -a 'i/ -•;•— ' l. -/ '\u25a0':'< Oakland began : right -off the reel^ in the '. initial '\u25a0 spasm. V Smith-waited ~f or a quartet \of bad 'i oneS," but i Van Hal-« tren: forced him ,at second: . Heitmuller used.;his head : ;long;:eri6ugh to.Tget a walk and Eagan made -it a -full housa with a :\ ; clean .;bingle.- Wright dis patched^ ahot one, to" Quick,- and while the ;, Seals', ipltcher was f just - wrapping his ; mitts; around: the: leather Van Hal tren trotted through with the first run for Oakland.; " : Not ; ; till .'. the fourth, did ,the Com muters land again. Then .a combina tion :of passes,; an; error by •Morlarity and Devereaux's hit gave them another. ' But s the : sixth" 5 made (every Seal ' >' ad mirer ashamed : ot: himself, and i each had Just cause/, for v Oakland hung threo on ; the locals ;; so ; quickly" that but & *ej<r>beeame jerry fo what was coming off. led with a bingle'and Eagan waited for a pass. ; Blgbee filled up -every; base | with a drive to center. Haley; sent ; Heine .. across . with^a -saf e one to; right and Devereaux's out gave Eagan: a, chance to register, one; Dash wood scored the -last, one, on; a fielder' 3 choice^ from third to . ficst. . The score: . OAKLAXD -; . ;, Smlf h- It ' A . B/ R - \u25a0 BH - SB - P0 - A E - Van Haltren. c. f .... 5 1 1 o : 1 n- 0 .Heltmuller.r. f..,.;; 4 I 2 \u25a0? 2 00 Kagan, 55. .;......... 3 •1. in r> 1 V sgfc:-:::::;r \u25a0 [ SfcS:-- «;:::: v i. S Dashwood, C........4 0 0 '02-2 0 >Totals ....35 5 ;~S ~1 27 13. *~2 :V. ; . SAX. FRANCISCO - ;•;' Cr £ - , ' AB. R. BH. SB. PO. A. E. Spencer, c. f. ........ 4-0 0 ,0 00 -0 oh . ler ;J ;b - ••••••••• 2 ° 10220 Mortarity. ss.r..":;;v-.'4 0 10 1 6 1 Hlldebrand. 1.f. ::;.. 3 0. 0 ..O 1 0 0 Irj^in., 3b... -..;.... 3 0 1 0 o i'- l o 1b...;.:.;-4 0 0 0 : 14 0 0 Snaujfhnessy, r.^f..-. .'3, 0-1 -0 "3 10 Street, c. .;'..,..:. ..4 0; 0. 0 2 0 O Quick, p............. 3 0 0 0 2. 3 70 Wheeler. 2b;;;...... l, r 0 0 0 2 2-0 •'Totals :.;*.'. ;-;... ".... .31 :0: 0 4 0 -27 -.15' " 1 11UXS AXDHITS BY IXXIXOS San ' Francisco.;... 0 0.0 . 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 - Basehits ..t.;.;: l 00 1 1 0-o*o 'I—4 Oakland ...;.;...- 1 0"0' 10 3iO 0 0 5 BasehlU ....... 1-0. 0 1- 0 a*l 0 2—B -»\u25a0:*. -"\u25a0"\u25a0.' SUMMARY -j'.- \u25a0- 'Two base hits — Shaughnessy. . Heltmullef. : Sac rifice hit— Shanghnessy.'i- First ; base .on called balls— Off Wright 2, off Quick ' 4. Struck, out— By Wrltht 2,; by.;Qulck- 1.. Hit by pitcher— lr-' trtn.'X.W.lld I pltcb-rWrJich t.' •" < ;.Tlm> Jof t game — 1 hour, and. 'o nilnutesv;.li'»plre^— Derrick. PORTLAND -SHUT OUT ; Los : Angeles -Makes - Three /Fast r ; Double^ Plays Against Beavers . ; ; y \u25a0 JJOS ANGELES.VjuIy -2.— -Los Angeles defeated -Poftland 'In 'the first-game 'of the : series': today. 3 to. o. :: K jnsella* held the^ locals: to r four ; hits,: thr«e | of *which were* made j by Ellis*. Ellis bounced; the ball over .the center -fields fence "for : a home' run in. the first; inning. ':\u25a0 Los Ah grelea made there fast - double -plays. Score:; "\u25a0'" . \u25a0• ' '\u25a0 \u25a0•; .; /. ;-'•-.•' ' '--- \u25a0 .- 1 >-.->.. , .LOSAXGELES'.!. " ; -.- .- . - : • v A8.R..8H. SB. PO. A.E*. Bernard,, c. f. ......\u25a0*. 0 0 j0- 1 0 0 Ellla. l.if.V. ....4 1.; 3 0 3 - .0 "0 Brashcar. 2b \. .::... 3 0 0 0 ;3; 3 -3 1 Dillon.'-lb \u25a0...%\u25a0...... 2r 0 \u25a0 0,-2-. 7 1 -0 Crrrath, r. f.;. ;.'.:.. 3:. 1"^ 1 -0. 1.0 0 Smith. 3b .......... 4 10 o 6 .8 0 Delmas, .; s. \u25a0 5^'. ."."..;.' 3\ f> 0 0 2 ' 1 1 Hogan,:c ..'..V..;... 2,; 0 0-0 • 4- 2".0 • ** Of Course You Travel on the Overland Limited. J~ You can buy round trip tickets, first class, to Chicago— St. Louis— St: I>aul^ilinneapolis---omaha—-KansasI > aul^ilinneapolis---0maha— -Kansas City— St.- Joe— Hbuston-r-Kew ' Orleans-^Mempnis^Boston^New \u25a0 Yofk.^ W asn i n ot on t- Baltimore, ; . Jamestown Exposition— Saratoga Springs, etc., for thirty to forty dollars , ' less .than ustiali round trip rates -on these days.— tickets sold to one or, more of these points each day — Better buy your: berth now over^tHe direct and quick short line, the Southern Pacific-Unioa Pacific \u25a0•:'" /.':.--' \u25a0\u25a0"•\u25a0 '"\u25a0'-'\u25a0 '-\u25a0 '\u25a0'.- \u25a0 .\u25a0;;\u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0;,' - .-V. \u25a0 .-_ ;..:\u25a0_ ,; ; \u0084 , *\u25a0..„. ) :\u25a0\u25a0.'....-: :-: : >^ ; , ;::;;;.;;:: Ticket Offices-— — —rs"' , Southern Pacific Co. Union Pacific R. R. Flood Bldg., Cor. Market and Powell Corner : Ellis and Powell Streets RESULTS OF. GAMES .Oakland 5, Sao'Francisco O. 'L,0% Angeles 3, Portland 0. . STAXDLVG OP TIIE CLUBS \u25a0\u25a0y^/ yf-i\v;-y'iZ Pet. Los'Anscltfl ... ....... jf4 j^ «579 Oakland ............. ,\ .44 4U a .524 SaST: Francisco' \........ 42 40" '^12 Portland >..... ;. ... 29 47 Gray, p. ....;... 3 0 0 0 0 \ 0 Totals ............28 "S-4 2 27 11 2 \u25a0-.PORTLAND , - • AB. R. BH. SB. PO. A. E. Bassey. 1. . t.. .....:. ;S 0 10 3.'0 0 Mott,/3b ..V r.;,3 0 1 1 0 .1 0 Casey,' \u0084t2 b .-.;....... 3 0 0 :o 2-. 2' O McCreedie, r. f . 41 o• 0 0 10 0 Atherton,* c. •?.-...... 3 «J 1 o'2 ft- 1 Donahue.vc. \u25a0'.-. ;.;... 2 0 1 0 * h 0 t^raon/^lb. .8 0 0 «» 6 \u25a0 0 2 Schlmpff^ g.- s. - . ; . . . * 4 ol 0 5O 1 KlnseUa.- p. .-"....* .:. 3 0" O iO 0~:2- 0 Wallace,; x - ...-.-....,1 0 0 0 0 \0 0 \u25a0Totals . ....\.'....:29 '.' 0 s•' 1 "24 10 4 xßatted for -Carson in ninth. "" *• SCORE BY INNINGS Los"Anjtele»-r...7Tl O -0 0 0 0.2 0 x— 3 "Basehit? ...;. \:.l' 0 0 0 0 1 1 '1 x-^-4 Portland ... .......00 0 0.0 0 000 — 0 Basehits ....".r.'.O 1 0 0 2' O : l'l o—s0 — 5 < \u25a0-•::-'\u25a0:\u25a0' - •\u25a0\u25a0• SUMMAHY • \u25a0 - - Sacrifice hit— Jloßan. Left on bases — I.ob Angeles. 4, PorUand .7. Bases on balls — Off ; Gray: 6.- off Kinsclla •4. Struck ont — By Gray 2, by Klnsella 5. Donble plays— Smith to Dil lon; Smith to- Braghear; Delmas to Brashear tq Dillon.- Home mo — Ellis. - First base on errow — j Portland 2. Los Angeles S. Tlm«! — 1 hour 53 minutes. Umpire — Perrine. EXPLAINS HOW YELLOW PERIL MAY COME ABOUT ' :"V7IH . the some day become the ruling nation of the wortd? Getirge^ Borrow,, the "English; philologist.' trav eler and author, used to~ say that" they would."' Nearl jr fifty years ago, when he was studying ; their . language, he maintained that there was among them the finest natural fighting material on the face of .the earth/ . . v , He Instanced, in proof of hisasserUon their prowess Hn stone throwing,- the most' primitive r form , of marksmanship. Anordlnary";Chinaman, he said, could throw .fa"; 'stone'-. weighing 'half a , pound or more ai distance of . 1 20 . yards with sure aim and deadly effect. He de scribed a stone.flght between some English bluejackets and an equal num ber , of Chinamen, in which the former were most Ignomlniously routed, many ofithem.yery. badly. hurt. ;.:.; But itlwas not through their. martial prowess that he predicted the supram acy of the Chinese. He said 4t; would come- about- !n another way/ As west ern civilization. became more luxurious and -enervated and manual-labor fell into : contempt the- Chinese would grad ually supply - all : the .. workers I»-/«ivlI ized- countries — miners,' farm *' laborersV factory hands, lanndrymen, cooks,- do mestic- servants .would; all -eventually be, Celestials. Then some day they would rise' suddenly, cut the throats of their-- masters, jiml become' absolute rulers of the destinies of the world.— Chicago News. . 'J. ' \u25a0'. \u25a0 ' ' . \' GALLANTRY AT WEST*; p'dlVß , West Point cadets who. loaned their great, gray coats to glrfj visitors . to shield them from the wind arc io.be tried I for violation of the rules «fi the academy. . '}:\u25a0 The . « trial probabty^ivtlt' •settle" the much disputed' point as to whether > chivalry in this day;,. and country-Is- legally i and ; officially dead. '.The shade'of ,-Srr:,Walter Ralefgh. : *who did. not hesitate ;S to ; ruin -his ; rlcli cloak "that tEngland'R- que«n might-not soil/her dainty boot. m*y;,be much "In terested :-in' the deliberations -of ; the military: board^which is to pass ..upon the striplings* acts.— St. Louis Republic!. GUARANTY FOR SAFE BRIDGES "Railway .'drawbridges in England are safeguarded in a peculiar manner. The brldgeman ; literally stakes-- his. ;lif e on the- correctness of. his work. As a traiti approaches the'lbridge it slows' up jind the Ibridgeman must * get .'op..' the..pilot of- the .engineand I ride across, gj On 'the opposite " side '• the engine*.. slows "doWn and ; the , brldgexnan drops', btt. ' to ,'xlde back on the pilot of, the next train go ing" the . other way. If ",the~ briag~erhan has been -so careless as r to cause ; a wreck goes down with th^^ train. Theyftiave very few' bridge accidents In England.— Savannah: News.; . MEANING OF THE NAMES "NAVAJO" AND "APACHE" Interesting Facts Rdating^to Indian Nomenclature Are Given \u25a0 " - Xavaho .was originally writtsa Navn- Jo. and is a word "of Spanish origin. Ac cording: to the lata Dr. "W., Matth«ws that -name is generally supposed to mean "clasping knife or razor" and to have been given by the Spaniard* be cause the Xavaho warriors carried great stone knives about their persons. It has been suggested that tha cazna may come from a synonymous word meaning: pool -or small laka. Finally Horatio Hale, a prominent American ethnologist, recorded the fact that 10ms take it to signify cornfield people. la the light of the -latest researches Zhla interpretation does not uem devoid, of appropriateness. Father Leopold's own •xplajaation however. Is B till more pla.UAlbl*> JL» th« name is evidently Spanish tho rvoords of the old Spanish missionaries' and «x» plorers must naturally contain th* Itity of its meaning:. Now, 'ln a' memorial to the king of Spain written in 1(30 by Fra Alonzo de Benavldes, O. s*. iL» the writer, after describing ' the Glla Apaches, says that more ' than 10 leagues north of therft "on* encounters the province of the Apaches of Navajo. Although" they are the same Apache nation aa the foregoing, they, are sub ject and . subordinate to another chlsJ captain and have a distinct mode of living. For those of back yonder did not use to plant,. but sustained them selves by the chase; and today we have, broken land. for them and taught them to plant. But these of Navajo are very great farmers, for that is what Navajo signifies— great planted fields." From the expression "the Apaches of Navajo" It la evident that the last word did at first represent, : not the natives now called by it, but the country they Inhabited. TJie southern Denes were to the Spaniards simply Apaches, who for* the sake of convenience were at. first qualified by their particular habitats, until frequent repetition and love of conciseness caused the name of the In dians to be discarded In favor of that of their lands, as it often happens even in our days. '\u25a0 ' As to the word Apache itself th.* same 'missionary proposes as a possible etymology the Spanish verb "apaceti tar," to drive herds to pasture; and his supposition derives color from the fact that A. F. Bandeller, speaking of the Apaches in general, calls them occa sionally "the Apache-vaqueros, or \u25a0Cowherds." But personally I would feel more inclined to accept Dr. Ales Hlrd licka's suggestion that that term is probably'a corruption of Opaka, which, in the dialect of the Pimas, the south- * era Denes' neighbor, means enemies, or aliens, like the 'Navahoes' Ana'e and the northern Denes* Atna. "Great planted fields" "was therefore originally meant by Navajo, and this I Interpretation 1 . 13 further explained by i the fact that when first encountered by I the Spaniards j they were in possession of an immense territory, some Of which — possibly that part oC.lt which was first seen' by the white Intruders— -was planted with corn." means in a fiat, even* piece of land, a plain or a field, and the suffix -ajo. the equivalent , of the modern -acho, is not only an augmentative, -but also a. de : preciatlve: desinence,', much, I should think, as the French* ending -allle in r"r "f errallle,'*'*'inangeaille."' which signify I respectively" Iron and food of little ac t count. Therefore, by " writing "the ! Apaches , of Navajo" Benavides must have meant "the Indians who live on the- ; large, f . more , or xjess worthless fields." -Those who are familiar with the character of their lands will not gainsay the appropriateness of the ap pellation.— An thropos. WISDOM OF OH SOKA PALAKA . Oh Soka Palaka. ' protector of the world In general and of Japan In par ticular", mayestthou forever be seated on a Totus flower. like Padmavatl. tli« daughter o( Blbhu and the bride of Sakti.. -Verily, the Linga Purana. in which -Siva explained the objects of life,, contain no, wisdom like thine.' Surely thou art even as'MahaVira. the twenty-fourth Tlrthankara of the Jains. whVwas bornmafly times and finally attained the Kevala, that is. the only knowledge, under a Tal tree on . the horth'bank of the Rijupalika. — Eastern World. 11