Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SA FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JANUARY 23, 1898. 83 NEW TO-DAY. T0 CURE NERVOUS DYSPEPSIA. To Gain Flesh, to Sicop Well, to Know What Appetite and Good Digestion Mean, Make n Testof Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets. PIOTOGRAPHED THE ECLIPSE | Interesting Expericnce of an Indianapolis | SUCcess of the Parties of| Gentleman. _ s Astronomers in India. i mmon or more S0 £ rvous dyspepsia. ing it think that their nerves € surprised that ¥ nerve medicine the real seat of Shape of the Corona the Same as It Was in 1888 | and 1896. organ to be looked after. s dyspeptics often do not have whatever he stomach, nor ymptoms of | The Information Obtained Regarding | Nervous dyspep- the Sun Will Be of Much Inter- | t in the stomach so < § | v other organ; est to Scientists. art palpitates and the kidneys are | ; in others the bowels are con- with headaches; still others 1 with loss of flesh and ap- accumulation of gas, sour Bpecial Dispatch to The Call. TALNI, British India, between Am- rast! and Nanghou, Jan. 22—The ob- servation of the eclipse of the sun to- day by E. W. Maunder and C. T. Walte was most successful. The sky was per- t during the n. of No. 61 Prospect | Ind., writes as fol- j-f pure gratitude write these few lines harper ; fectly clear and the 1 and valuable med| 5 Dyspepsia Tablets. 1 |middle of the totality equaled a full ave been a sufferer from nervous dys- | moon. The general shape of the sun co- peps last four years; have | rona was the same as the eclipses of and oth- 1886 and 1896. The corona extended thout any favorable re- over two diameters from the sun and st time: e temporary . g > rell ffoots of the mudiciny | 1ts greatest extent was along the sun’s w ted this to my sed- | equator. er : a bookkeeper with | Photographs were obtained on a litt X but I am glad | scale of 4-56 inch to the sun's diameter, o bat the tablets have over-|and also on the scale of 1-10 inch, to get £0 these obstacles, for I have |tne coronal extensions. The spectrum sleep better and am phere and its promi- better in /. The above is writ- sfully observed with ten not for notoriety, but is based on : \ glass fitted with a direct v fon prism in one of the eyepieces. The three photographs of the corona were obtained on & scale of 7-10 inch to the sun's diameter, and also the scale actual fact. Respectfully you: A. W. SHARPER, “§1 Prospect street, Indianapc It is safe to say that = ‘,,k:‘,,’ff.‘},‘ S s ot of 1-10 inch. Good spectrum photo- o e phs were obtained. stomach. They cure sour stomach, £as R fnbF e hemviawiion® pa b S d with a prismatic camera and a e T COT! b: Lick ( unde atory party, Professor Campbell, wires that the sky nable little book on stom- soh By anfiressing St o ~ gL Stuart Co., | i Clear and that observations have i Dl full-sized packages been successful. The light in the mid- sell full-sized packages | 5. of the totality was greater than the e . —_|full moon, and the general shape of : - the corona was similar to the eclipses | of 1535 and 189. It extended to the - — | distances nearly two diameters from i IR TR RS f | the sun. The greatest extension was | along the line of the sun’ BYRAILTO TIE YURON GOLD FIELDS SURVEYOR " JOHN W, GRAY. DRADLIC WORK. Surveys Being Made by the! Alaska and Northwestern | Company. A B C Code—4th Boston Capitalists Awaiting the Con- sent of Congress to Begin Build- ing to Fort Selkirk. ESTOF TIME. Coloriel W. C. Alberger of this city, who s recently returned from Alaska, where for the Alaskan Northern Railw i Company, is confident that the work of t of the Englishand German | copstruction will begin as soon as Con- Expert Sp , 731 Market Street, for r.ss grants the right of way. Chronic Diseases cures—not for a week, N0t T Jaft here last October,” s for a month, but for all time. Alberger last evening, “with a par te our superior methods we will fully equipped for the work C 5 T ! RRH e mapped out a route through $5 PER MONTH $5 id Colonel From there we went twenty-five farther, I ret 1 home, rting on Christmas day. I left my par- in the field and it will proceed with the ich brought us to the Canadian MEDICINES FREE. rk to Fort Selkirk, which will be the northern terminus of the road. The line will be 300 miles long, which is the short- route possible from tide: he Yukon. | > the most difficult part of the | n engineering point of view, s over the pass, and although the grades are steep in pla I don't think we will have to tunnel anywhere. The worst feature is the precipitous nature of the | pass. Great masses of granite jut out, lecessitating a vast amount of heavy | work in grading the roadbed, but the route is entirely practicable. From the | point reached when I returned the coun- | iry is what may be called rolling and ad- mirably adapted to railroad construction, The soil is good and there i? plenty of gravel for ballasting to be obtained all | along the line. ater to navi- | ing, but the longest bridg over 700 feet, including | is over the Yukon at ¥ | will probably be nec y to put in a ! | draw to permit the p: ge Oof steamers | as the river is navigable at that poin | Fortunately, however, there is plenty timber at this end of the rout will not Mountains | spruce, | Rarther up | the trees are smaller, an 15-inch tree be- ing of exceptional size in the Yukon coun- | try. Finally the timber disappears alto- gether, and we expect to derive a good revenue from hauling timber into the mining district “How long will it take to complete the | road?”’ was asked. ! “If it were anywhere in States 1 could answer that question,” re- plied Colonel Alberger, “but the condi- tions in that country are such that it is impossible to say. In the first place we cannot begin work until Congress grants us the right of w 1 anticipate mo | trouble on that score, though. We have | already filed our appilcation and we ex- pect Congress will act upon it favorably this session and we will begin operations right away. We can do a large amount of work on this side of the pass during | the winter, but on_the other side the | ground is frozen so hard that we cannot do much except in the summer. The work will be pushed ahead, though, just pidly as possible when once we be- .l' rivate Diseases. EE BOOK and Symptom Blank. ENGLISH AND GERMAN EXPERT SPECIALISTS (Ineorpor for §250,000) Masters of Chronic Discases, 7381 MARKET STREHT. Hours, 8-5; Evenings, 7-8; Sundays, 8-11. Phone Green 601 CONSULTATICN ALWAYS FREE. Send for FR the United | No deception practiced. No $100 Reward. | ASK YOUR DRUCCGCIST for a generous {0 CENT TRIAL SIZE. | “‘Can _you give the names of those in- ted in the company?”’ No, I am not at liberty to do so at present. 1 will say, though, that they are all Boston capitalists and there is no uestion about there being . sufficient | nancial backing. 1 have spent consid- erable money for the company alread and my demands have been promptly met and 1 am certain they will be right along. If we had the consent of Congress I could | spend $200000 a month from now on, buflding_wharves and grading the road- | bed to the summit, and I think we will | be able to begin work in a very short time.” “It has been stated that the Rothschilds have also run a survey through Chilkoot Pass for a railroad; do you know any- thing about it?" “I know they have not made any sur- veys vet through the pass. I met Mr. PBratennober and party, who were sentout | b)aihe London Exploration Company, in which the Rothschilds are interested, but I am positive that no surveys were made for at least fifteen miles from tide-water. They, too, would have to obtain the con- sent of Congress before they could con. struct a road in Alaska, and it does not seem likely that an English company would be given preference over Ameri- cans.” s 10 cocsine, mercury nor any other fn- drug. It ns and cleanses the Nasal Ileals and Inflammation. mbrane. Restores the Is quickly shsorbed. Gives 50 cts. at Drugzists or by mall, at Droggists or by mall. <5 Warmen Stroet, New York _————— Disinherited Her Son. The last will of Catherine Wright was filed for probate yesterday. An estate | valued at $4000, with the exception of $1, is bequeathed the testator’s daughter-in- Jaw, Mrs. Charles Edward Mahan. Tha $1 is given Charles Edward, and in the will it is stated that the testator cut him NOTARY PUBLIC. A. d. HENRY, NOTARY PUBLIC 63 MARKET BT., OPP, PALACE | Off with this small amount on account of Hotel. Telephone 670. Residemce %09 | his intemperance and neglect of his Valencia street. Telephone, ‘‘Church” 16 | family. | the sugar trade, leaving the Hawalian ! ready to begin discharging to-morrow | *““We will have to do considerable bridg- | | transfer business on the water front. A company composed of influential men has been incorporated, and in a few weeks the concern will be in full swing. The company’s offices will be A COAL FAMIN on Market street, near Third, and when | business begins it will have eight| | teams to start with. Trunks are to be moved for 25 cents each, and on all | other kinds of baggage the rates are to be greatly reduced. The prospect for.a rate war among the transfer men is very bright. Charles Cheeseman, the steward of the British ship Pyrenees, who was | beaten by the mate and boatswain of | the vessel, was not hurt as badly as | was at first thought. His nose and | one rib were fractured, and his ear, | { | | Arrival of Colliers From the North Brings Some Relief. face and scalp were cut. but there were no internal injuries. to the German Hospital yesterday. The men who were arrested for a | saulting him say that he drew a knif . He w: The Steamer Humboldt to Join g ot the Klondike Fleet This Week. and attempted to slash them, and that it was not until he made that move e that they struck him. Captain Plum, who went as mate of A Gasoline Launch Caught Fire in | the tug Isabel when she was ordered T | to Panama, returned on the Mail com- e e i o pany’s steamer Colon yesterday. He says the tug behaved splendidly and that she made good time on the run down the coast. There was some excitement at the launching of the Japanese cruiser Chi- tose yesterday. The gasoline launc Al Borak caught fire and had to be | scuttled in order to extinguish the flames. Water was thrown on the blaze in large quantities, but it only Be Scuttled. All the vessels chartered for the Klon- dlke trade are being put into shape as rapidly as possible. The bark Theo- bald was brought down from Martinez yesterday, and after a few minor re- | patrs have been made here she will seemed to add fuel to the flames. start for the Sound. The steam | Finally a hole was schooner National City will be ready | tom of the craft i e i e | 1o ater. The hu een dam- to sail February 10, and the following | | ‘«‘.1‘;3‘1'.";-}1 el ey pm!‘uh'i; i passengers are already booked by he: cheaper to build a new boat than at- E. Richards, R, Roberts, Gus Unger- | tempt to patch up the old one. mann, D. Fredericks, Mr. and Mrs. G.| The steamer Humboldt will not go Samreither, William Klos, A. M. Mun- | back into the Eureka trade for some zenmayer, A. Hahnemann, Miss Son- time to come. Some parties have an e Eonch, Gooree Wolfert. Aug. | option on the vessel, which will expire ust Wrede, John Nelson, Gus Nelson, to-morrow. If they fail to come to | time Max Kalish & Co., agents for the Bridget Faltner, C. T. Smith, E. T.| Humboldt, will run her to Dyea them- Knight, A. Hofmayer, C. Ripke, H. | selv Mr. Kalish is very angry over Rossler, John Shore, J. L. Harkinson, | the fact that certain parties have been taking $20 deposits from miners for transportation to Dyea and Skaguay on the Humboldt. At present the only people who have any right to sell tick- ets for the Humboldt are the agents. ADAMS W@AS VICTORIOUS. H. McNulty Beede, George Klos, Selina Nelson, Victor Clisson, Miss and W. M. Williams. The collier Progreso arrived from the the Sound yesterday, and the work of | getting her ready for the St. Michael trade will begin as soon as her cargo of coal is discharged. Her charter efeats Percy Murdoch, dla- price is reported to be $75,000. He Dsten = SR Eb é The demand for vessels for the| meda’s Champion, inan Excit- Klondike trade has been so great that many boats have been drawn out of ing Tennis Match. The specially arranged tennis match between Dick Adams of the California Club and Percy Murdoch, champfon of | lines short. ‘The barkentine Sharp- | shooter has therefore been brought out | \p. Bejle Vue Club, was played vesterday of retirement and will sail in a few o1 1« at the California courts before a large days for Kahulil to load sugar for | .inering of enthusiasts, Adams winning this port. | by a score of 61, 108, 810, 6—4. The steamer San Jose, that was | “mrom the time play began to the finish withdrawn from the Central American | ¢ (ne mateh the players were greeted trade to bring down coal to relleve | gy gpplause. Brilllant smashes and the scarcity at the Southern Pfif"‘c | long rallies were plentiful, and the crowd oy ks e Bne coilon | had an excellent chance to show its ap- into her old trade again. She salled| ..} "Adams played a careful game, vesterday for San Jose de Guatemala | Proyal- Adame PO & Careiil game, and Ac jpas pulco with freight only. The bark Wilna was besieged again | Jonent, this style of play eventually Thorimiabmbs i i e D | winning him the contest. Murdoch = :;lrd“ "‘J}fl:““f TN e WhO | chowed himself to be a clever player, but ained around the bunkers all night | ¥as handicapped by unfamillarity with I eer 1o got an early load in the | the court. After the match Murdoch com- orning. The shortage will be over. | Plained of sore feet, not being used to come for a short time, as the Progreso | Playing on bitumen, and asked for a re- | s with tons_and | {rn game on a clay court, Adams agreed L p to this, and the game will likely be the Willamette from Seattle and Bris- | plaved in Alameda Text Saturday. tol from Departure Bay, the Wash-|' Owing to the illness of Bob Whitney, tenaw from Tacoma. Burma from | his brother George acted as partner to George Bradsh: match with W. born. After A former team & morning. Score, 63 The British ship Lord Shaftesbury,| Charley Haight made his first appear- now out seventy-two days from Syd- | s on_the court vesterday after an e Nanaimo (B. C.), and Cazrina and Em- | pire from Coos Bay will all be in and | in_their prearranged Alter Magee and S. San- spirited exhibition, the eded in capturing ‘both bsence of ma ney, N. S. W., for this port, has been | y years blayed 2 few chartered to load at either Tacoma or | g2mes with Joe Dally. Sx_mgm and et han e arives off the | Charles Hubbard held the championship e AR EANS o . | in doubles in 1893. It is said he will be- Golden Gate the pilots will instruct the | come a member of the California Club captain to proceed on up north. and will try to get back to his old-time s to be more opposition to the form. knocked in the hot- | COLLECTED IN THE CORRIDORS A. Colly, a mining man of Sonora, who has come down to the city from that part of the country to take charge of the Tu- | olumne float in the parade to-morrow, | brings word of anotber big strike in the | Fairview mining claim, an extension of | the Bonanza, that is expected to pan out larger than the famous strike of last | September, when $37,000 was taken out of one pocket holding only two tons of pay | dirt. The present pocket has not yet been worked, but $2000 has already been cleaned | up from the merely preliminary investi- | gations that have been made. The pres- | ent find was made on the 100-foot level { and was the result of the initial work on | & crosscut that it was decided to make. | ‘\“.. F. Burbank, a capitalist of Los P4 ngeles, is registered at the California. C. J. Byxter, one of the best known of Fresno's prominent men, is at the Baldwin. F. R. Mowrer, the marshal of the United | States Consular Court at Yokohama, is a guest at the Grand. George Russell, cattleman, banker and ‘r:\pllallst of Nevada, is staying at the | Lick. | W. H. Workman, ex-Mayor and lead- ing politician of Los Angeles, is at the | Palace. B. U. Steinman, Sacramento, has come family to witness the They are at the Palace. 1. S. Harvey, of the Wellington Coal Company of Victoria, B. C., Is at the Oc- cidental. H. B. Stabler, a large fruit grower of Yuba City, will be at the Lick for the next few day C. George Krogness, the Chicago mana- ger of the World-Herald of Omaha, is in the city on a short visit; he has taken rooms at the Palace. A RICH STRIKE IN SONORA. - one-time Mayor of down with his Golden Jubilee. Friday evening a party consist- ing of two young ladies who reside on Van Nessave- nue and their es- ; { ADVENTURE. ¢ . ¢ corts decided to TR NS s make T iTID through Chinatownand sce for themselves how the almond-eved stranger from the | Orient ushered in his new year. They ex- pected to meet with some adventure out of the ordinary, and they did, ifarow with a guide and a subsequent trip to the police station may be considered as things not to be expected in the ordinary round of a conventional existence. The party pro- | ceeded up Sacramento street and were trying to understand the difference be- tween a joss and a josh, when they were approached by a smooth-looking Celes- tial, who emerged from out of the smoke of burning punks and firecrackers, and | after acquainting them with the fact that that the city possessed offered to show them the sights under his experienced chaperonage for themodestsum of $L. The tourists jumped at so good a bargain and the whole outfit started along together. They had a fine time up to the hour of | settlement, and then the trouble com- menced. The only pieces of money in the pockets of the escorts were a bogus dol- lar and a good half. They tried to pass the counterfeit on the innocent-looking |guide, but he demanded a good coin and refused to take anything less than the stipulated price for his services. The men of the party not having the price were unable to comply with the demand, so | notwithstanding beauty's tears valor's threats the hard-hearted Mongo- lian had the whole party marched off to the station. There the men of the party explained the matter, and as there was evidently no attempt to pass the bad { h» was about the finest thing in guides | and | money, and as the whole matter evident- ly arose from the ignorance of the worth- lessness of the coin they had attempted | to pay the guide with, the gallant ses- | geant on watch, moved at the sight of so | much loveliness in distress, produced the necessary half that the escorts lacked and the Chinaman was pald and went on his way in & happler frame of mind than did his late guests when they left the station a little while after. facturer of Sacramento, will both be at the Grand during the festivities of the next few days. Summit Hecht, the young brother of Bert Hecht, the well-known shoe manu- facturer, is in Boston, where he is rap- idly making a name for himself as a writer of popular songs. He has given several very good things to the public thus far and, if the opinion of those versed in such matters goes for anything, his efforts in the past are merely the earnest of greater successes in the future. One of his latest hits, “The Daughter of the Leader of the Band Is at present W. Wehnet, a well-known vineyardist of | Evergreen, is at the California. F. M. Chittenden, a leading attorney | of Fresno, and his brother, L. S. Chit- | being sung out here by the “Courted Into tenden, one of the foremost lawyers of Hanford, can be found at the Grand dur- Court” Company ing Jubilee week. | John Holliday, a globe trotter whose & A GELIA SCOTT'S WILL CONTESTED Her Husband Claims He Was Deprived of a Rightful Share of Her Estate. home is in London, is in the city on his | way around the world. He s registered at the Occidental. J. H. Henry, president of the San Jose and Santa Clara Railway Company, has come to the city with his family and taken rooms at the Palace, fronting on Market street, in order to witness the Jubllee parade. Mr. Henry was the director general of the San Jose Carnival of Roses, one of the most successful af- fairs of the kind ever held in the State. Dr. J. W. Ashley, a popular physician of Oroville, is among the visitors to the clty’s fete who are registered at the Bald- win. L. T. Garnsey, president of the Redon- do Beach Rallroad, has come up from his home in Los Angeles and is staying at the California. W. A. Duncan, a wealthy mining man of Oroville, is at the Lick. George R. James, one of the leading men of Memphis, Tenn., is at the Palace with his wife. George A. Metealf, a leader in the social | and business world of Boston, is in the city on a visit of pleasure to the coast accompanied by his family. He is stay- ing at the Occidental. Accuses Relatives of Having Unduly Influenced the Testator Against Him. E. W. Scott, surviving husband of the late Angelia R. Scott, has filedacontest to the last will of the deceased. The contestant alleges that his wife was unduly influenced by her sister, Mrs. | Louisa Garcia, Mrs. Helen Gerrish, her niece, C. M. Gerrish and her nephew, Frank Garcia, Jr. Mrs. Louisa Garcia, Helen Gerrish and Frank Garcia, Jr., Mr. Scott avers, were frequently with his wife, and knowing that she was of unsound mind they took advantage of sessessssssssss ‘With the crowd I z of visitors pour-| her condition and led her to believe ¢+ USED HIM ing into the city | that the contestant was constantly vio- ' ¢ to witness the | lating his marriage vows. Scott also ¢+ FOR A MOP. ¢ Golden Jubilee | alleges that by false statements they $ “ ¢ celebration are | led his wife to believe that he was try- ¢ coming a number | ing to poison her, and with others was e+ of those easy-|conspiring to put her in an insane asy- lum. In this way, the contestant says, they succeeded in getting his wife to draw up a will that deprived him of a just and lawful share of the dece- dent’s estate. In order to make his wife believe that their charges were made in good faith, Mr. Secott continues, Mrs. Garcia, Miss Gerrish and Frank Garcia, Jr., retained detectives to shadow him and they fre- quently visited Mrs. Scott at her home, 1743 Franklin street. They were un- successful in their attempts, however, to dig up something against his repu- tation, but succeeded in so‘influencing Mrs. Scott’'s mind that she neglected to bequeath the contestant his rightful share of the estate. In consequence the court is asked to deny the will ad- mittance to probate. —_———— WILLS FILED FOR PROBATE Small Estates Disposed Of by Testament. The will of Rufus H. Clement was filed for probate yesterday. The widow of the testator, Carrie E. Clement, is bequeathed the testator’s entire estate which is val- ued at $1000. Kate McCorville's last wiil was filed for probate, and by its terms an estate valued at $4100 is bequeathed to her three sons. The will of Eugene F. Herne, disposing of a 35000 estate, was filed for probate. The entire property is | left the testator’s children. The will of James McCarthy, bequeathing a $2400 es- tate to his brother Patrick McCarthy, res siding at Sing Sing, N. Y., was the last testament filed for probat living individuals who travel through the world collecting as they go whatever they can lay their hands on. When they are successful in escaping detection they gen- erally manage to fare pretty well, but they occasionally run up against a snag, and when they do they coma out at the small end of the affair that ensues—at least, they do when the snag happens to be Martin Noon, the husky porter of the Lick House. Noon knows about as much | of the rules of the manly art of self-de- fense as a Chinaman does of the Bible; but his muscles are large and hard, his sinews taut and stringy and hisfist lfkeunto the hand of Providence in size; so when he starts to mix things it takes more than a good_man to hold his own, irreépective of the knowledge that the stranger may possess. Yesterday Noon saw a tall stranger making off with a silk-lined overcoat belonging to W. Richardson, a lumberman of Truckee, who Is a guest at the hotel. He told the fellow to put down the coat and get out. The thief looked down from his superior height to the comparatively small man who addressed him and gave an impertinent reply. The next minute Noon had him by the scruff of the neck, and after literally wiping up the floor with him deposited him on the sidewalk outside, a wiser and more ragged man than when he came in. Several A. Muller, the popular representative of the Winchester Repeating Arms Company on the Pacific Coast, has taken rooms at the Occldental for himself and family. Dr. B. B. Corey, a well-known physician of Fresno, is in the city to take In the celebration of next week. He is at the Grand. | Edward Fisher, tho Vacaville banker, is | ;e SPPUESHOE 00 (s, (et T eance at the Lick with his wife. | | habeas corpus was denied by Judge Cook George Mainhart, mining man of Grass | yesterday morning, and the prisoner was Valley, and L. T. Bruner, a large manu- | remanded to the custody of the Sheriff. s Mrs. Rissland Denled a Writ. The application of Mrs. Mary Rissland, N 23S —= p= to mankind. 3 tions of man. 4 v \ \ Hudyan is the scientific discovery \S‘x\ “ thathas been used by the doctors of the Hudson Medical Institute for many years. No one else can supply Hudyan. the secret process. Hudyan is not a cheap patent medicine; it is a treatment, and it is a treatment that perfects the imperfec- Hudyan cures ringing in the ears, noises in the head, prematurity, atrophy and those special disorders peculiar Hudyan cures the curious weaknesses known as tired feelings. No one else knows Hudyan cures nervous debility, stunted growth, palpitation, shortness of breath, dyspepsia, constipation. Hudyan cures pains in the back, pains in the side, pains in the chest, pains in the loins. Hudyan cures dizziness, falling sensations, headaches, nervousness. nervous twitchings, nervous pulsations, nervous declines, nervous morbidness. Hudyan cures nervous debility, If you are really in doubt about the curing properties of the Hudyan treatment call and consult the doctors. Consult them FREE. of Hudson doctors. It will cost you no money to have a private talk with the chief of the staff If you can’t call WRITE FOR CIRCULARS AND TESTIMONIALS. FIRST, FIRST, FIRST FIRST, FIRST, FIRST, SECONDARY, SECONDARY, SECONDARY, SECONDARY, SECONDARY, SECONDARY, i TERTIARY TERTIARY TERTIARY TERTIARY TERTIARY TERTIARY These three forms of Blood Poison or Tainted Blood can certainly be cured. The cure for these three forms of blood poison is called the GREAT 30-DAY CURE, be- cause it arrests the poison in 30 days and certain cures in from 30 to 60 days. You should consult the specialist on blood poison or write for 30-DAY «BLOOD BOOK." HUDSON MEDICAL INSTITUTE - JUNCTION ELLIS, STOCKTON AND MARKET STREETS, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA.