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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1901, REGULARS WILL HULE N LUZON All Voluntears in Philip pines to Be Mustered Out Quickly. 1 | Funeral LASTRITES OV - PHILIP REMILLARD of the Young Club Man Largely Attended. Pcpular c ETIL NUSBAUINER BECOMES | AN EXPERT ON FART1 PRODUCE 'As Commissioner of Agriculture He Will Sit in Judg- | ment on Cabbages and Garden Truck. - <& nent Proposes to Provids | Rev. Benjamin Fay Mills Preaches Tx Thousand Fresh Troops | the Sermon—Handsome - Floral Service by the First | Offerings Sent by Friends ReADY FOR of July. of Deceased. | TOE o = ey —_— Bunco MEN.. ‘k SHIN N y Oaklana Off. n Francisco Call, & . 1118 Broadway, March I5. The funeral of Philip H. Remillard took THE Man wiry place this THe Mok From % Lo CAKLAND. ¥ ial the deceased. s army of friends in Oakland. » regular lub and in soctal | b e 1 known he num- | | His FRien; X ength u and these sought | | g »«-m\?é;.“,'* ¥ ¢ 10 provide | to show their sorrow by their attendance | | . troops from the ( -day. The roc : = z a as buried in es were simple and consisted e 1 by Rev. Benjamin Fay Mills | | * the Temple quartet. Mr. | ¢ upon the immor- | 5 said nothing hap- but all in accordance st and best laws. He quoted _— reat i ary palibes e i ry |“.|‘.T;:m s wege All RIGHT AT D 4 Aty . Home. .. The | | s e all employes of | s or r Company—Axel | | erving Jensen, Lars Boneksen, An- | | g 5 t za, O. Brunelle, Alfred Grégoire | | ~ s Reliance Athletic | | B N s F lub and Oakland | | S W € t handsome £ s i were other pieces 1 £t s Ty family, the Remil- | | R M a e « wenty-sixth V . Thomas Cre | N O X 3 the Misses | cenTe MEN Con e e ; e convE HeRre \swheRe | A TMAKE ARAKE | - - ‘ ne :‘:’\,‘ ALWAYS - > nth | 7 the =" | RETURNS IN GOOD HEALTH. | | ngeme .ve Father Mestres Welcomed Back From | | z the Europe by Monterey Parishioners. | | e Nier | MONTEREY, March 15.—Rev her | | e Sine 't formerly priest of San| | NUSEY BOUND Ur parish in this city, | | e Xt w \ year spent in | | FORT“E cIry, ri g T health N | <4 % & S | \‘Iv EN MUST HANG. | it ould even reach | | M n in Man- > I "*” B 2 - w ¢ To-Day. | charge c o Mo WHAT THE UNINFORMED MAY. PICTURE IN THEIR MINDS WHEN THEY ARE INFORMED THAT FARMER . r men wk AORTRITEA TeoT ! MIL NUSBAUMER IS NOW ABROAD IN THE LAND IN THE CAPACITY OF CENSOR OF AGRICULTURAL £ e« Il resume his | | PRODUCTS. and his return is | & - joicing among the | * 5 v 1 oy, | ¥ { AKLAND, March 15.—Oakland has | of the wily gold brick man, the joyous | For instance there is a general belief SN T G a “Man with a hoe.” Governor | confidence man and the deft pickpocket. | that the convention habit is so strong - GIFT OF NEW UNIFORMS. Gage has appoinied that eminent | ‘They won't get thet there grip thiy |:DDI IS AgH ARy & v | apostle of cab s and garden | time,” said Nusey as he riveted the | co! of no o An 5 | Loomis Band Profits by Mrs. H. B. track, Emil Nusbaumer, as Com- | last link about his shoulders, “and thet | thoes e, orEe Of ROl s B K TS Pendleton’s Munificence. | missic of Agricuitural District No. 1, | there watch 'll stay right there. A friend | cultural district the bet is a thousand to AND NAV g to Be Dis- d and Sea. embers f this pi first g W. B o. Kelle WASHING tucky from by jum window; gn at each boa asel b of the | Presider Inter be Recelver Alaska Peter E. A be: Herbert W. Cardwi Fanning Among W Y {, March the shoot- sontinuous nal score: Gilbert, e associa- | Dudley Charles F. | Tanner. March e presid —Albert E A. Metzg s The officers are nt, r; manager, 1s officiat ON, electr! windows de John extingui Rose of North Dakota, to Michael, | Radcliffe, to be a boatswain | ¢ Public Mone: ). E George H —Mrs. d to the forms costing ional and was prompted | asie: F. W s leader. wires The br ed H B of “the tehings of juries caused by jumping head cut nd Scanlon, ng from a window, of Connectic h i the The damage to the building was small. at St Henry Henry W. Timothy F. s W. Hack, Frank V William ' G. eorge P. Reed, William T. Pendle- | Loomis cornet The that time all of ve been abandoned instruments substi- President, George Higso; Pendleton; treasurer, F. Turner Jr. | JUMP FROM THE WINDOWS. | Occupants of a Washington Hotel | Receive Injuries During a Fire. March flames. —_—l Appointments by President. WASHINGTON, March 15.—The follow- | ing appointments have been made by the navy ‘Willlam B. Bonham, to be second lieu- | n the Twenty-ninth Infantry, U, S. Haycraft, to be first licutenant Regiment of Infantry, U. of volunte Robineon, ell, George H. with_rank of F. Hoyt Penrose, Wil- bl llam F. de Niedeman, Ira C. Brown, Frederick | Complications in South Africa and China, | ta Pryce, who for thirty-six years has re- dar Combine Wi J. Combe, Franklin A. Meacham, Charles M. | Great Britain may be anwilling to stand | sided in tnis city and after whom Pryce Red Cedar Combine Wins omas C. Chalmers, Seaton Norman, | between France and Morocco. | street - and Pryce’'s Subdivision were TACOMA. Was March 15.—In d, John R. MecDill, James C. i named, dled last evening. She was 78 Frederick Hen. n er, Thomas B. Anderson, Grandy, Willlam Cook, Samuel T. ng. Charles L. Furbush. sistant surgeons of volunteers, with cant —Cli ce R. Long, Hi y | vhe! | 1 " Gebrge & Fener, Harey 8- Moore, | Motion as to whether the bill should pass. | the Santa Fe line caved yesterday and Palmer H. Lyon, Walter C. Chidester, Thomas | N0tWithstanding the veto, the vote Was | y)o.eq all traffic. Passengers up to a late C. Longino, Charles R. Giil, Charles E. Ma to 5. The bill originally passed by a Bar POmE anti ben et donatd a M. P "Compton_Wilson, | Vote of 11 to 7. and 12 votes were required | hour were taken to Bay Point and brought e Wiliis, Frea 1o pass the bill over the Governors veto, | to this city via the Southern Pacific Rall- e R it road. The Santa Fe officials stated las Jones, Willlam H. 1. Merhart, Verdo B. Greg- e, Francis'J. Pursell, Bruce Elliott, H. Gouldin, hotel, Ken- B. by fall- in | V. Miller, one that ‘“‘Nusey"” will s house cultivation. The new agricultural director has been in receipt of bouquets of carrots and cab- bages all day, and “Nusey” {s preparing and now *“Nus art forced hot- up to the newly Word reached Oakland last night that | the appointment had been made, and this s" friends are passing it | Tr xEme r:umme m-»;_ and no gol durned’ acoredit i = | bunko chap gets thet.” flecredfec Tavings | " Whether “Nusey” ever reached his new | office or not was not chronicled in Oak- | 1and to-day, but those who know the ex- 3 morning Emil Nusbaumer, farmer-at- | jurist, practitioner at the bar and man- | to take a course at the *Cow College” band has twenty-| large, started out to find his new office. | aging politician have a few ideas of what | at Berkeley in order to properly fit him- ,are permanent resi- | Having once read a newspaper, Mr. Nus- | Farmer sey’ will do with it when | self for the discharge of his arduous Jlmlrrr[:umzn‘slfl!y‘ was | baumer was quite familiar with the ways | he gets it. | duties. 89 200 was PLAN T0 RECEIVE THE CITY'S GUEST Offfeials Confer on Prepara- tions to Do Homor to the President. McKinley Will Find Oakland in Gala Attire and All Classes Will Join in Endeavor to En- tertain Him. —_—— Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, March 15. Entertainment without surfeit, honors without fatigue, will be the aim of the committee appointed to supervise Oak- land’s reception to Presidemt McKinley on the occasion of the Chief Executive's approaching visit to the city. The com- mittee has borne in mind the fact that | the President is in search of much-needed | rest. There will be no handshaking, and it is possible that no public address will be asked from the eminent visitor. The plans, as laid before the Board of approved by that body, begin with a carriage ride from Berkeley, where the President will deliver the commencement oration, to the home of Senator George C. Perkins on Vernon Heights. School children drawn up in line along the route to be traveled by the Presiden: tial party will scatter flowers in the road- way. There will be no pelting, say the committee. . At the Perkins residence the reception committee will deliver the freedom of the city to the President and he will meet soclally some of Oakland’'s most promi- nent citizens. From Vernon Helghts the party will drive through gayly decorated streets to the Macdonough Theater, where it is hoped that the President will deliver a brief_address. After the exercises there the Presidential party will be driven to bay. Mayor Snow has appolnted the commit- tees, who will have charge of the ar- rangements, after . consultation with Mayor-elect Barstow, to whom will fall the honor of receiving the President. They are as follows: Programme and Route—Edson Adams, A Britton and P. E. Bowles. Transportation—R. P. Jennings. Decoration of Roads—T. H. Willlams, E. B. Jerome, F. W. Delger, C. D. Bates Jr. Decoration of Strees—H. F. Gordon, Smith, A. Schilling, L. E. Bromwell. Decoration of Buildings—D. E. Coliins, H. P. Carlton, R. H. Chamberlain, H. C. Taft. Decoratlon of Harbor—J. P. Taylor, John L. Howard, W. A. Boole JF. Finance—Isaac L,_Requa, T. H. Willlams, Jchn W. Phillips, W. R. Davis, Frederick S. Stratton In addition to the foregoing the recep- tion committee will consist of: George C, Perkins, Victor H. Metcalt, F. A. Leach, F. W. Henshaw, G, Pardee, C. N. Fox, T. L. Barker, John P. Irish, J. D. Me- Clymonds and seventy-five other prominent cit- ns to be selected later. It is expected. that the Presidential party will leave Berkeley shortly after 1 o'clock. The Oakland committee’s plans will be forwarded to Washington for ap- proval or modification to suit the Presi- dent’'s convenience. LIBELS THE IROQUOIS.—Matthew Bridges filed a libel yesterday In the United States District Court against the ship Iroquois to. re- cover $5000 damages for the loss of a leg, al- leged to be due to the negligence of the mas- ter of the vessel F.M 1 Loyalty to His Employer. That young man who consented to have a portion of his bleod let out to save his em- ployer set a remarkable example of herofsm. The Incident shows what power there is in good blood. There is only one natural wa: to get good blood, and that is from the stomach. indigestion, constipation, and makes rich red blood. Trade by Mayor Snow this morning and | the pler where a Government vessel will | be in waiting to convey them across the | John | | | | | | | If the stomach needs assistance try Hostetter's | Stomach Bitters, This wonderful medicine cures | dvspepsia, | meeting was h. 11 TALKS OF PLAKS FOR UAIVERIT Architeet Howard of N w York Addresses Students at Berkeley. Comes at Solicitation of Mrs. Hearst to Examine Ground Preparatory Erecting First Building. to BERKELEY, gymnasium, It alen Howard nd Dr. F. W Church, San Whee Architeet He “I was rece Hearst to take the first of the he is to erect ing building as a th orial me: to ata Senator Hearst. The great univers.ty plans are about to be realized; t fivss step is just abow We are here in a ise. Prog- ress, cou e words blazo ¢ the State and the brightest of the jewels in that shield is education. We shall not live to see this great work compl A great work is never finished: it n aes. Dr. Clampett spoke on the traditiors and work of the Un: sity of Dublin. In closing he said “T have listened to sermons until they have almost hardene ched until I have probably but let me tell you of advice and ¢ faculty of Dublir words of no ot I graduated I f graduate of the er men b »und I was b at world Arrested for Forgery. SALINAS, March 15 ot Torres, a young man of ba y has been on a charge r a check f Yellowste arrested presented etor of t ok hew hesitation. Later discoveréd that t When arrested had found the ¢ forgery. that he k ADVERTISEMENTS. Pears’ Its least virtue is that it lasts so. Soap is for comfort; the clean are comfortable. Pears’ soap cleanliness— is perfect cleanliness. All sorts of people useit, all sorts of stores sellit, especially druggists. DR. CROSSMAN’ SPECIFIC MIXTURE For the Curs of Gomorrhoes, Gleots, Strictures and analogous complaints of the Organs of Generation. Price $1 a bo! For sale by druggtsts. | PRESIDENT OF YALE IS COMING WESTWARD Iminent Scholar Will Deliver the Charter Day Address at the University of California. NEW HAVEN, Conn., March 15.—Presi- | dent Hadley of Yale leaves this city to- | William Carey Sanger's first day in the morrow for the Pacific Coast. On March | omca ‘«:!ShAsalstaflr;‘l fiit;‘r:&:lr};n?{“:‘r;lrd::‘s i “h % marked by a m s ; z | 28 he will be the Charter day Orator at| ;. ication. By order of the Secretary all #i% Uhfversity. of Eallicrute. of the officers of the army stationed in The university corporation at its meet- | this city were required to appear at the decided to remove the North | War Department at 10 o'clock in uniform .eum building and Treasury | for the purpose of being presented to the eference to a multitude of | new Assistant Secretary. corporation did not vote to th . 1750, the ‘v’-‘l’.’}p(:lm halls, but it was L ARBEOCH00AAS A E 00005 : THE DAY’S DEAD. } lecided to remove the psychological lab- Q4444444444444 444440 | sy oratory. The old gymnasium will be re- modeled for laboratory purposes. Naval Lieutenant Maher. VALLEJO, March i5.—Lieutenant A. N. pamist i, FRENCH ADVANCING Maher, U. 8. N., died this morning at the | Nayal Hospita! ON MOORISH TERRITORY | Vague Reports of Fighting Are Re: stroke of paralysiz. had been invalided home from Cavite, ar- | ceived and Great Britain Is Growing Uneasy. | LONDON, March 16.—The Tangier cor- | riving on the Solace some weeks ago. To- | respondent of the Daily Chronicle, dealing | day he had arisen and dressed himself with the reported French encroachments | preparatory g on the tug Una- upon Moorish territor: | dilla_for a’ San Francisco hospital, when s i the fatal stroke came. Lieutenant Maher “There has beensevere fighting although | was appointed to Annapolis from Kansas but few details are allowed to pass the | and graduated with ihe class of censor. It is clear, however, that General | wag §2 years of age. column has established French | excellent officer. south of Figuig, although the rumor that Fizuig had been occupled by the French is not confirmed. There is an imeasy feeling there that, owing to the COLONEL SANGER MEETS A MARTIAL MULTITUDE Remarkable Demonstration Is O1- dered in Honor of the New As- sistant Secretary of War. WASHINGTON, = March 15.—Colonel A;A 44 nt Maher Mrs. Henrietta Pryce. SANTA CRUZ, March Mrs. Henriet- Wells’ Veto Sustained. SALT LAKE, March 15.—In the State | Senate this afternoon the Governor's veto | of the Evans bill was called up and on | years of age and a native of Bristol, Conn. PRS- S — Franklin Tunnel Caves In. The Franklin tunnel near Martinez on evening that the damage was slight and that the track would be cleared and all trains running soon after midnight. —_—e—————— ‘William Thomas Drops Dead. BAKERSFIELD, March 15.—A mass-meeting of residents of Kern City was held last even- ing and initial steps taken toward establishing a bank in that city, with a capitalization of $50,000. The following officers and directors were chosen: President, F. N. Samuelson; vice president, W. C. Ambrose; cashier, V. E. [ Willlam Thomas, janitor of the Donchoe o L o PR Tany Noriesa, J. L. | puflding, %0 years of age, fell dead this morning about 1 o’clock at the corner of Any one can Tell The -man or woman with an irritable cemper, restless, fidgety movements, fail+ ing memory and lack of concentration is suffering rom crippled nerves. The lines of care, the palid cheeks, the wasti flesh, the dark circles under the eyes te! all too plainly of the worry, the pain, the loss of sleep and disturbed digestion, that break down the nervous forces and consume the vital power. For quick and sure relief nothing equals Dye. Miles’ Nervine. It relieves the pain, quiets thé irntation, strengthens the overtaxed and weak digestion and feeds the worn-out braip and the wasted nerves. Try-a bottle to-day. Dz, Miles Medica! Co., Elkchast, Ind, Sold by all drugeists on a guasantee, “ My trouble came on me gradually through overwork, lack of sleep and rest, and I suffered from constipation, stomach trouble, a fluttering of the heart, dullness, confusion of ideas, brain fever and nerv- ous prostration. in flesh when I took: my first dose of Dr. Miles’ Nervine. cighteen pounds and felt hearty and strong.” ~ Geary and Mason streets. Thomas had been indulging in a swim at the Olympic Club during the evening. He left the club with some friends, who walked with him to the corner where he dropped. BRIEF LOCAL NEWS, MRS. NELSON BATTERED.—Mrs Mamie Nelson, 304 Turk street, secured & warrant yes- terday from Judge Cabaniss for the arrest of Mrs. Mamie Goldsmith on a charge of hattery. She sald she met Mrs. Goldsmith on a Fillmore- eet car Thursday and she abused her and struck her. SUIT ON TRADEMARKS.—Keuffel & Waser of New Jersey filed suit in the United States Circuit Court yesterday against H. S. Crocker to recover $20,000 damages for infringement of trademarks on drawing and drafting pa- pers and a catalogue. The plaintiffs also ask ¢l red d | for an accounting and a perpetual injunction. y ucel | SMITH CASE SUBMITTED.—The case of | Charles H. Smith vs. The California Safe De- posit and Trust Company was argued yester- day before United States Circuit Judge Mor- row and submitted. The case involved is the ownership of 304 bonds of the California and Nevgda Rallroad Company, valued at $65,000. PLANNING A GRAND CELEBRATION— The Iroquols Club met"last night and discuss. ed plans for the celebration of the fiftieth an- niversary of the holding of the first Demo- cratiofState convention in California. ebratfon will take the place of the annual convention of State Iroquois clubs and will be held May 19 at Benicia. It was reported that the town authorities of Benicla are plan- ning for a three days' celebration. The prin- cipal exercises will be held in the old State capitol. A set of memorial resolutions, hand- ‘somely engraved by Leo de Cardona, & copy- st In the County Clerics office, were ordered I- was In six weeks I gained Rev, I. V. McCarTy, Anderson, Ind, rarde to the famil f tl late P, J. . . A e Ty SR | 4rcand 44g . m. denly & few weel ago. ’ e e Few people are so busy helping others that they can't stop to help themselves. M. S. LATHAM, Secretary. e AND THE Mission-street electric cars direct to track. ~ INGLESIDE San Francisco Jockey Club. SIX BIG EVENTS! FOUR PURSES, STEEPLECHASE CALIFORNIA DERBY $5,000 ADDED. ALL THE CRACK 3-YEAR-OLDS WILL RUN. Trains from Third and Townsend Sts. at 12:45 and 1:15 p. m. Returning leave track about i E. J. POWER, Racing Secretary.