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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1901. 15 *WARSHIPS SAIL T0 PERSIAN CULF England Believes Fresh Trouble Is Impending at Koweyt. Edhem Pasha- at the Head of the Turkish Troops Is Camped at Basra. British on the by already left eady spot the gun- Kur- e for the Persian coaled. It is be- uble is impending at t-el-Arab, in the Per- nded by Edhem Pasha, g Koweyt, though e troops are in- h the object in Yemen. ectio JOHN JACOB ASTOR’S NOURMAEAL DAMAGED Liner North Star Collides With the Millionaire’s Magnificent leasure Craft. —John Jacob As- rmahal was by being in is afternoon est addition mship Com- r of her a dozen feet of Although there s aboard her excitement, but which got tan- confusion pre- her ra way excursionis WHS N AGUINALDO SO0N - TOBE SET FREE Military Guard Will Be Removed From His House. General Chaffee Believes the Former Leader’s Power Is Broken. ————— | naval | the Persian Guif. | has 30,000 | > the fact that the | Special Dispateh to The Call. | WASHINGTON, Sept. 28.—The War De- | partment is considering the advisability of quietly withdrawing the guards from | the house occupied by Aguinaldo in Ma- nila and allowing him to have such lib- | erty as he pleases to take. General Cha: fee believes this would be the easiest way of disposing of Aguinaldo. The former leader of the insurrection is not consid- ered as a danger to the peace of the isl- | and, as his followers have given up their arms and surrendered. They pay no at- tention to him in captivity and Chaffee believes they would pay no more atten- tion to him free and at large. The Gov- ernment does not care to punish him and it has kept him prisoner only for his own protection from the friends of General Luna, whom Aguinaldo had murdered. The Becretary of War has him kept & prisoner because it would be a reflection | upon this Government to allow him tc be murdered in the streets of Manila. Aguinaldo, however, insists he would be | safe from attack if allowed to go free. He still believes himself the leader of his | people and that they would all support | him and whatever cause he espoused. Chaffee has no fear that Aguinaldo could start another insurrection and he has rec- ommended to the War Department the withdrawing of the guards about Agui- naldo’s house. He would not formally release Aguinaldo, but as he is living like other people in Manila, with the excep- tion of a military guard, the guard could be discontinued, removing all semblance of restraint upon him. He could then go where he pleased, having taken the oath of allegiance, and there would be no dis- | tinction given him. 1 General Corbin has_indorsed Chdffee's | | recommendation and Secretary Root will EXPELLED. act upon it when he returns to Washing- ton. Aguinaldo will then be the only one of the insurgents who has taken the oath of | allegiance and his future will be in his own hand mg for some dis- the liner, and of Of Interest to People of the Coast. WASHINGTON, Sept. 25.—Postmasters commissioned: Washington—Ethel 8. Willson Charleston; Rose. Matthews, Ot- ter. »ointed: California—Gordon H. | Darby al, Mendocino Count; vice Ed- ward T. Paulson, resigned. Washington— John 8. Bell, Brush Prairie, Clarks Cuun-: ceeded on_her North Star the dan- t on her way t twelve feet ng torn away. ty, vice Robert Watson removed. ! ROTHSCHILDS PURCHASE Pen s granted: California: Original— MEXICAN C Thomas B. Rushmer, Angels Camp, OEEES MINES Thomas W. Maxwell, Sulphur Creek, $ 14 George P. Bassett, San Jose, $8; James | Pay Two Million Dollars for the Fa- | 00T & o8ttt Home, 2 pa. $3. In- meus Le Esguadra Property | crease- . Highlana | at Ocatlan. 84 A 3 . §12; Henry AUS 8—Frank A. Vick- | geles, $12: { n of Ocatlan, | mento, $: arrived | tary Home § hechilds | Oregon rt Rothschilds | ¢ 8™ Increase—Martin Butler, Philc math, $12 Wa ton: Increase—Charles E. Dun- | ning. Spokane. James H. Stewart, Sumner, $10; Wil A. Joy, Spokane, $12. —_— Strike on Elevated Road. | .. 1 CHICAGO, Sept. 25.—After an all-night | nt vear wili | session the operating employes of the | The Roths- | South Side elevated railroad (the Alley | secure control of | “L") struck at 5 o'clock this morning, “at producing copper king 15.000 anoa, Lower and prob- loyed in their because of the refusal of the company to grant a horizontal increase of 25 cents per | This afternoon and representatives_of R g Tk brief conference. Mr. = i per cent raise to all | PRI S the men on m‘? road. The strikers are | S . | said to be looking with favor on this __ Body Found in the River. position it is believed probable YUBA Y, Sept. 2 e body of t the strike will be declared off offi- | = x W n the river v, a| 2 1 had 3 Disabled Vessel Reaches Port. s i€ drowning was| popT TOWNSEND. Wash.. Sept. 28.— { The ship J. B. Thomas, reported off Cape | Jiminez Not Prosecuted. | Flattery sterday in distress, arrived ogpene 2 here at clock morning in tow of v ctor for Dr. E.|the Sea Lion. The Thomas sailed from Judge Fritz's court | Tacoma September 20 with 1800 tons of | e of felony embez- | coal. On the 24th, during a severe gale, ted that the she sprang a leak and as the water kept ined. and that ning on the pumps she headed for the | nount good, its. Upon arriving here there was and a balf feet of water in her hold. ADVERTISEMENTS. -CURES WEAK MEN FREE. Send Name and Address To-Day---You| Can Have It Free and Be Strong and Vigorous for Life. INSURES LOVE AI;D A HAPPY HOME. | L. W. XNAPP, M. D. How any man may quickly cure himself after ears of suffering from sexual weakness, lost 1ty es, varicocele, etc., and en- organs to full size and vigor. r name and address to Dr. L. ng, Detroit, Mich., ladly send the free receipt with 1 directions so that any man may easily cure mself at home. This is certainly & most gen- rous offer, and the following extracts taken om hie daily mail show what men think of generosity: Dear Bir—Flease accept my sincere thanks for yours of recent date. 1 have given your trestment & thorough test aad the beneSt has been extraordinary. It has completely braced me up. 1 am just as vigorous as when a boy and you cannot realize how happy I am.’" “Dear Sir—Your method worked beautifully. Results were exactly what I needed. Strength and vigor have completely returned and en- largement is eptirely satisfactory. “Dear Sir—Yours was received and I had no trouble in making use of the recelpt as directed, and can truthfully eay it iz & boon to weak men. am greatly improvi size, strength and vigor.” All _cor ndence is strictly confidential, mailed in plain, sealed envelope. The receipt is free for the asking and he Wauts every man to have it. ] Simply se Knapp, end he will g | ver he receiv 1 wut it was a doleful fleet. ! enjoyed it to the full. | not | eted the white one and for a moment she P | the revenue cutter Gresham had stove In her port quarter, she headed for the berth | behind the hook. Some of the excursion | boats dropped back to salute the popular ICANYACHT BEATS CHALLENGER AMER Continued From Page Thirteen. sportsman, who has _been game enough to make a second effort to lift the cup, {and then the whole fleet moved on in a mad race for home, many of the skippers eping their whistles going until they % reached the Narrows at the entrance of the er bay. i When it was all over Sir Thomas Lipton | showed himself the thorough sportsman a haif-length ahead | he along the Long Island to seu. The start wa thrilling. ts bounded aw the line like a couple of runaw t and to windwar the maneuvering be- | “Well,”” he ss as he stood on the | fore the start Captain Sycamore had | deck of the Erin, “that’s one dot against given the wily Yankee skipper a genuine | us. But in my own heart I am just as surprise, returning a Rotand for the Oli- ed on Thursday. Just when Barr_thought he had him under h the Englishman deadened his head and then luffed under the Columbia’ stern into the weather berth. This victory for the Shamrock at the very first of the race the Columlia could not overcome in | to-da b the iong beat to windward. | Captain Bob Wringe. who was on the The two big yachts were an inspiring | bridge of the Erin, at Sir Thomas Lipton's | hopeful as I was this morning, for I feel that if I only have a wind I am all right. It was a fair and square race, not a fluke, | but it was not Shamrock’s day. We want a breeze that will put that deck six inches | under water, and then you will see a race, Be sure of one thing—1 was licked fairly sight to the s they plunged | eibow, said: 3 seaward, pou: fountains of | *If we get a fresh breeze we will lift spray from their bows and drenching the | the cup yet. nine to twelve knot breeze lined up along the weatner rail. |is what we want. eie X0 S NN CUTTER GRESHAM AND YACHT ERIN COLLIDE the wind until their lee n in the swirling, bubbling and from the windward side they heeled showed yards of their bronze unuc]r i Neck 1 tack al tack, JEW. Y ey Saced ke 3 team of horses. Dismay | NEW YORK. Sept. 3.—Sir Thomas Lip- began to be written on the faces of the | ton's steam yacht Erin narrowly escaped s as Barr tried once, twice and | | Walker and the Erin for EXAMINER TRES T0 BLANE CLUB 1Accuses Bohemians of Causing Trouble in Haight Family. Fakes Story Because Yellow Sheet Is Ordered Off Files. That the Examiner does not care whom it Injures so long as it can attain its own ends was demonstrated Wednesday morn- | ing, when, for revenge, it made an attack | upon the Bohemian Club for ordering the | yellow sheet off the club files. The Exam- | iner accused the members of the club of | being the cause of -a_divorce suit insti- | tuted against Henry H. Haight, a promi- nent Bohemian, by Gertrude Haight. The Examiner stated that Haight, through associating with the ‘“dissolute’ members of the Bonemian Ciub, neglected his young wife and made her life so un- bearable that she was compelled to seek relief through the divorce courts. According to the story published in the Examiner, the Haights lived happily to- ;gether until the husband became a mem- | ber of the Bohemian Club. According to Hearst's paper, the couple were married in 1893, were happy in each other’s com- pany for several years and then “Mr. Haight seemed inclined to give up his home for his club, and the result of his association with 'the rapid element in bohemianism was soon talked | about ™ In this manner the Examiner is using | | the family troubles of the Haights to try | | and get eéven on the Bohemian Club. As | a matter of fact, the Bohemian Club is not the cause of the quarrel, and the | friends of the entire Haight family are up | in arms against the Examiner. H Attorney -Henry, who represents Mrs. aight, in speaking of the story pub-| lished in the Examiner, sald yesterday: | It was a_ dirty trick. The idea of using | femily troubles as weapons znd striking at a | | being prominent club over the head of a woman is extremely low. Mrs. Halght has asked for a divorce, it is true, but neither in the com- | plaint nor in her conversations with me has she ever tried to blame the Bohemians for her trouble. In her complaint she alleges that her husband, in April, 1%1, willfully and wrongfully inflicted grievous bodily injury upon her, and that is the only ground on which she asks’the court to grant a decree. e Women Bar Hearst’s Paper. _SALINAS, Sep At a recent meet- ing of the Women's Christian Temperance Union of this city it decided not to allow the San Francisco Examiner to be left at the free reading room. The reason for taking such action was that the pa- per is not a fit publication for the public to read, being too sensational and not re- liable. | The Erin’s small boat was promptly manned, and within a few seconds after the crash the men stood ready to lower | away, if necessary. but fortunately it_was | not necessary, as Sir Thomas himself an- | nounced from the bridge to his startled | guests: “It's all right, but provided no one was hurt I would lcse a dozen Erins if neces sary to lift the cup.” ——— SHORT-LIVED EXUBERANCE OF CROWDS IN LONDON | & \ a serious accldent to-day, when, just after the Shamrock and the Columbia had rounded the turn, the United States rev- enue cutter Gresham collided with her. Both boats were doing patrol duty, the Gresham in the hands of Thomas B. the day in charge of Lieutenant Bcedeker, of the United States rcvenue cutter service. In | starting to clear the course for the home stretch the Gresham apparently tried to LONDON, Sept. 22.—The Lorden crowds began to watch the bulletin board ored bombs and variegated flashlig without much hope of the challenger winning, but when it was announced that | the Shamrock was ahead at the turn of the outer mark, the immense assemblages at the Crystal and Alexandra palaces and cross the bow of the Erin. There was | on the Thames embankment became sur- evidently a misunderstanding of signals | prisingly cheerful, and as the succe: by the Gresham. and it was too late i green illuminations showed the Sham: was still leading after the turn, expecta- tion of her winning rose to a certaint when at last she tried to back out and the i but when, shortly after the turn, red; | Erin put on full steam ahead. The rev- enue cutter struck the yacht a glancing blow on the port quarter, some thirty or forty feet from the s plate was bent, some paint rubbed off ond the rail bruised. An inside athwartship deck beam was buckled. When the Gresham came up later to ask wuat damage was done Sir fires and red rockets suddenly announced that the Columbia was leading and later | that she had won, the amazed multitudes | tood silent. Here and there was a wild | ‘merican screech and a few groans and | hisses, and then the disgusted crowds Thomas himself from the bridge said | Louly broke up. | (HeSHgl ajtuseuyEone: The scant accounts of the race circu- “I know you could not help it. You are | jated in the extra editions of the evening the last man in the world to do such thing. Only lei me get to Sand and [ don’t care. There is not a worth of damage. It is all right. Aboard in the cabin he said: “It was a narrow escape. If the Gresham had struck us amidships we would probably have been sunk. Commander Walker is a special friend of mine and I know he is much sorrier for what -has happened than L. papers and on the ticker tapes, describ- | ing the keenness and closeness of the fin- ish have, however, restored popular faith | somewhat in the sibility of the Sham- rock’s final success, though more experi- | enced judgment. taking both days’' per- | formances together, does not get much | consolation. The betting has almost ceased, thougn around the hotels some | Americans rather freely offered two and three to one on the Columbia to-night. a third time to cross the bow of the foreigner, only to be forcfd around each time by the lean golden muzzle of the Britisher. Visions of the dear old cup, that means the yachting supremacy of the world, vanishing across the waters danced before their eyes. On and on they flew, turning twin wings of foam from their bows, and the Colum- bia seemingly falling back rather than gaining. The hearts of the patriots sank lower and lower. As the vachts got far- ther out the swells lengthened and the white flyers seemed to labor more heav: ily in the long wayv Just after passing Long Beach Hotel, with its verandas and windows filled with_people, the old City of Paris, now the Philadelphia, of the American line, came foaming in from the east with a bone in her teeth. She headed slightly northward between the wacers and the shere, in order not to impede them with her wash and went like an express train, dipping _her flag in salute. Her passen- gers and crew lined her rail for a sight of the exciting spectacle until she was far down to port. The vessels in the excur. sion fleet by this time were rolling badly Jany of the spectators were forced to the «wclusion of their cabins, and many were gept near the rails. The excursion vessels ‘ormed a crescent about the stake boat | as the yachts rounded the outer mark, The Shamrock wore around, spinnaker pole to starboard, like a lance in rest, and the big steam yacht Erin, with the “bloody hand of Ulster” in the Royal Ulster Yacht Club ensign at her taffrail, opened her whistle long and loud. It was the first time Sir Thomas had felt the joy of victory, and he and his party probably with her he Yankee skippers were too polite | to pull their whistle cords, but the toots were not loud nor long, and the bands did not play *Ceolumbia, the Gem of the Ocean.’ But when the racers had spread their wings, spinnaker matehing mainsail and balloon Jibs drawing forward, and the white fiyer Columbia began to eat up the green water between her and the chal- lenger, drooping spirits began to rise, and when the yachts got on even terms, about half way home, the bands began to play and the people raised a cheer. As they approached the finish line, th Columbia leading by a half-dozen lengths all the pent-up enthusiasm burst forth. About a ouarter of a mile before they reached the line, the golden beat blank- ran up alongside and it looked as if she would be first home. Cheers died in pa- triotic_threats. Suddenly, as the Colum- bia luffed off and got her wind clear, she forged ahead and came tearing down like mad. As she crossed three lengths ahead the enthusiasm broke out again with re- doubled energy. Every Yankee skipper grabbed his whistle cord and made a_ter- rific noise and din. Sirens wailed and the white steam jets. made it look as if every ship in_the fleet had broken her steam chest. The Corsair, J. P. Morgan's steam vacht, threw her power into smoke. Everybody cheered. Men and women jumped up and down for very joy. Not a few hats tossed into the air fell over- board, but their owners cared not. The Corsair set American flags at both peaks, gaffs and taffrail. Soon the whole fleet blossomed out in the national colors. The Corsair went alongside the defender and her crew gave three cheers, which the Yankee tars aboard the Columbia an- swered with bared heads. The whole fleet seemed anxious to escort the Columbia to her anchorage. Meantime the Shamrock had taken a tow from her tender and had drawn out of the ruck of the steamers. Escorted by Erin, which showed a big hole that Argentin Dear Sirs: [ have taken and of all the medicines I ters excels them all. DON'T FAIL TO TRY IT. 000000000002006063¢€990C able medicine forstomach complaints, taken, your Hostetter's Stomach Bit- HUGH M'CAFFERY. — ; e STOMACH BITTERS Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Biliousness and Flatulency OR TO PREVENT Malaria, Fever and Ague. 3 % 2 e, Mich., your valu- Bay Mills; Mich., Dear Sirs; Having used your Hos- tetter's Stomach Bitters, I have found it 1 great preventive as well as a remedy for malarial affections. D. B. 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Consultation free. Fidelity Rupture Cure. . Rooms 4, 5 & 6, No. 2634 Kearny St., $5000! 4 INTEREST IN A SteamLaundry OF SAN FR: PROFITS $1000 to $1200 Monthly, For particulars apply to The American Guaranty & Trust Co., ONTGOMERY ST. AUCTION! Referee’s Auction Sale BY ORDER OF COURT. FINAL OFFERING OF Crooks’ Estate Properties, Monday, October 7, 1901, 12 O'CLOCK NOON. -~ (9 A NCISCO. At Salesrooms of G. H. UMBSEN & CO., No. 14 Montgomery Street. Prominent Third-Street Corner, 200 feet of Market Street. Larga frontages on Third, Stevenson 1) and Jessie Streets. The largest available eorner left in this see- tion of the eity. Offered in three subdivisions— 1. North corner Third and Jessie sts. Q.& on Third st, 83 ft. on Jessle st. St offices; rents $5220 per angum. 2 Three-story and basement brick buildh and lot fronting 60 ft. on Stevenson st., §7: ft. east of Third . and fronting 27:4 fL. om Jessie. 3. Three-story and basement brick building and lot fronting 60 ft. on Stevenson st., 117:§ ft. east on Third st. and fronting 47 ft. om Jessie st. Annual income from these last twa pleces $4000; can be separated and increased with small outlay. Cholece Piece of Business Property. Nos, 910, 912 and 914 Kearny street, betweem Jackson and Pacific, extending through to Montgomery avenue; two frontages, 49:4 feeg on Kearny and 6 feet on Montgomery avenuej will pay well when properly improved. Brick Building, Nos. 915-917-919 Dupont Street. Between Washington and Jackson; lot 47:9 feet by 137:6 feet; best location in Chinatowny present rental §155 per month. Nos. 832-834 Washington Street. Large, centrally located corner brick buflde ing in Chinatown, northwest corner of Washs ington street and Stouts alley, between Dupony and Stockton streets; 64:6 by 137:6 feet; rentsy $350 per month. Three Large Pieces of Property in Potrero Distriet. 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