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COMMISSION WILL SUSTAIN WICAERSHAM Completes Investigation of Conditions at Nome. — Report Will Be Unfavorable to United States Mar- shal Richards Department of Justice Agents Are Said to Have Found Grounds for the Charges Against Him. —_— ial Dispatch to The Call. Nov. 12—J. C. Taylor and Joy, representatives of the t of Justice, arrived in the city from Nome. In August both among the oldest in the sed through Seattle en under instructions to make rough investigation into the trouble between Judge Wickersham of the Third who was in Nome holding court tumn and winter, prior to the time appointment of Judge Moore, and Marshal Richards. The d a fine of $500 against the and Joseph Jourdan, a saloon- contempt, and the Marshal filing orders against the who partment, north, route district by case grew out of the prosecution Postmaster Wright of Nome nment for the misappropria- It was tried before Judge nd after the trial the al- to the ears of the court Richards and Jourdan had e with the postmaster and the jury. The chargces were up by the court and on the finding were assessed and a short jail Jourdan paid his fine, ras bonded his and of the ined & Judge Moore, who declined to re- or revise the decision of Judge sham. Marshal Richards then took the c to the United States Court nd it is there at the present of Appeals between Judge al Richards, in of the De- ructed to and at the same ged with an inve under which are also made a of the offices of the s well as of all the in the Nome on good authority that the resulted in the finding of of affairs and the report will be favorable to Marshai nce, it is said, they is good re n for s made against Mar- Jourdan to be true he court in the prem just. Therefore, it is erse report vorable to -harges made way In Marshal Ri tion of the affairs of the it is 14 found the they some ir work. In the they are of es was weak nt court at Nome is said to found to be in excellent shape way to get the judicial busi- district straigntened. ILOWELL BEATS POLYTECHNIC. The Lowell High School football team Polytechnic School team in game of the Academic serfes yesterday at the by a score of supported by rival schools. touchdos Kenyon in one instance. . Hastings -J. Jones Kenyon McFar- win. Mackay’s Remains Arrive. YORK, Nov. 12—Resting in a %l, a large room between be ted for that tem- body of John W. Mackay on White Star liner Liverpool Mrs. Mackay iter, the Princess Colonna, the same steamer. s taken from conveyed to d Cemetery, Brooklyn, where it es placed in a vault beside the remains J. W. Mackay Jr. — GRAPE-NUTS. SCHOOL TEACHERS LEARN Just Like Other People. . Bad food and overwork wreck many a | life, but the right food makes sure and | complete happiness, for one must be happy if perfectly well. | “Grape-Nuts saved my life and changed | me from a mnervous, sick, despondent woman to a healthy, strong and cheerful | one,” writes Mrs. Alice Riegel of Pontiac, | m. had not been well for seversl | years and I thought, as did my freinds, that ‘my days’ were aumbered.’ My fll- | health was caused from drinkirg coffee, eating improper food and overwork in the schoolroom; I had become very weak, | tired and nervous and nothing 1 ate agreed with me. Medicine made me more nervous and impaired my digestiv organs. “It was with difficulty that a neighbor | induced me to try Grape-Nuts and I liked it from the first with thick cream and sugar. I lived on it exclusively with Postum Food Coffee until my digestion was so much improved I could eat other foods. provement in my looks and I am now healthy, strong and happy. I attribute the change in my heaith solely to the chaage of diet. “Husband and I botb like Grape-Nuts 2nd Postum. I think they are the most healthful and strengthening of all foods NATION"S CHIEF HUNTS BRUIN Roosevelt in the South on a Big Bear Ex- pedition. Crowds Appear at Stations to Welcome the President. erusf CL R CINCINNATI, Nov. 12.—To-night Presi- | dent Roosevelt is speeding down through Kentucky on his way to Smedes, Miss., | about twenty-five miles north of Vicks- burg for a four-days’ bear hunt. The place selected for the hunt is some miles from the rallroad and is in the region which was formerly the favorite hunting ground | of v(;«\eral ‘Wade Hampton. Years ago the Fresident and General iHampmn planned a hunt in this region, but it was never made and when Presi- | | dent Stuyvesant Fish, of the Illinois Cen- tral, proposed the present trip, the Presi- | dent readily assented. The President, | however, does not anticipate the pleasure of killing a bear so much as the pleasure | | of a few days’ complete recreation in the woods. To one who has hunted grizalies ! in the Rockies, black bears are not very big game. But hunting bears with horse and hounds will be a new experience for him. Fish has arranged to have one of the | best packs of hounds in the Mississipp! delta at the camp. From .Memphis the train will then proceed to Smedes over the Mississippi and Yazoo Railroad. There | or near there it will be run upon a sid- there to remain until next Wednes- when the President will return to Memph | The President’s trip across Ohio to-day | was pleasant but eventful. Despite the fact that the itinerary had not been pub- | lished in advance, there were waiting crowds at almost all the stations and there were plenty of cheers as the train swept by. At Trinway, a small place west of Dennison, the school children | lined up on either side of a large Ameri- can flag and waved their handkerchiefs. The President stepped out on the rear | platform and waved his hat in response to the demonstration of the little ones. At other places he showed himself and at Dennison he made a few remarks to the crowd saying: 1 want to thank you very much for coming greet me and to that I appreciate wish that I w not always afraid to the small folks. some accident happe! You know the problem of the little apples in the middle of the barrel. The little folks are just like that—always come in the middle. I shall not try to make a speech to you. I am Eoing south to meet at Memphis a man Wwho has done distinguished service—General Luke Wright—in the Philippines, and I am going to take four or five days' holiday first. It is at pleasure to come here in your beautiful to have passed through Pennsylvania as have. I have not merely the hope, but that our people as a whole will so elves that the gogd times we are 2; that we shall be fdolish action and the forethought to cut out any evil that hamp: the good. The only stop between Dennison and Cincinnati was at Columbus, where a stop of fifteen min engines. The g llery at the station, over- looking the tracks, was erowded with peo- | ple. Dr. Gladden, the eminent clergyman, and General Axline greeted the President as he stepped out of his car. After a brief cha forward and shook hands with the en- gineer and fireman who were leaving at the end. of this divisiop and thanked them for the safe run. Then for several min- utes the President and Secretary’ Cortel- vou paced up and down the platform in | sight of the crowd. He was given a parting cheer as he boarded the train to resume his journey. At Cincinnati the President's train stopped from 6:10 until 6:33. A large crowd was in waiting, but they were kept without the gates and a space surround- ing the President's train was kept clear by a platoon of police while the cars were switched from the Pennsylvania to the Louisville and Nashville tracks and en- gines changed. Here General Basil Duke, | W. Knott, editor of the Louisville Post, and several officials of the Loui ville and Nashville Railroad joined the President for his trip as far as Louls- ville. General Duke and Egitor Knott vere special guests of the President in his car when the train left Cincinnati but the President put in all his time dur- the platform greeting ing the stop on friends. As the train pulled out the ! President, with General Duke and Mr. Knott on either sids V4 his farewell | acknowledgments. pected to reach Memphis at 9 to-morrow morn- ing. e e e e e el CLOUDBURST LAYS WASTE AN I5LAND Special Dispatch to The Call. SANTA BARBARA, Nov. Merry of the yacht Daisy, accompanied by Sol Sheridan and J. F. Newby of Ven- tura and Oliver Gale of Chicago, re- turned from Santa Cruz Island to-night. party reporis a terrific cloudburst on island _on Sunday morning, which sed a loss of $2000 and the narrow pe of some Japanese fishermen from instant death. In speaking of the dis- aster Captain Merry said: “We anchored in Disks Harbor on Sat- indicating that a raim was near at hand. It did not begin, however, until Sunday afternoon at 1 o'clock, when a downpour set in and continued all night. At 5: ° on Geck when suddenly our attention was attracted by a rumbling sound equal in force to the booming of a thousand can- aon. It took but a moment to ascertain the cause. Glancing (oward shore we discovered that a cloudburst had o curred on the north side of Diablo Moun- tain and an_immense body of water was rushing down the caflyon. This water was at the least estimate twenty feet deep and carried away everything in its path. Trees that measured two feet in diameter were torn up by the roots and carried out | | to sea. Nothing was left standing in the | | wake of that mighty volume. “Near the beach was a camp of Jap- | anese abalone fishermen who were sleep- ing in their tents, unaware of the impend- ing danger. They were awakened by our | party and had scarcely left their tents | when the water struck their camp, car- rying away everything in sight. The Jap- anese succeeded in reaching high ground and thus avoided instant death. These men had been on the island all summer ued at $1250 and shells to the amount of $750. Their boats were picked.up by us at sea. The entire harbor was filled with trees, logs and various other debris. My friends soon moticed the im.| ' When the storm was ended we went | ashore and on level ground water was | standing to a depth of from four to six feet. It was the most remarkable sight I have ever witnessed.” DIES IN A SA .—An_unidentified man, evidently a laborfr, about 50 years old, was discovered dead vesterday afternoon in the rear and drinks and suitable for the weak as well as for the strong.” of a saloon at 405 Bush street. Death was due 1o natural causes. . s the development | es was made to change with them, the President went | urday afternoon, the weather (70ndill0ns; lock on Monday morning we were all | and had accumulated abalone meat val-| THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1902 JDENTIFES HER DAUGHTER'S BODY Girl Who Took Poison Proves to Be Miss Tillie Schaub. Foolish Love Affair Is Only Cause Assignec for Her Tragic Death. The body of the young girl who was | found on Howard street, near Ninth, | Tuesday night suffering from carbolic | acid poisoning and who died while being | taken to the Imergency Hospital, has | been identified. | Mrs. Coombs of 735% Minna street vis- | ited the Morgue last night with her two | daughters, Lily and Lulu, and identified | the body as that of Tillie Schaub of 731 Minna street. The mother of the dead girl was then notified, and she completed the identification. 7 The mother was overcome with grief and collapsed when she viewed her | daughter’s body. She could assign no reason for the -suicide. Lulu Coombs imparted the information that the dead girl had been in love with |a roomer in her mother’s home, and grieved because he left the city Tuesday morning. She said that on Tuesday morn- ing Miss Schaub visited her and askea her to accompany her on a walk. Tillie said that the roomer was going to leave the city, and on that account she was not going to work that day. Miss Coombs could not go with her, so she went alone. Later in the afternoon she returned to her home and at 6 o’clock left the house without telling any one where she was going. g It is presumed that she took the acid soon after leaving the house. The deceased had been attending St. Boniface's Convent up to three weeks ago, when she left to learn dressmaking with a woman on Herman street, near Castro. She was a good girl, according to the statements of those who knew her, and despondency over the departure of her suicide. small rooming-house. ter did not come home Tuesday night she thought that she was stopping with some girl friends and did not become alarmed. @ i o HONEAN SHIELDS HER ISSALANT 1 | Mrs. Rose Turner Refuses to Tell Police Who Shot Her. A woman known as Rose Turner was shot at three times vesterday morning at | 7:30 o'clock in the doorway of the house in which she live ‘One bullet inflicted a flesh wound In her thigh, from which the loss of blood was | great, but the injury is notserious. The | woman’s assailant is sipposed to be Biily Sperry, who plays a piano in a Barbary Ceast dive and poses as a pugllist. He has been in her company much during | the two weeks she has lived at the Mis- | sion street house, and they have had frequent quarrels. Sperry was arrested last night by De- tective Ryan. He is held pending further investigation. No one saw the shooting and the woman refuses to say whether or not Sperry is guilty of the crime. As soon as he had | fired the shots | sion street and boarded an outbound car. ! child in Los Angeles. | scon after 7 o'clock her Yesterday morning landlady, who son, Mrs. Thompson and Mrs. Forbes, was awakened by the ringing of doorbell. Without opening the she asked who was there, and the man outside said, “I want to see Rose.” Mrs. Mason called the Turner woman to the door and went back to her own room. Almost immediately three shots were fired. Mrs. Turner screamed for help, but by the time Mrs. Mason reached the door the man was gone. Mrs. Turner was, taken to the Central Emergency Hospital and was removed from there at noon to St. Luke's Hos- pital. Mrs. Turner said at first that the man who did the shooting was named Frank Collins. She wore a photograph button of Sperry and finally practically admitted that he was the man who fired the shots, but declared that she would not swear to a complaint or appear as a wit- ness. It is presumed that the shooting | was the result of jealousy. door 12 Captain | @ il siefoisint @ | CGHOLERR KILLS SEVEN SOLDERS 1 MANILA, Nov. 12.—Cholera made itsap- pearence yesterday among'the men of a detachment of the Fifth Infantry, which is stationed here. Seven men have already ; died and a number of others are seriously [B1IN | The detachment of the Fifth Infantry {in question has been placed on guard | along the Maraquina River, whence Manila receives its water supply, as it was | deemed necessary to protect the stream from possible pollution. The cholera de- | veloped while the men were on duty. it was believed that cholera had entirely disappeared from Manila, and its reap- pearance has created feelings of appre- hension. 5 General Miles, who is making a tour | of the archipelago, was given a reception ! and banquet at Iloilo yesterday. | the affliction which had come to them with the war and cholera. He sald he | hoped for ‘an early improvement in their | affairs. J From Iloilo General Miles proceeded to 0l0. J'rne further decline in the price of sil- ver has forced the Government to raise the exchange to 32 50 Mexican for $1 gold, The cheapening of silver has resulted in increasing the losses of the Government {and all other holders of silver. The in- stability of the present currency is seri- ously damaging business and the members of the Civil Commission and representa- tives of commercial interests on the isl- ands will unite in making a strong plea to Congress for the establishment of a non-fluctuating Philippine currency. m‘JEFFEB%)N C%b l:f{'m"fi‘v' lé—vllldr.': erwood, in an of n e Su) e sitting in bank, -day declared un titu- 3 y tional the State Whisky tax law. the roomer is the only cause given for | Mrs. Schaub is a widow and conducts a | ‘When her daugh- | at 835% Mission street. | the assailant ran out! through .the passageway leading to Mis-| Cojon, under the name of F. C. Frank is variously known as Mrs. Jennie Ma-| g the | The | | general delivered a short address in which ! | Le expressed sympathy with the people in | STEPS ASHORE . INTO ARTS OF LAW OFF:CERS - s | i 1 | | R P i | | | i ) | NEW YORK LAWYER WHO HAS BEEN ARRESTED FOR EMBEZZLEMENT., e | ENJAMIN F. CHADSEY, a bril- liant young attorney of Brook- lyn, N. Y., was arrested yester- day afternoon on the arrival of the steamer Newport from Pan- {ama, on a complaint from Kings County, N. Y., charging him with the embezzle- ment of $900. The affidavit on which the |arrest was made is a voluminous docu- iment sworn to by Isabella Miller, guar- dian of the estate of Henry Meyer, a minor. She charges that in December, | 1801, Chadsey collected $1000 from Charles Meyer, administrator of the estate of Caroline Meyer, the money belonging to { her ward, Henry Meyer, and that in the face of repeated demands Chadsey refus- ed to turn over to her the amount, less $100, which she says was the agreed fee for his services. § The police have been in possession of the warrant and afidavit for more than a week and have been watching all in- | coming steamers from Panama. The ar- rest was made by Detective John Frcel of this city and Edward J. Orr, a private dctective from New York, who was sent out with the papers in the case. Chadsey claims that his arrest is the | result of a plot to injure his reputation. | He says that he has-done a great deal of ;(‘zmpulgn work in the Empire State. He | had in his possession when arrested newspaper clippings describing his efforts in the political fight which resulted in the ! election of President Roosevelt as Gov- ernor of New York. In these clippings he is described as the *golden tongued- orator” of the State. | Chadsey says the money he is accused of embezzling is in & bank in Brooklvn awaiting proper qualification of the bondsmen for Mrs. Miller as guardian of { William Meyer. He admits having re- ecived the money, but says it was turn- ed over to him by the Surrogate Court with the understanding that his eclient iwould furnish a suitable bond. In the | which Chadsey was to receive and he I'says he purposely neglected to secure | bondsmen until the matter of his fees ! had been arranged. | "On October 4 Chadsey and i his wife teok passage on the steamer Finance for |and wife. They crossed the isthmus and The wounded woman, who is of Mexi- | ceme up the coast to San Francisco on | can descent and admits that her name is | the steamer Newport. not Turner, says she has a husband and | Calitornia Hotel. His wife is at the Chadsey says he s | perfectly willing to return to New York without extradition papers and will prog- bly start East to-day in charge of the New York officer- who caused his arrest. A dispatch received from New York last night announces that Chadsey is also {in contempt of the Surrogate Court. | ie alleged that he overcharged the estate "nf Daniel M. Collins, a jeweler, $800 and was directed by Surrogate Chase to re- turn the money. Chadsey disappeared scon afterward and an order adjudging | him guilty of contempt was entered. | @ il mfooislofol @ | FAIRS’ NEW YORK ESTATE { HALF A MILLION DOLLARS | NEW YORK, Nov 12.—Charles L. Fair, ‘who, with his wife, Caroline D. Fair, was kilied as the result of injuries received {in an accident while riding through | France in an automobile on August 14 lasy, left an estate in this State of the | gross valuation of $500,000, according to a report which has just been made. The estate consists entirely of personal property. Fair left no real estate in this State. This proverty will go to his two sisters, Mrs, Theresa Alice Oelrichs and Mrs. Virginia Vanderbilt, wife of William K. Vanderbilt Jr. The personal property consists of the following: Bighty bonds of (he Scuthern Pacific Railroad Com- pany, serics B, $81.500; sixty-eight bonds of the Southern Pacific Railroad Com- pany, series A, $76,500; temporary certifi- cate 100 International Banking Company, | sahela River Railroad Company, $26,640; | 113 bonds of the Ohio River Railroad Com- : pany, first mortgage, $126,560; 126 bonds of | the Ohio River Ralilroad Company, gen- era. mortgage, $133,600: cash deposited | with J. P. Morgan & Co., §$8800; jewelry, | $500; furniture in house at 331 West Seventy-fifth street and in Bolkenhayn | Apartment House, $10,000. y ————— i HOTEL ARRIVALS. NEW WESTERN HOTEL. | T Kennedy, Reno, Nev|H Birab, Presidio D Kynes, Nebr ¥ J Vi R Kerr, Elmira, Cal |H, Baker, Merced | O Johnston, Woodside |J Flagherty, Ind | P Mattinsen, Wandnlthi R Cramer, Lancastr | WS Henning, Lo W Simmons & w,G Vi | W B willlams, Utah |G Du Broix, asic "o | @ E Martin, 8 Anselmo/ E Mason, Ariz | J King, San Anselmo |8 P Parkest & w, Sac | @ E Chandler,8 Ansimo| W ¥ Evans, Redswood e C B Smith. Loulsville, D J Edwards, Oakland ;2 Miss M Green, Oakland 2 Miss M Lewis, Oakiand I8 G Lewls, Albany, N Y W G L Dawson, Haywrds | 15 W Waldron, Me |Miss Dawson, Haywrds G Lamger, Philadel |Miss B Dixon, Haywds J D Richards, Jimtown G Bertallette, Philadel Carmody. Philadel |Prof I Lawrence, Ney hiladel T ii, Manila |3 Drum, e e ese 1Y IRy 3w o H M Ball, o0d |Miss L Baird, Lompoc ———— Late Shipping Intelligence. " "ARRIVED, Wednesday, Novemmber 12. © Stmr South Bay, Johnson, 28 hours from Eureka. DOMESTIC_PORTS. PORT TOWNSEND—Passed inward Nov 12 —Fr bark Ernest Reyer, from Hobart, for Ta- coma; schr Albert Meyer, from Monterey, for llard. : Salled Nov 12—Ship Sam Skolfield I, from Port Blakeley, for Port Natal. 'LAND-—Arrived Nov 12—Ship Allerton, from Barrow. OCEAN STEAMER. % QUEENSTOWN — Arrived Nov 12 — Stmr Commonwealth, fromr Boston, for Liverpoo, and proceeded.’ meantime a dispute arose over the fees | It $20,00; twenty-four bonds of the Monon- | WORK 15 BEGUN ON STEEL PLANT Extensive Enterprise Is Under Way in East Oakland. Ground Is Eroken for Imitial Structure on Large Har- bor Site. st Oakland Office San Francsico Call, 1118 Broadway, Nov. 12 The Pacific Steel and Wire Company, which contemplates the erection of an ex- tensive| plant in East Oakland, broke grcund to-day on its twenty-five-acre site ! at the eastern end of the Oakland har- bor basin, near the California Cotton Mills, at Twenty-third avenue. The ini- tial structure is to be of brick, 450 by 118 feet. Machinery for the manufacture of i steel specialties is en route from the | East, and the company expects to have | the building ready for the installation of the plant by January 1. i The projectors deciare that the manu- | factory is to be one of yge largest in the | United States, dnd is to De established in | | this city because they have decided that Oakland harbor is an ideal location. In a statement issued to-day the pro- Jjectors say: The site selected has a frontage of nearly a thousand feet on the main line uf the South- ern Pacific Ratiroad, and over 1500 feet water frontage on Oakland harbor, thus giving the new company unsurpassed shipping facilities by rail and water. ‘The location selected is also_convenient to the strect car lines of the Jealty Syndicate in Oakiand, thus providing accessible homes for the workmen. The stockholders of the Pacinc Steel and Wire Company comprise some of the ablest and_most conservative business men on the Pacific Coast, including among their number D. 0. Mills, H. E. Huntington, L W. Hell- man, president of the Nevaaa National Bank; A. Yorel, of A. Borel & Co.; Percy 'T. Mor- gan, president of tne Callioinia Wine Asso- ciation; Frank M. Smith, president of the Pa- cific Coast Horax Compiny; Lewis 1. Spear, formerly of Lewis K. Spear & Co.; John Rosen- feld’s Sons Co.; W. H. Talbot, of Pope & Tal- t. The charter of the company is a very broad one, covering all manutacturing operations. ‘The immediate purpose of the corporation, however, i1s to manufacture only the fine art steel and wire specialties, for which there is a great and growing demand in the rapidly developing Pacinie Coast States, and the pros- pect of a large export business with the isiands and countrles of the Pacific that can be advantageously reached from San Fran- | cisco. “The company has _strengthened its posi- tion by making immediate connections with the new and modern factories of the National Steel and Wire Company on the Atiantic coast, at New Haven, Conn., to suppiy the Atlantic coast sections and export trade frem that coast, and of the DeKalb J'ence Company and Union Fence Company, at DeKalb, IiL, to supply the great Middle West and Northwest and Southwest sections; while they will have su- perigr advantages in securing a supply of steel |irom the Lackawanna Steel Company of Buf- falo, New York, the newest and largest steel | plant in the world, some of the stocknolders of the Pacific Steel and Wire Company being large stockholders in the Lackawanna Com- pany. The executive offices of the company will | be in the Mills building, San Francisco, and the warehouse of the company will be’ tem- porarily at 134 First etrest, San Francisco, the store formerly occupled by the - DeKaib ¥ence Company and Union Fence Company, which businsss will be hereafter conducted by the Pacific Steel and Wire Company. The management of the company will be in the hands of thoroughly practical men, who have had many years experience in the busi- ness with the Washburn & Moen Manufactur- ing_Company. ‘The_estublishment of this plant on the Pa- cific Coast js another indication of the future growth of the manutactures of California and an earnest effort to develop the export trade of the countries of the Pacific, as well as building up the resources of .the Pacific Coast | by affording a home mdrket for its produets. | Large inducements were offered by other cities | to induce the location of the plant elsewhere, | but the location selected Is considered the best on the Pacific Coast In point of rail and water facilities, superior climate, and sufficient ground for the building of additional factory facilities as the growth of this country ‘and trade justifles. The “officers of the company are Frank L. Brown, general manager; Frederick W. Hall, vice president and general vounsel; Lewis E. Spear, treasurer. L e e e i s s ] SIY TAUNTLESS A5 BAMMED In a suit for $200,000 damages filed yes- terday by the Union Transportation Com- pany against T. W. Newell, the Sperry Flour Company, the California Naviga- tion Company and several stockholders in the corporations named, the serious ckarge is made that the sinking of the steamer Dauntless in the San Joaquin River above Antioch on the night of August 24, 1901, was the result of a de- termined effort on the part of the defend- ants to prevent the plaintiff corporation | from engaging in the business of carrying | freight between points on the river and this city. Two causes of action are named in the cemplaint and on. each $100,000 damages i¢ asked. It is claimed by the plaintiffs that the collision between the steamers Mary Garratt and the Dauntiess, which resulted in the sinking of the last named steamer, was caused by the issuance of orders by the plaintiffs to the master and pilot of the Mary Garratt to run into the Dauntless, with the intent of so disabling her that she would not be in condition te carry freight up and down the San | Joaquin River. The alleged orders, al- leges the plaintiff corporation, were the | result of a conspiracy entered into by the defendaut corporations and others. The other cause of action is alleged to be the unseaworthiness of the Mary Gar- ratt, which dccording to the complaint | was in such condition that she would not | answer her helm and therefore was un- | controllable. | BEQUEATHS ENTIRE ESTATE TO HIS FAMILY The will of the late A. H. Washburn, one of-the pioneers in the development of the Yosemite Valley, who died October 2, has been filed for probate in Wawona, Mariposa County, by Wilson & Wilson, attorneys for the deceased. Attorney J. ‘W. Congdon of Wawona represented the ‘Wilsons in probating the will. ‘Washburn left a fortune of approxi- mately $100,000. According to the terms of the will the entire estate is left to his wife and married daughter, Mrs. C. C. Higgins. His two brothers, John 8. and E. P. Washburn, and his former business associate, John named as executors and subsequent trus- tees. The sum of $1500 is left to each of three nieces of the deceased, Misses Alice ‘and Charlotte Bruce and Mrs. J. I. Me- Mullen. ] Towne-Weinstock Wedding. SACRAMENTO, Nov. 12.—An event of to-day when Miss Alice Weinstock, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, H. Weinstock, and Burton A. Towne, son of Mr. and Mrs. .. A. Towne of Minneapolis and nephew of the Ilate N. Towne of San Francisco, were mar- ried at the home of the bride's par- ents, 1631 H street, by Rabbi Bernard M. Kaplan of the Synagogue Congregation B'nai Israel. The bridesmaid was Miss Marion Towne, sister of the groom, while Dr. Jule Frankenheimer of Stock- ton was groomsman. After a wedding tour Mr. and Mrs. Towne will make their home near Woodbridge, where Mr. Towne has a vineyard. 1 B. Cook, are) { ¢ | i much Interest in social circles occurred |. { Dance” : C WILL RUSH WORK ON LABORATORY Dr. Jacques Loeb's Re- searches Soon to Be Resumed. Fully Equipped Workshop for Scientis: on College Campus. FELE L BERKELEY, Nov. 12.—The erection of the laboratory for Dr. Jacques Loeb, the newly chosen professor of physiology at the State university, to build which Ru- dolph Spreckels donated $25,000, will be commenced at once. Since Professor Loeb is to commence the duties of his new office on the first of the year, the bullding of his laboratory ‘will be rushed. The place upon the cam- pus for its erection has not yet been se- lected, but already John G. Howard, the supervising architect, has drawn tenta- tive plans for its construction. | The structure will consist of a main building and two wings. The central por- tion of the building will be given over to extensive laboratories for the use of Dr. Loeb and his assistants in the pursuance ot their individual researches. Every modern appliance and all of the requisite scientific paraphernalia for the work of | the scientist will be installed. | A feature of the projected physiolo; hall will be a salt water aquarium, in- stalled in one of the wings of the build- ing, where the scientist may preserve alive all of his marine subjects and study their vital prodesses. Electrical machin- ery will keep a constant flow of pure wa- ter through the tanks. As assistants in his work in the newly created department of physiology at | Berkeley Dr. Loeb will have Dr. Martin | Fischer and Professor Charles G. Rogers, | both his former associates at the Univer- sity of Chicago, Dr. Frank W. Ban-| croft of the present department of zoolo- gy will take charge of the undergraduate classes in the department. DIVINE THROB SHOWS NOT AT ZECH CONCERT s The second of the Zech symphony con- { certs at Fischer's Theater was given yes- | terday afternoon with a good audience in attendance. Evidently the interest in | this form of music is actively aroused, and there was plenty of enthusiasm in | the welcome accorded to the conductor | and his confreres. People who are rarely | seen at concerts have been attracted to | the Zech series by one and another con- sideration, and though Mr. Zech cannot’ be said to have solved the symphony | problem, he is yet doing excellent se vice in keeping alive the attention already directed to the question. But Mr. Zech has not solved the problem. With some good features all its own, and certainly conspicuously better than none at all, Mr. Zech's symphony leadership is yet far| from that leadership for which San Fran. cisco has been waiting so long. As evi- denced by the work at yesterday's con- cert, the conductor’'s chiefest lack is in the fundamental direction of = rhythm. | The pulse of a movement, the divine throb | of perfect rhythm, was never felt. One | never knew quite where in the beat Mr. | Zech's baton was. Particularly noticea-! ble this was in the show movements, with | the result of a slackness and uncertainty | of grasp that made the effort of listening anything but an easy one. Neither were the shade and color of the work at ail | approaching the long desired. Possibly | owing to the smallness of the hall, the effect throughout was overweighty, the prevalling tone quality harsh. There were no planos, and the balance of the parts, with lost melodies and soaring accompani- | ments, was at times even absurd. But there was spirit in the performance, | conscience and good taste and enterprise shown in the choice of the interesting programme. The first number given was | the fine E minor symphony of Tschaikow- | sky; after which came Chadwick's “Mel- pomene” overture—curiously in the samwe key. The Schumann ‘“‘Abendlied,” arrang- ed for strings, was encored heartily and played twice. Saint-Saens’ symphonic poem, “Phaeton,” specially in the second part, was the best work of the afternoon, and - the Brahms G minor ‘“Hungarian | closed the programme. At the | next concert, to take place on NavembPrl ! Schumann | Wagner | | 26, at 3:15, the following programme will be given: Symphony No. 4 in D minor. Prelude_to ‘“Tristan and Isolde’ Suite 5 .Grieg | Symphonic Poem_(after Keats) 3 Frederick Zech Jr. | (Given at the request of patrons.) With an amateur orchestra of seveniy- | five members Mr. Minetti made a truly | | excellent showing last night at the Ai-| hambra Theater in the first of the Phil- harmonic concerts of this season. Not for | some time has the Philharmonic Soclety been at its present high level and the| work done last evening shows an enthus- iasm and sincerity of effort as well as a | general excellence of material that the leader must be sincerely congratulated | upon. ambitious one for a society of amateurs | to attack. Bizet's “Patrie,” a. difficult | and complex work, was the chef d'ceuvre | of the evening .and was given, with a freedom and vivacity, variety of shading and breadth that were entirely creditable | to the young performers. Their work was | hardly less admirable in the orchestral setting of Bruch's G minor violin con- certo, in which the orchestra displayed a discreetness and sympathy of very high order. Mr. Willard, who played the Bruch concerto, 18 a performer of taste and nice judgment. His tone is not large, though ure, his intonation true, his whole work uent and sincere. The ‘‘Rosamunde” overture, Bolzoni “Minuetto” for strings —very daintily given—and the Strauss waltz, “Du Und Du,” completed the pro- gramme. Thanksgiving Proclamation. SACRAMENTO, Nov. 12 — Governor Gage this afternoon issued the following Thankagiving proclamation: Executive Department, State of California. Conforming with the iaw and the proclama- tion of the President of the United States of America, I, ry T. Gage, as Governor of the Stafe of California, do hereby proclaim Thursday, the twenty-seventh day of Novem- ber, A. D. 1902, a legal holiday. Governor of the Siate of ‘Celitorsi e of Attest: CHARLES F. CURRY, oo Secretary of State. Sacramento, November 12, 1002, FORCE IEBIC COMPANY'S EXTRACT BEEF The programme was a distinctly | Ci r ; - L Agal Break hn¥ o) USE THE KNIFE 5 LAST RESORT Surgeons Operate -on ‘W. D. English for Appendicitis. Say Patient’s Chances for Re- covery Are Much Im- proved as Result. Oakland Office San Franeisco Call, 1118 Broadway, Nov. 12. William D. English, secretary of the State Board of Harbor Commissioners, submitted at noon to-day to an operation for appendicitis, after his physiclans had decided that surgery was absolutely nec- essary to meet the conditions which were diagnosed by them during the week that Mr. English had been under close obser- vation. ’, Dr. D. D. Crowley and Dr. E. H. Wool- sey performed the operation at East Bay Sanitarium. The patient rallied well from the shock and there was an excel- lent reaction. His condition, as revealed by the knife, was such as to fully war- rant the extreme measures taken. Ae- pass before they can give a final decision as to the outcome. After the patient had recovered from the effects of the anesthetic the doctors found that he was showing good indica- tions of reaction from the temporary shock. The operations uncovered an ab-. scess, the same in character and develop- ment as that which necessitated surgical treatment recently of King Edward VIL The operation wasg on the same lines as those followed in the case of the royal patient across the water. Dr. E. H. Woolsey, the English fam- ily physician, with Dr. D. D. Crowley, as- soclated, attended Mr. English and they were assisted by the hospital staff. “We can say that Mr. English has more’ than an even chance for recovery,” an- nounced Dr. Crowley after thé operation was completed and reactiom had set in so fgvorably. “It will, iver, be a week, in all probability, befer¢ a definite statement concerning the uftimate out- come can be given. We are very hope- ful that the patient will fully recover.” Eastern Bowlers Win Again. The All-American bowlers met the mem- bers of the San Francisco Club at the San Francisco alleys last night and proved easy winners. In the five men team, the Eastern men lost the first game by five pins, but won the remaining four. They captured the second game by 42 pins, the third by 9% pins, the fourth by 49 pins and the fifth by 52 pins. Peterson and Wolf of the All-American team defeated Kronke and Joosten of the San Francisco team by 61 pins in the first game and 113 pins in the second. Selbach and Voorheis of the All-Americans beat Rohrs and Schuite of the local team by 38 pins in the first game and 17 in the second. Peterson and Wolfe then played two games with Schlichting and Kronke and beat them 23 pins in the first match, but the local men captured the honors by 29 pins In the sec- ond match. Lagarde of the San Fran- cisco team won from Voorheis of the All- American team by a score of 416 to 402 in singles. — e *At Gornegrat, on the Zermatt mount- ain railway, stands the highest postoffice in Europe. It is over 9000 feet above sea level. ADVERTISEMENTS. Attack Of Fast Heart Lasted 160 Hours. Doctors Didn’t Know What To Deo. Dr.Miles’ Heart Cureand Nervine Cured Me. “For seven years I have been troubled with what the doctors called a ‘fast heart,” oing at once from the usual beat to twice as n!,bllrhichdin alsho;ftwlime would ebyxm me terribly and onl T treatment by a i- cian x’k would ifl back to normal s These attacks increased in frequency and severity until December, 1ot, when they came on once a week. Each attack would lay me up a day or more. The attack begin- ning January 13th, 1902, lasted 160 hours almost a week) my heart beat almost one hundred and fifty per minute and some times more. During this week m pl:{‘ddnn consulted with four other docmgn! to no purpose. My heart finally slowed up, and it was then a serious question with my family what to donéxt; as for me, I wastoo far to care much what happened. Dr. Miles’ al- manac said, “write_for advice” and my son wrote, receiving a nice reply. A ncighbor fold us he your remedies with efit. Itook courage, began the use . Miles” . New Heart Cure and Restorative Nervine until I had taken eleven bottles of the Heart ure and seven bottles of the Restorative Nervine. I had two slight attacks after I began the use of your medicine the last one lasting only thirty minutes. For more than three months my heart has run without a furry. I d, and Dr. Miles’ Y S gy y g e for more than ten years.”—M. T. CANTRELL, P. M, Fredonia, Kansas. All sts sell and first bot- tle Dr. Mi e Remedies. mhh& on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address Dr. Miles’ Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. Trueulariwm Will Insu-e Your Eye-Glasses AT LEON LEMOS’, Merchant Tailor, w1117 to 1127 Market Strest... Bet. Seventh and Eighth, SRS FROM $15.00 UP Weak Men and Women strength to sexual organs.