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THE SA FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1903 [EIVES OALAND CABLE DFFICILS MESSENGER BOY |EXPORT DUTIES A PUBLIC PARK KBOUT TO RETURN CAUSES A WRECK ity Is Will of the Late Dr. James Coronado Is to R ch to a School §1v EMPEROR WILLIAM SENDS GIFT TO THE PRESIDENT Presents Bo a Beautifully a Prussian nal Work. h of Citizen Strangely Disappears been a. boon to The st pmf:‘,(:or’d:red from Eastern factories wil 7 fill the new build- ently we must present stock near v T T But our bargains are not all gone, by any means. We still have a great many instru- nents which will be sold at unheard-of low prices— Good Pianos for less than the cost of poor ones. Don'tlet need of ready money - stand in - the way — that matter can be easily arranged. Clark Wised( Weber Agency 5t Grant Ave the Land Officers Enriched by the Bring to Successful Com- pletion Their Labors at Honolulu. of the Silvertown Are Royally Entertained by the People. the tanks ongside the Greetings The cost of t goes from STOCKTON CELEBRATES A GREAT ARBOR DAY One Thousand Trees Are Planted on Streets in the San Joaquin City. of them w tire length of was about nine miles. I and thousands of to pa e holiday spite the le fog. In addition to the of the Arbor Club the Daughters of the Golden West, Foresters and other | ns turned out i numbers to plant trees and the differen achers, social clubs and so- made it a tree-planting MONEY IS APPORTIONED | FOR THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS Superintendent Kirk Announces thea Schedule of Distribution in the State. SACRAMENTO, Jan. 16.—T. J. Kirk, Superintendent of Public Instruction, has made the apportionment of the school money of the State to the varlous coun- ties. There are 373,999 children entitled to recelve school money, and the amount to be apportioned is $2,289,853 61. This gives an amount per census child of $6 39, The smallest amount apportioned was to Alpine County, $17 59. It has but eighty- one census school children. San Francis- co, with §2,391 children, gets $525,478 49. Los | Angeles County, 45,167 children, gets $258,- 1 and Alameda County, with 34,415 children, is apportioned $219,911 8. ! AR Vs, | Funeral of Bishop Ropert. HONOLULU, Jan. 16—The largest seen since that of funeral Honolulu has Princess Kalulani, was he that of the I Bishop of Panopolis and Vi c of the Catholic Mission in the { 1slands, which took pl: on January 7. | More than 3000 people nded the serv- ices and there was a long cortege led by | the Government band. Business was prac- | tically suspended while the funeral was | |in progress. The late Bishop had been | | connected with church work here since | 1565 and had been Bishop since 182, —-—— | | South Vallejo Wharf Improvements. | VALLEJO, Jan. 16—The new slip for | | the railroad boat at South Vallejo wharf | | is completed, and work on improvements | | for the convenience of passengers and | traffic is being pushed rapidly. Dredging | | is nearly finished, and there is a depth ! of nearly eleven feet in the slip at low | tide. The railroad boat will have a di- | rect course to Valiejo Junction, and can always quickly enter the slip regardless of wind or tide. Ground is being prepared | for the laying of new tracks, which wiil enable two passenger trains to arrive and discharge passengers fat the same time, A new freight platform is completed, | The flirtatious boa and the pret- | tv girl in The Call to-morrow. Sets the Wrong Signal|Reichstag Is Not Ready; for an Approaching Train. Collision Follows and Four Railroad Employes Are Killed. aused on the Baltimore t of Cumberiand to employes of the Balti-| Ohio Railro; Hendrix, con- 4 about the| ris er, engineer, Balti- — Kinney, conductor, the displaying of | ar track for | No. 10, when ere was stand- boose two en- ger train was drawn h'~'1 d these crashed: through | nd engines which obstructed | kil e train had not at- ate of about twenty miles an the collision came. The postal | passenger train was derailed = passenger coaches did not leave | the occupants escaped in- ged th messenger boy | who w the block tow- | 10 came along and hearing | r tracks, | is explained, pre- at danger. While | e of what TRAIN IS DERAILED. Thirty Passengers Are Injured, but None of Them Fatally. the DENVER, Jan. 16.—A special to savs on the | was derailed 20 o’clock were m 1gh none fatally most se- | P. Gutschall. Mon- d back cut and inter. es B. Miller, , Ka 5 Chicago, y, arm | lent Grif- e Rail of the accident was the | breaking of the bolts holding a fishplate | by a freight car which jumped the track a little earlier. The section cxew had been notified and was on the way to re- pair the track when the wreck occurred, | { The deep snow prevented the accident be- | ing more gerious. Pictures of ladies at the inaugural ball. In the Wasp to-day . —_————— CHANGES THE CHARGE OF INSANITY TO CRUELTY - | Sherman Bowman of Redlands Wants Divorce and His Wife Starts Eastward. NARDINO | | { | ity a few days ago, | insanity dismiss the ately afterward filed it asking for a divorce on the d of e When Bowman had arrested he said that she had him with violence and had able signs of mental de- | t. The c was called before Judge Bledsoe to-day, but in accor YUs arrangement effec dismissed without ction evidence. Bowman, 1 his attorneys, immediately filed e complaint, the papers having beerr prepared. In the com- ¥ + alleges that for some months his wife's actions have caused him great mental suffering. Immediately after be- ing served with the papers in the divorce suit Mrs. Bowman left for the home of her parents in Springfield, Ill. Her father Is General Smith, a prominent resident of | pringfield. of BULLET OF MURDERER ENDS SALOON-KEEPER’S LIFE Money Stolen After the Firing of a Fatal Shot in Port- land. PORTLAND, Or., Jan. 16.—Henry Mey- er was shot through tthe heart and killed early this morning in his saloon at Twenty-fourth and Thurman streets. Two men giving the names of T. A. Ed- wards and E. H. Price were arrested on susplcion of being the murderers, but were afterward released. Meyer was alone In the saloon when the shot was fired, but his wife, who was I{ the saloon, In their apartments back heard some one ask to bellet in after her husband had closed up. She says her a messenger | 67 , and the | ; husband opened the door and let some one in, and shortly afterward she heard the shot. Meyer was found lying behind the bar, and all the money in the cash register was gone. - JURY ACQUITS DISBROW OF CHARGE OF MURDER Prosecution Unable to Connect Him With the Killing of Clarence Foster. RIVERSHEAD, L. I, Jan. 18.—Louis A. Disbrow was acquitted to-day of the | chfarge of killing Clarence Foster at Good Ground on the night of June 9. The ver- dict was reached by the jury after brief deliberation. The case of the prosecution throughout was weak, the strongest point made against the accused being that he was the last person seen with Foster and Miss Lawrence on the night of the trag- edy. The contention of the defense was that Foster and the girl committed sui- cide. — e Man, Noted for Fasting, Dies. SAN BERNARDINO, Jan. 16.—Ambrose Taylor, one of Rialto’'s oldest citi- zens, who was famous for the long fast which he endured for the cure of rheu- matism, is dead. Heart disease was the primary cause of his death. It was he who tried all sorts of remedies without result for rheumatism, and who, finaliy resorted to fasting. For thirty-two days he did not take a mouthful of solid food, merely drinking a little tea to sustaain life. The longer he fasted the more his leg limbered, until he was finally able to walk about the yard for the first time in years. UNDER DEBATE to Adopt Aggressive Course. Resolution Directed Against the United States Is. Withdrawn. Jan. 16—By a vote of M1 to ag to-day adopted the sub- titute for the resolution of Baron Heyl { Zu Herrnscheim asking the Government to denounce the most favored nation trea- fes, which was directed against the United States and Argentina. The substitute re- | quested the Government to denounce trea- | | tles where experience showed that the most favored clause was injurious to Germany’'s interests. Baron Heyl Zu Herrnscheim withdrew his resolution in favor of the substitute. The Socialists and Radicals composed the minority. During the course of the debate to-day Herr Gothein, Radical Liberal, said the I'nited States observed the treaty of 1828 loyally, for the most favored nation clause | in the present sense was unknown prior | to the Anglo-French treaty of 1851 Con- | tinuing, he said: The greatest obstacles against commercial treaties are open and disguised export bounties, Which the zealots for these reasons should help to abolish. We cammot denounce the present d its full speed and was only mov- | reciprocity arrangement with the United States | without damaging our interests until new treaties with other countries are made. Prince Herbert Bismarck, the next peaker, said: The United States s Germany inating aga of the agree- not get and aiso a effervescent wi that Roosevelt has mad treaty with Cuba, giving extraordinary con- cessions to her sugar. the United States will readily make us concessions, because Germany is her best customer. The great mistake of the tariff convention was that we abandoned our agricultural interests for a pittance. ment. in opinion has been expressed in the tag that the sharp language used here the Uniteq States will damage our interes “n in negotiat ed States. o strengthen the g @ new treaty with the 1 the contrary opini hackbone of our neg: when they can say: ‘‘We should ifke > make concessions, but the wicked Relchstag !l not allow us.”” Therefore it 1s a good g 10 beat the drum and say: “We will not urselves to be imposed upon any longer = patience is finally transformed into | PRIVATE WAR CLAIMS . ARE PASSED BY HOUSE Congressmen From Illinois Engage in a Lively Controversy Over One of the Bills. WASHINGTON, The devoted the day te war claims, i Jan. 16 House ssing about twenty. The two features f the day were the defeat of a claim of F. Moody & Co. of Keokuk, Ia. for he payment of the amount deducted from their contract for furnishing equipment to the Third Iowa Cavairy, by the famous commission which unearthed the army contract/ frauds in St. Louls in 1863 the fight of Payne, the floor of the majority, ~against an regolution to . refer ninety Southern aims, aggregating $400.- 000, for stores and supplies taken from the Union army during the Civil War to the Court of Claims for finding of fact under the Tucker act. The former bill led to a lively controversy between two lIowa members, Messrs. Smith and Hodge Hitt of Illinois, the chairman of the For- eign Affairs Commfttee, was the stenog- rap® of the commission and was able nally to corroborate Hedge in his pers opposition to the bill. The commis: n in | favor of the omnibus clatms resolution was too strong for Payne, but on the final vote the quorum failed. As the previous question had been ordered the vote on the doption of the resolution will be the first thing in order on the next claims day. ISR, Changes in Mexican Cabinet. EL PASO, Tex., Jan. 16.—Governor Mi- gurel Ahu hihuahua, who is vis- ing at El F t afternoon was noti d by President Diaz of several changes in Cabinet, occasioned by the resigna- tion of General Bernardo Reyes, Minister of War. The changes and portfolios are: Governor of the Federal District and Min- ister of the Interior, Ramon Corral;Min- | inter Fomento, General Manuel Gonzales Casi; Minister of Communications and Commerce, Dr. Leondro Fernandez; Min- ister of War and Marine Affairs, General Francisco C. Mera. o RS SRR Leaves an Estate Worth Mijlions. HONOLULTU, Jan. 16.—Paul Isenberg is dead at Bremen of peritonitis. Hawailan capitalist and leaves a fortune variously estimated at from $5,000,000 to | $10,000,000. He leaves two sons, one a Sen- ator of Hawaii. The banks and stores closed as a mark of respect to his mem- Years Of Suffering From Heart Disease. I Would Not be Alive Today But For Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure. Do not neglect the &arning szmp!on\s ofa weak heari. ~ Palpitation, smott ermg spell swelling of feet or ankles, pain in and aroun heart; oftentimes affections of the stomach, lungs, liver, bladder, kidnels, etc., arise from heart weakness. A weak heart must be helped. It cannot stop to rest. It must be strengthened and regulated. The blood must be enriched, the heart nerves strengthened and the circulation improved by the !f“‘ heart and blood tonic, Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure. There is positively nothing to equal this wonderful medicine in its beneficial influence upon hearts weakened from any cause. “I am very grateful for what Dr. Miles Heart Cureriu done for me, as I am confi- dent I would not bé alive today had I not learned of its wonderful virtues and taken it before it was too late. I had been a sufferer from valvular heart disease for many years. in fact ever since I was a little Tlfl and for three years before I began using Heart Cure I was in very bad shape. I could not sleep on my left side at all and would frequently have’the most dreadful smothering spells. A nes my left side would swell up. 1 had pain in my head all the time from which I suffered greatly. Nothing I took did me any good until I used eleven bottles of Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure which removed all these distressing symptoms and made me feel well and strong.”—MRgs. H. C. CRUSE, San Fran- cisco, Cal. All druggists sell and gnnnt:e first bot- tle Dr. Miles’ Remedies. nd for free book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. f i 2 discrim- | He was a | ADVERTISEMENTS. {rar E 1 | | 1N i F ;/. > //‘ | | H .1 | i A _dith TR A Lospital Casr&) There was a hurry call for the ambulance of the City Hospital. In the course of a few moments a very sick woman was brought in on 4 stretcher — she was pale as death and evid v suffering kfl-»-.'.l agony. There was a hasty examination and consultation, and in s than a quarter of an hour the poor creature was on the operating table to undergo an operation for ovaritis. 4, = rati B The above is an accurate account of an incident which occured in New York recently; the young woman in question had warnings enough of her dangerous condition in the terrible pains r"‘»'_i ‘f‘“‘ ng sensation low down in her left side. She had no one to advise her, and she suffered torture 1 it was too late for anything to save her life. Women should remember that if they do not care to tell a doctor their troubles, they should be willing to tell them to a woman, who stands ever ready to advise and help *hem. Again we state that Mrs. Pinkham’s advice is freely and confidentially given to every one who asks forit. Address, Lynn, Iass. following letters prove beyond question that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has the power to cure, and does cure thousands of cases of inflammation of the ovaries, womb, and all other derangements of the female organism. OTTOSON SAVED FROM A SURGICAL OPERATION. “DEAR Mgs. PixgnAx: —1 cannot thank you enough for what your Vegetable Compound has done for me. If it had not been for your medicine, I think I would have died. “I will tell you how I suffered. I could hardly walk, was unable to sleep or eat Menstruation was irregular. At last I had to stay in my bed, and flowed so badly that they sent for a doctor, who said I h: nflammation of the ovaries, and must go through an operation, as no medicine could help me, but I could not do that. T received a little book of yours, and after reading it I concluded to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I am now a well woman. I shall praise your medicine as long as I live, and also recommend the same to any one suffering as [ ‘was.” — MRrs. MINSIE OrrosoN, Otho, Jowa. (June 9, 1901.) MRS. Follow the record of this medicine, and remember that these thousands of cures fof women whose letters are constantly printed in this paper were not brought about by “something else,” but by Lydia E. _Pmk}:up"s Vegetable Compound, the great Woman's Remedy for Woman’s Ills. Those women who refuse to accept anything else are rewarded a hundred thousand times, for they get what they want —a cure. Mozal — Stick to the medicine that you kmow is Best. Write to Mrs. Pinkham for advice. JINFLAMMATION OF THE OVARIES CURED WITHOUT THE KNIFE. “DEAR MRS. PINKHAM : — I wish to express my gratimdfe for the restored health and happiness Lydis E. i '8 Vi mpound has brought into my life. Plnk','aln;n:d‘ssggeadb]fgr(t:}?reep:"ear.s with terrfiwle pains at the time of menstruation, and did not know what the trouble was until the doctor pronounced it inflammation of the ovaries, and proposed an operation « I felt so weak and sick that I felt sure I could not survive the ordeal, and so I told h‘.m that I ‘vrould not undergo it. The following week I read an advertisement in the paper of your Vegetable Compound in such an emergency, and so I decided to try it. Great was my joy to find that I actually improved after taking two bottles, 5o I kept taking it for ten weeks, and at the end of that time I was cured. I had gained eighteen pounds and was in excellent health, and am now. 2 ? - ““You surely deserve great success, and you have my very best wishes.” — Miss Avice Bamey, 50 North Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga., Treasurer St. Francis Benevolent Association. 35000 00 FORFEIT if we cannot forthwith produee the original letters and signatures of above testimonials, whish will prowe ' their absolute genuineness. Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Ceo., Lynn, Masss | San Jose Contributes Fair Telephone | | { | Operators for the Los Angeles | Service. : | SAN JOSE, Jan l'\‘— v y" Prisoner’s Confession "n{ Central California, and now San Jose | Los Angeles office mpany. A Causes Sensation in ust col bute her share. The selectip: southern been a sort of beauty conmtest, and es | office has sent its prettiest girls. The quintet of girls that went south on the | | overland tr: t erator: | PRETTY “HELLO” GIRLS ne ( dearth in tha drafts to be made |Plan Campaign Against Packing-House Merger. KANSAS CITY, Jan. 16.—The sixth an- of the National Li nual conven stock Association adjourned at 5 o'clock |(hl5 afternoon to meet next year at Port- | iand, Or., after electing all the old offi- | cers for the ensuing year and taking the | ! initiative in a systematic campaign of | | legislation against the proposed packing- | looks. Helen e voung ladies will arrive in Los A geles to-morrow and begin work M house merger. It is expected that they will | William M. Springer, general counsel |abs from their homes about two |® for the association, in a spirited address, | months, at the end of which time the | 14 rick Murray. After a hard * obtained [outlined a bill which he had formulated | “to protect trade and commerce against | los Angeles office will have probably a trained force of its own. unlawful restraints and monopolies,” and | ed an . wkich he saild was merely an allnpllal!(;‘n | Find the two little rascals who h':] ; of the Sherman anti-trust law and the | - . ad b before it Hoar bill now pending in the Senate. In |built the snow fence—to-morrow’s| was commitie Evy and the discussion that followed President | Call. | Judenan. Ju 1 the horses while John W. Springer said that a bill alons | e e tered the bank. The the lnes suggested by Judge Springer Earthquake Shock at Honolulu. 1 to the Aln™ Me- would be printed within a week by uu-! HONOLULU, Jan. 9.—A sharp shock and association and sent to every Legislature in the land. In further discussing the supject President Springer said that if the ) o'cloek At 7:9 a. | shocks | earthquake was felt here at 7 | on the morning of January 3. on the same day two heav m. s proposed merger was ever consummated | 1o 9% (AT B D o BEwut. ise who ihe National Livestock Assoclation would | ~ "¢ the plunder, claimed to string packing-houses from Chicago to lost part of it on the road » | Kirls San Frandisco. In response to an appeal | Favors a Federal Leper Settlement. | t from the executive committee for a leg- | HONOLULU, Jan. 16.—The independent islative fund, $7500 was subscribed in less | Home Rule party has prepared a memo- | { than thirty minutes. | rial in support of a Federal leper settle- A resolution_introduced by Frank M. |ment. Stewart of South Dakota protesting | sgainst the packing-house merger was | b | adopted. | To-night the delegates were entertained | |at an elaborate smoker at Convention | Hall, the chief attraction at which was | | the Megaphone Minstrels, an aggregation | | of 200 funmakers, who had been trained for the occasion by St. Clair Hurd, a well | | known actor. To-morrow 200 or more of the delegates Number of v 1 hi d New Orl: | they will be guests of those cities. | | Warships Arrive at Monterey. | MARI‘ HOTEL DEL_MONTE, Jan. 16.—The battleship New York, the flagship of the Pacific fleet, with Admiral Casey on beard, and the cruiser Boston are in this harbor. The vessels will remain here for | a few days. The officers of the Fifteenth { Infantry and Ninth Cavalry invited the | naval officers of the two vessels to'join them in a banquet at the Hotel del Monte about $1200 was innocent of hold-up. The authorities expect to make several | more arrests . ET OF CLEVERNESS to-night. The banquet will be followed = by a dance. ou ‘ The Colonel Xate Papers—The To-Day ‘Woman Who Poses in to-morrow's Call.