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10 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY., JUNE 19 1903. VESSEL WRECKED N S0UTH SERS Missionary Ship Carrie | and Annie Brings | the News. w Natives Find Lumber-Laden Derelict in Marshall Islands. Carrle and | ssionary schooner An which arrived yesierday forty-five | days from Kusale, brings news of the wreck on the ands of a 0- ton lumber-lade: Name, rig and known, but the r was dispatched to #cene of the wreck and she is due at this point within a few weeks. | e nmews of the wreck reached the | Carrie and Ann n April 1 and was brought to Kusale by Accord- ing the stor: the vessel went ashore f Mills during the She was a wooden and 6% tons, to- boats or a | The story e Gepman Governor ed the schooner the wreck. The Neptun w ow San Francisco from | Mille | "he Carrie and Annie is the property of the Amer Board of Commissioners of Foreign sions, a Congregational or- She feft Db ar e e o £ the Ibert Islands, to the Marshail group and to Pon- a ! of the Carolis wo missionarie on the acho as passer Walk who has th Seas for nty-three tes 1 e Wil- ip for eleven » i going to 1 ss Wilson to So- expect to re . M Skeleton qp Farall§nes Cargo of Niter, LT NEWS OF THE OCEAN. Matters of Interest to Mariners and Shipping Merchants. June aw R 19 9 am|Pler 1 pm|Pier 9 am|Pier 2 7 pmiPier 16 { 6 pm Pier 1 pm Pler via Panama. t Sound Ports er Ports 12 “m|Pier i1 am/Pier 4 pm Pler £ Ross 9 am/Pler ¢ - 10 am|Pier : 11:30 p Pier Coos Bay a v.! 9 am/Prer 15 < bia Ast & Portland 11 am/Prer 2 > Fork fu t 9 am P, Pt. Arens.. ¥ e June a Humboldt June Hamburg & r..' 2 pmiPie; ex0 & Way.| m {n; arbor 4 pm Pier Sydnes & Way Pial 2 pm|Pier G ound Ports. |11 am|Pier Newport & " ionelulu, Kahuluf Jane 27, ria & Portland & Japan.. via Panama. June 20, -{1:30 p Pier 1 9 am|Pier | 3 pm Pier 11 amPier | 1 pm|Pier 112 “m!Pier Excelsior. . Portland. . b y ‘orts. |June 2> | Skagway & Way Ports.|June 29 | Skugway & W ‘ast and Geodetic Survey— i d _Heights of High and Low Waters at Fort Point, entrance to San Francieco Bay. Published by olflcli au- _thority of the Superintefdent. NOTE—Tbe high and low water occurs at ' e 2 members of the Hargis factl 1gho n in discussing what| gere gimost jubilant to-night uverc \‘i):: follow either a verdlct of guilty or | unoffictal reports from the jury room. it of acquittal or of a compromise on Im- | was claimed confidently that ten of tZe prisonment, bu ns are that | jurors were firmly for acquittal and th the Sury: will hat it has |other two were being induced to jo disagreed and rged. It | them to-morrow in a verdict of acquittal. s said that in that event there will be no | It is mentioned that all of 'the men It is not expected that the verdict and lay all the facts before Goy- the murder of Marcum and | ernor Beckham. Ewen would not give | others will stop with this jury. Al-|out what he would tell the Governor. | | though the court has been in session | Men close to him say it -will reflect op some weeks at great expense to the coun-|men high in official life in Breathitt ty and miso to the comgonwealth, it is/| County and may form the basis of war. | day, except when there are but three tides, as Per Br stmr Ivydene, at Port Los Angeles— Time Ball. . bktn Amaranth, lat 40 16 £ i desired to be revorted all | Branch Tydrographic Office. U. & X. Mer- | Wellc had encouritersd “aimost "‘continuous " hants’ Exchange, an rancisco, Cal., 4s; bound rom ] tau, fo :unv 18, 1903. | ®end for Port Town- \Honolulu | Pisagua. NO HOPE FOR CONVICTION IN MARCUM MURDER CASE Intense Anxiety Prevails Around the Courthouse at Jack- son, as It Is Reported That the Jurors Are Divided, the Majority of Them Standing Out for Verdict of Acquittal 3 | e | | 1 JUDGE SI WHO PRESIDED AT THE TRIAL OF THE ALLEGED ASSAS- OF ATTORNEY MARCUM IN BREATHITT COUNTY, KY., AND OF THE ACCUSED MOUNTAINEERS. || +| il | ! || [ — ACKSON, Ky., June 18.—As expect- ;such a report to the Governor as to se- ed here, the jury in the case of Cur- | cure other trials under different condi- Jett and Thomas White, | tions. It is remarked that the genera! | rged with murdering J. B. Mar- | ©X0dus ;-’wl is expected will take away | 3 .- | many of those who t 4 4 cum, has been unable to agree |geper ho might otherwise be | d on witnesses and jurors. It | The case has been in the | is not likely that the county will find =oon | of the jury all afternoon and to- | such another witness as B. J. Ewen, who = TP s e removed Lexington, nother | ipon a verdict hand d at or nig a for conviction, while others | Such prosecutor as Commonwealth At- ided, most of them favoring ac- | \otn®¥ Byrd, who expects to locate at e et 10 bed early, | Winchester, Kyv. Business was practically The ors wen ; ¥» | suspended to-day e reign of terror there will be no report before fo- | still continues with all sorts of apprehen- | slon as to the convictions conditions. The = future and no hope of any nder the present official suspense there has been in- Courthouse and g th e ANX the bout bloodshed and fur- as -there would be in probability of acts of arson victi such brought in for the panel, from which tre jurors were selected, were brought in by n; that there will be | deputies or members of the dominant fac. general exodus of members of the Card- | tion, and that they can be depended upcn well-Cockrell faction, the widows and or- | for the result that is now anticipated phans of victims and others, and that the | LEXINGTON, Ky., June 18.—Captain ant faction will be left without | Ewen announced to-day that on the ad- opposition in holding -the | vice of friends he would go to Frankfort . as well as the county offices here- | as soon as the Jackson jury returned a prose- e event of cor believed that Inspector Hines will make rants for bribery. il the ¢ front (Misslon-street wharf) about twenty-five minutes later than at Fort Point; tbe highest tide is the same at both place: 2D, Thursday, June 18, Dettmers, Hardy Creek Adier. : ) % fornia, Thomas, San Diego. Gielow, San Pedro, Hansen, Eureka. Johnson, Eureka rt, Smith, Westport. :ar, “Martin, . Point Reyes. South Coast. Olsen, Casvar Newburg. Andfindse r Stmr Mandalay, Smith, Crescent City. Jaby fhiv Ruuddlan Castle, Robert Bark Haydn Brown, tow tug Sea Rover Santa_Cruz, San Pedro, Corona, W Port- Asplund, Eureka, In ove expositio ore. Palmgren, Willa sbove exposition of the tides | Mary. Dodge. Oteen, Maskons " the successive tides of the | Soir ,'\i";’""‘tgrm’jg_r;f» GoSluslaw River. day in the order of occurrence as to time; the | Schr Volunteer. " B, Coiesa fourth time column gives the last tide of the SPOKEN from Honolulu Jy stmr Enterorise, hence Jumns 1y 16, off Crescent P m, anchored, nce June 13 for The heights given are in addition 1o the soundings of the United States | Coast Survey Charts. except when a minus (—) sign precedes the heighte, and then the numb; given is subtracted from the depth given by the | Charts. The plane of reference is the mean of | the lower low waters | —_——— gometimes occura, 1 Norte—June Y. barge Santa Paula, 2 nd proceeded N at 5 p m, he Portland, in tow tug Rescue “The Time Ball on the Ferry buliding w dropped exactly at noon to-day—\. e, of the 120th meridian, or at 8 p wich time. Lieutenant, | IS TELEGRAPHIC, POINT LOBOS, June 18, 10 —We | hazy; wind W, velocity 16 mllFlDD::' h?uel"u"r | DOMESTIC PORTS . SAN DIEGO—Salled Ju 2 | for "San Erancisco. Be. 26~ Sume myiiton, " ABERDEEN—Sailed J — . sml’p‘“fi:l'\“;é“‘"’“‘ | Wilson, for Sen Franctaco. 5 ~Sebr Henry ARRIVED. | E—Salled June 18—s Thursday, June 18. | for Skagw, tmr Dolphin, Stmr Phoenix, Odland, 14 hours from Men- ’nffi‘“fi‘ r:vmefl n“x"f 18—Stmr Queen, aocin ce June 15; stmr_Rainier. hence Jume 14, CCStmr Del Norte, Green, 33 hours from Cres- poalled June 15—Stmr . Valencla, o fin cent O - Stmr Chas Nelson. Anderson, 84 hours from | BEUREKA—Arrived June 18—st, i Seattic, via Fort Bragg 14 hours | patch. hence June 17, for Partland, Or. 2 Stmr Santa Rosa, Alexander, 42 hours from | 5% June 185—Stmr ‘Alllance, from Port- land, 'r:,l for San Franeisco. rrived June 18—Schr Bertie M June 10 schr Ida McKay, from Han” B stmr . Prentiss, hence June 17; mere. from Callao, % 0L 20 B Sailed June 18—Stmr Pomona, = ol for San Fran San Diego. Stmr North Fork, Jacobs, 25 hours from Eu- reka Ship Geo Curtis, Calhoun, 22 days from Br ship Dumfriesshire, Jones, 60 days from Senr A B Johnson, Segelhorst, 7 days trom | , SAN PEDRO—Sailed June 18—Schr Grays Harbor. for Olymoia: schr Joseph Russ, for Pogt.]:)’gl Schr William Renton, Anderson, 7 days from | ford; stmr Pasadena, for Eureka; stmnrs Sa- moa, Santa Monica and South P o P g ortland, for REDONDO—Sailed June 18— and Redondo, for San Francias - " Grays Harbor. Schr Carrie and Annle, from Kusaie. i Schr Jobw A, Olsen, 7 days from Astoria. Mitchell, 45 days Celia £chr Alcalde, Peterson, 8 days from Cos- | Arrived June 15—Stmr Santa Monica, for ‘mopolis. San Pedro. Bkin Gleaner, Schmehl, 7 days from Co- | MENDOCINO—Safled June 18—Stmrs Point Arena and Greenwood, for San Francisco. TATOOSH—Pasesd ‘in June 18—Stmr Olym- pk; hence June 15, llsolswhlworm assed in June tmr Melvil] e e ! —Salied June 17— Chehalis. for San Francisco. R el ASTORIA—Arrived June 18— Bktn Cheha- lis, hence June 6. June 13—Stmr Robert Dol- lar, for Seattle; barge Santa Paula, hence June 13, in tow tug Reseue. Sailed June 18—Stmr Sequoia, for San Fran- cisto; ¥r ship Duquesne, for Queenstown. TACOMA—$ailed June' 15—Stmr San Ma- teo, for £an Francieco. lumbia River. Stmr Columbia, Randall, 50 hours from Port- lznd, via Astoria 42 hours. Stmr Chico, Jensen, 52 hours from Bandon, Stmr Gipsy, Leland, 24 hours from Monterey and way por Br stmr Gaelic, Finch, 28 days 8 hours 55 minutes from Hongkong, 17 2 hours 50 minutes from Yokohama and 6 days 2 hours 81 minutes from Honolulu. CLEARED. Thursday. June 15, Stmr_ Corons. Johnson, Fureka; - Pacific Coast Steamship Co. | after | that | that Nelson's skull had been fractured by | | the blow given him. | young man i | should never have been begun.—New York | | | Sun. —_——— Five 0’Clock Tea. The 5 o'clock tea s getting to be very | much less elaborate of late. Tke sand- | NOVEL ROBBERY ON OCEAN BEAGH | Young Swede the Vic- tim of an Original Thug. 3 :Thief Stuns Companion in Surf and Steals Clothes Herman Nelson, a young Swede, fell & victim yesterday afternoon to as novel| | and bold a robbery as has been committed | {in this city in some time. | Nelson is a ranch hand from Fresno and came here on Tuesday last to take in the sights. About noon yesterday he vis- | ited the CIff House and then went for a | stroll along the ocean beath. { 4n his travel he struck up an tcuuaint‘-i ance with a young man who joined him | in his walk. The stranger suggested that ! they take a plunge in the surf, but pro- | posed that in order to avoid other visitors | ! to the beach they walk to Mussel rock, | four or five miles below. Nelson consent ed and the pair, after reaching the place, | went in swimming. { | After a few minutes in the surf they | returned to the shore, rested, and again | | took to the water. After another rest| | they went in for the third time. Nelson | | was in the lead when suddenly the | | stranger struck him on the side of the | head with a rock. Recovering himself | the young farm hand found his new- |J found friend trying to shove him out in | the surf. Nelson grappled with the man | | | was told that he was siruck by a | Nelson began to get weak and, | reaching the beach, either fell leep or became unconscious. When he awoke his recent companion was nowhere to be seen. Nelson's clothes were also missing and in their stead was | the other man's suit and a woman's bath- ng outfit. In the pockets of the clothes | were taken were $0 and a gold | watch. Nelson dressed in his companion’s cast- off clothes and went to the South Life Saving Station, where he told his story. One of the crew brought him to the Park | Emergency Hospital, where Dr. Millar, after an examination, gave as his opinion but wave. obtaiied in any other way. The police were notified and a detective | § was detailed to investigate the case In the pockets of the clothes exchanged for Nelson's the stranger had left a card issued by the teamsters’ union and bear- ing the me of Frank J. Morrisey. Nelson described his assailant as a Rlon[i of about 22 years and Vs that he will be able to recognize him if | he sees him agaip. ———e—— A walking delegate Who draws two salaries for nothing. Read the Wasp . e Place of Man in the Universe. The ideas of Alfred Russell Wallace on the place of man in the universe were forth in the Sun for March § with a set i commentary which showed that they were, in the main, untenable. Tie same | questions have been widely discussed in | England. Mr. Wallace's original paper in | the Fortnightly Review for March set forth that the universe was finite; that the solar system was situated at its cen- | ter, and that consequently conditions for the favorable development of the human race were presented on the earth not to | be found elsewhere. One of the most com- plete rejoinders of these theses is by Pro- | fssor Turner of Oxford, who points out (also in the Fortnightly) that it is not yet proved that the universe is, in fact, finite; that there is, properly speaking, no physi- cal center of the universe, even if it be limited; that even if the solar system oc- cupied its geometric center at a certain | Instant it would not long remain there, | since the sun and the whole solar system | in rapid motion: and, finally, that there 18 no good reason why life may not be de- | veloped at one as well as at another situ- ation within the universe as we know it. The controversy is probably ended and wiches are made of bread and butter, and | sometimes there are a few of pate, but, owing to the horror of most women for growing stout there are but few sweets, and one rarely sees the nut and almond and mayonnaise mixtures recommended in various cookery columns. The little bottle of rum is still in evidence for the few men who like it, but as a ruie there is whisky and soda in another room. One of the fa- vorite sweetmeats is the old-fashioned loaf cake, which, after all, is very simple | and which partakes almost of the nature of raisin bread. There is a bakery in town where these loaf cakes are a spec- lalty, but they must be ‘ordered a long time in advance. Rock candy and sac- charine are the two sweets used for the tea, although many take their cheering cup with only a slice of lemon and neither sweetening matter nor cream and sugar.— New York Times @ it for lithograph:ng. SLAND PORTS HONOI ailed June 17—Bark Albert, for San Arrived hence June KAHULUI—Sailed June 16—Stmr Whittier, with blktn Fullerton in tow, for Ventura. FOREIGN PORTS. June 17—Maniia enora Begona. ed to Manila. 0. June 18—Ship Marion Chilcott, LONDO: stmr_ Nuestra and s beinz {o; reports stmr lost her serew Caiifornia. CAPE TOWN—Arrived June 17—Br bark Sofala, from Tacoma. COLON—Arrived June 17—Stmr Allianca, The Next & ICTUR and Money. ‘ TO Be Gi\]en With the “The Pony Express.” BY HERMAN W. HANSEN. | FREE [[Sunday Ca and demanded an explanation of his act, | Is an excellent reproduction i colors of the work of one of America’s best artists, HERMAN W. HANSEN, ana is a picture of a truly American scene, a typical Cowboy Pony Express. Remember, this beautiful picture i1s given free with The Sunday Call, and cannot be Herman W. Hansen was born in Ditmarschen, in the Province of Holstein, Germony, in 1856. His father was the rector of the school there, and it was there that he recewed his first nstructions, and when sixteen years of age he enterea a lithographing establishment, at the same time studying drawing and painiing under Prof. Heimerdienger ana others, When twenty years old he went to Lond:n and spent one year n that metropolis, and from there went to New York and thence to Chicago, where he was engaged in making sketches Although engaged i making skeiches for publishing houses and Iithographing estab/ishments, a great deal of his ime was given up, anc is to the present time, to the stuay of frontier Iife, the cowboy, Inaians, the cattle which roam the Western valleys, but more particularly the horse, which has always been his admiration and his best frrend. Mr. Hansen 1s still a young man, and his best days are yet before hwm. He was married n 1884, has two lovely children, a boy and a girl, and a pleasant home n Alameda, from New York. — E June 16—8 v . y:rukd R s L e, New Ethics of Hospitality. HULL—In vort June 3—Fr bark Eugenle| 1n fashionable life the ethics of hospi- Fautrel. for Oregon, via Hamburg. tality and the consideration which guesis owe to their host and hostess have been so greatly modified that one wonders where the new ideas will lead to and whether in the end there will be any mutual obliga- tion at all, such entire independence be- ing the order of the day at present. A few years ago it seemed rather odd to old tashidfled notions that invitations to din- ner and other outside functions should be accepted independently by both host and hostess, and that an invited guest could be left at home without rudeness to eat a solitary dinner, if he or she did not hap- pen to be invited out. But now still fur- ther latitude is permissible. and it really seems as if-it could go no further. “You know Mrs. M. was not at home when 1 visited ‘her,” said@ a girl who had been off on 2 week's end house party. “What do you mean?” queried her com- panion. “Why,” answered the other, “she had an invitation that she wanted to accept, 50 she went off and left us to take care of ourselves. Her mother was there, we were chaperoned all right, and it was really more fun than if she had been at home."—New York Tribune. . e liigage o UL * The census of 191 reveals the sad fact that more than half of the total popula- tion of Ireland belongs to the non-pro- ductive class. They are actually more PEW‘;OEI:K——&n:d .luAne ls—swr Ir? L}wr- numerous than the professional, commer- He Havre: stmr Auguste Victorla, for ' o), industrial, agricultural and domes- et o It pay Cetpeary st tic classes together. This fact 1s at the Koenigen Luise, & g Cherbourg: for Bremen, via Plymouth &nd - ot of Ireland’s poverty. BRISTOL—In port June 3—Fr bark Marie, for Puget Sound, via Wales. LIVERPOOL—Sailed_June Br ship Pass of_Killiecrankie, for Victoria. VENTNOR—Passed June 16—Br ship Way- farer, from Antwerp, for San_ Francisco. DELAGOA BAY—Arrived June 17—Br ship Lyderhorn, from lard. HOBARTOWN—Sailed June 18—Shiv Emily Reed, for Simcastown, South Africa. SINGAPORE—Arrived June 18—Span stmr Isla de Panay, from Liverpool. SALINAS CRUZ—Arrived June 12—Br bark Highlande, from Newcastle. Aus. CADIZ—Sailed June 13—Span stmr Alicante, for Manila. NEWCASTLE, Aus—Arrived June 17—Bark James Nesmith, from Cape Town. OCEAN STEAMERS. BRISBANE—Salled Jupe 18—Stmr Miowera, for Vancouver. SCILLY—Passed June 18—Stmr Fuerst Bis- marck, from New York, for Plymouth. LIVERPOOL—Sailed June 1S—Stmr Com- monwealth. for Beston, via Queenstown; stmr Parisian, for Montreal. via Movill Arrived June 18—Stmr Haverford, from Philadelphia; stmr Pretorian, from Montreal; stmr Tavrlc, from Portlagd; stmr Teutonic, from New York. CHERBOURG — Arrived June 18 — Stmr Moltke, from New York, via Plymouth, for Hamburg, and_proceeded. QUEENSTOWN—Sailed June i8—Stmr Oce- anic, for, New York; stmr Belgenland, for Philadelphia. Arrived June 1S—Stmr Carpathia, from New York, for Liverpool, and proceeded. LON[{O)\—*AH’!M June 18—Stmr Manitou, from Néw York, via Southampton. NAPLES—Arrived June 1$—Stmr Hohenzol- lern, from New York. PLYMOUTH—Arrived June 18—Stmr Fuerst Bismarck, from New York, for Cherbourg and Hamburg, and proceeded. ELEPHANT’S TRUNK GRADUALLY EVOLVED Account of the Manner in Which the Peculiar Organ Was De- veloped. The recent discoveries of fossil remains | of ancestral proboscideans in the tertiary depeaits of the Fayum district of Egypt, combined with a careful study of the skeleton of certain species of mastodon known to sclence for many vears, have enabled Dr. C. W. Andrews (proceedings of the Royal Society) to indicate very clearly the manner in which the trunk of the modern elephants has been gradually evolved. The ancestral proboscideans were com- paratively small and short-legged ani- mals, which had, of course, no difficulty in putting their mouths to the ground. As the successors of these primitive forms gradually increased in bodily stature, and more especially in length of limb and size of head, it will be obvious that in order to be able to obtain food or water from the level of the ground they must either bave increased the lensth of the neck or have developed a special prolongation of the muzzle. But in the case of large and heavy-headed animals, whose successors were destined to carry the enormous tusks of the extinct mastodons and mod- ern elephants. it will be further manifest that an increase in the length of the ver- tebrae of the neck, and hence of the neck itself, would from the mechanical consid- erations have been impossible. Accord- ingly the only practicable course was the elongation of the muzzle. In the earliest forms the lower jaw was short and heavy, with the union between the two branches (symphysis) very mas- sive. On the other hand,,in many of the early mastodons the lower jaw had be- come very long and terminated in a long troughlike symphysis. To accord with this prolongation of the lower Jaw 1t is quite evident that the upper lip and nose must likewise have been elongated, and they probably formed a kind of probos of which the tip was most likely more or less prehensile. For some reason or other no sooner had the prolongation of the low- er jaw attained fits maximum devel- opment than the length of its troughlike symphysis began to diminish, till the structure culminated in the short snout found in the later mastodons and ths modern elephants. During these changes the length of the proboscls must have continued to increase, while its flexibility and tactile power were likewise at the same time augmented, till the structure attained its full development in the ele- phants of to-day.—London Field. ———————— When Mr. Du Chaillu died in St. Pet- ersburg he had been engaged for about eighteen months in preparing to write a careful Inclusive account of the Rus- sian empire. This was to be his crown- ing work and he had just begun, for he thought four or flve years were neces- sary. e gt An unexploded four-inch rifie shell, supposed to be a Civil War relie, was drawn up through the suction pump of a dredger off the coast of Florida the other day. It will be presented to the Jacksonville Chapter of the Daughters of the Confederacy.