Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
TEEL TRUST MBS, B, T. SIRE TAES OF 1T DOAL HED Concern Decides »n Change of Man- agement. —— aroa rge H. Ismon Resigns His | on With Impor- nt Institation RREESPEILIES Say His Withdrawal Is by Eastern Representa- es of Corporation, but This He Denies. FORCED TO IGN. —_—— POLICE L SEARCH FOR THE DYNAMITERS hooner Disappears. s Wreck of S¢! was ancouver roke up vestige is to be r first broke two nd foundering in deep 4 end was broken to pounding of Is Burned to Death. Ky. Oct 29.—Attorney e of the best-known cky, was burned to n his office. It is not originated, but it is ed and fell into before the was seen on the 1utes of the discov- He —Further small © have taken place in 1sh troops were vie- Chilef Dontcho and ed in the district of urgent chief was op distriet. Oct._20.—Altred | Prime Micister, in al policy to & that he was THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1903. 0S5 ORCHESTA DIES SUDDENLY, 15 SUCCESSFUL Former San Francisco !Holds Audience When Belle Passes Away ‘ All Other Perform- in New York. , ances Are Closed. Relatives, by Suppression of | Fisk and Franko Win Laurels Facts, Make Mystery of by Their Excellent Her Demise. Solo Work —— — Special Dispatch to The Call. YORK, Oct. 29.—Mrs. d suddenly at her h Treet, this m Her husband is a well real estate dealer who | The particular thing about the Duss { orchestral concert in the Alhambra last evening was that | o-date. Nothing on the programme an- ted the “Rienzi” overture by \\'B§<l Saint-Saens was represented in the | prepared musical offerings twice; Rich- ard Wagner twi Humperdinck, Rich- € Thomas and Waller The name of Waller may mot the full apprehension of he figures as the com- Dance of the Sunfeast,’ sical tome picture d has been associated with some important the- erprises. It was given out at hat Mrs. Sire’s death was due nd that she had been art disease for her Information was ps e affluent time ling scores with of a reporter writing hurry- odie Mongroise No. yeoman duty for a all and to! most raggy of the drums amazingly later on modemn the next is the solidly and scintlllated as k of ice. That is not cold—far from that; n unmistakab! : nethermos ass and the bell- . on the way, the the air as keenly as a MAKING OF HATS I THS GOUNTR player would every orchestral ure and unmixed; that, | individual man and the » who manipulated the harp would play artistically, with perfect regard and respect fo made It only a in deciding what the vould Mk MUSIC THAT WON. e 3 the the n by ot a compos e , but way other pieces as en- | ' as explained by ductor D Whoever proffered no mistake, for the 1 inged with g C request io by Franko. If it was not appeal to the emotions and technically . t, sane completely balanced. th MRS. FISK POPULAR. SWIT CHING As Goring | vy the mu- | and Mrs. Fisk the evening by “My Love is Like a Mrs. Fisk is 1 lo obligate for the piano was E. Romayne Sim- solos of Franko, the concert meis- ned a regular furor. ‘He was stitute for the set opening e,” by Wienfowski, s brought out an ex- | technique and also | occasis New York. For different styles ic side of Franko. To | braided straw sce he was compelled to | , and the first play the e Song”’ from the “Meis- | cture i tersinger,’ and the Moskowski *‘Sere- tment, brown Franko also played an obligato to | luge’™ very cleverly. | her entertainments in | Duss orchestra was | t th still playing and -the audlence was ener- e city we nt the braid- 1 . This, considering s applauding. an orche rt was the at- | story of success. This afternoon ra will be heard. pes desired. T the sewing department, an im- in which 200 or more women ch of ti The straw is sired by patter i When Senator Arthur Pue Gorman was at the Fifth-avenue Hotel, New York. just before sailing for Europe recently a | spaper man, presuming upon long ac- sed the political sphinx n interview. “Can’t do it, d the Senator. “Politicians, | How 07" should be seen and not heard.” An the ator resumed his promenade up and down the hotel corridor. A marriage lottery has been organized by the Bachelor Club of Derby, Conn. Once 2 year the twenty-five members will draw lots and the one receiving a black ! ticket must marry within the year. The penalty for failure is the forfeiture of $50. which each of the members has already deposited with the treasurer, expulsion from the club and a loss of all money paid ; hat e into style e in the molding « ement of the buildi ines in use are not the are more complicated revolutions a revolution, and imitation of the -made stitch. om this department the hats go to sizing room, where y are stiffened with a prepdration of giue. They then go to the hat room, where they are dried out. While the bats are in the shapes o J the style destred, they must pass thecuey the club’s insurance department. Those| who abide by the drawing will receive $200 for wedding expenses. The ciub has been urganized fifteen years and no member has ever married. | Ome of the bright clerks in the office of |a firm of bankers and brokers in Wall | street, which Is known the country over, transacted a business matter in a way which highly delighted one of the mem- bers of the firm. “Get the finest overcoat in town,” said the broker gleefully, “‘and send the bill to us.” In a few days the clerk appeared in a beautiful fur-lined coat. *“Fine coat—fine,” remarked the broker, as he contemplated first the gar- ment and then a bill for $1300. “Why didn’t you have oil paintings on the but- several other stages of preparation before they obtain a perfect and lasting shape. For Instance, in the blocking room they must be blocked on blocks that are heat- | ed by steam or gas. G UP. The unfinished headgear is now ready for pressing room, where it Is put un- der pressure on machines, which process gives it an even finish. In the *pressing room there are twelve hydraulic presses and twenty-six steam presses. Hats that require a smooth finish are placed upder | hydraulic presses, and when the rough ef- | fects are wanted the hats are placed un- ‘\der the steam machines. The work of blocking and pressing is all done by men. tons?”"—New York Post, The metal dies or patterns used in the There are several young premiers in va- | blocking and pressing are also made in | rious parts of the British Empire, but | the moilding or biock shop in the base- | the latest is the youngest of all. He is R. ment. i McBride, the new Premier of British Co- The next step is to give the hats a light | Jumbia, who was born in New Westmin- eoat of varnish to brightén them. The ster, the original capital of that West- | hats are then wired and lined. After this | ern Canadian province, thirty-three years is done, and if the factory is not going to ago. He went to the other end of the put on trimmings, they are ready for the | Dominion for his education, as he is a market—for the milliners. However, this | graduate of Dalhousie University, Hal:- factory does its own millinery work on |fax. In 1852 he was called to the many of the hats, so the headgear to be thus treated is sent to the trimming de- -1 it was' completely up-| | with preliminary mock | | mentioned that all the | | orchestra | | MILDNESS WINS HIM ADMIRERS + NEARLY WRECKED ATTEND COURT BY WATERSPOUT) UPON Ris GOT Bark Oregon Has Thrill- Lorin Weis Is Carried‘i ing Experience in Before a Judge at South Seas. Woodland. —— x Captain Parker Gives Vivid | Testimony Given to Prove Description of Raging That Man on Trial Storm. | Was Insane. gt THE NATURAL LAXATIVE WATER. MY NAME IS NOT HUNYADI ONLY, BUT, HUNYADI JANOS, THE CRIGINAL, ONLY GENUINE ! | | | | It is regarded as providential by the of-| WOODLAND, Oet. %.—Lorin A. Weis AND REUIA ficers and crew of the bark Oregon. which | was brought into court this morning on HUNGARIAN arrived here yesterday afternoon with a{a cot. 7The strain had been too much for NATURAL cargo of coal from Neweastle. N. 8 W. | him. Wednesday night after the ad- LAXATIVE that the vessel and all hands are not now | o =~ STRES Ry B EBT BEr the & ATER. | | resting in_the unfathonted depths of the | JOUTRTmeNt of court he suffered from a Akt Pacific. The vessel, whilé in latitude 15.49 | YOUS collapse and physiclans were wiih south, longitude 152.06 west, on September | Bim long into the night. His condition | |12, narrowly missed a colossal waterspout, | this morn was improved, ko s . which, according to the master's report,' will probab! have to testif: - v was cf such gigantic proportions that the | penaif from his improvised bed in Is Abesys Bnliails Soe pinnacle, like Jack's famous beanstalk, was lost fo sight in the clouds. | Captain F. O. Parker’s narrative of the| courtroom. Judge Gaddis favored pos.- poning the trial, but We sted on proceeding, say would not help matten | The defense p more charact | nesses during the forenoon and s | others to prove that Hodge and Mrs | Wels were seen often together after tE GONSTIPATION Rheumatism had caims and light winds | throughout the passage and nothing out | | of the ordinary occurred until September 12, when we were in latitude 15.49 south longitude 152.06 west. There was a moder- | | ate breeze from the north when the sin- | S°Paratio at dances and different B ¥ G Sman; W gular phenomenon oceurred two mile: JD“ :’_: "mih akinatuny bwe Mg o= 0 o o e astern of the ship. The water was rush- | D-Striet Attorney’s objection that a ’ | ing and foaming up 1o an avtoniibin: | proper foundatien had not been Cured with height. It crossed the -wake of the ship | DOt havind been shown that the One Bottle to the clouds in a spiral column-about | 2% R O . ‘ six feet In diameter.. At the base It looked | 10 dethrone his reason. The cou McBurney's like heavy breakers about a mile around. | 0Wed the testimony with the understand- Kidney and | It finally disappeared to the westward. | DS that the defense must Show it has Bladder Cure If it had passed over the ship it would | PeeR comm ted to the de : 20 m | | bave torn the masts and yards out of her| The defense closed dur . h session and the prosecution rebuttal testimo all of which was | tradictory to the defense theory plea of insan and finally swamped the seen by all of the hands.” The Oregon was out ninety days from Newcastle and brought 200 tons of coal for the local trade. sel. It was | A French ba s T ']l" passed in latitude 37.5% north, ln;k :'\:::'\e1 NEW CONDUCTOR OF CHAN. | |13 west. but her signals could not be de- | | ING BELLERY'S FAMoOus | | c'Phered | ITALIAN BAND. [ i | | SATLORS LaUGE ar s + IDEA OF PAJAMAS Naval officers and navy men in general are having a lot of fun over that ‘news” | | paragraph which was sent all over the New Conductor of Italian Band Is a Talented e { country "a short time ago to the effect | COBtrol - N Musician. | that the Navy Department has it in con- | the man on trial, testified as | templation to “substituts pajamas for | Sation he A‘iw'.vxh his 3““," BRI 1 | night shirts” for the use of the enlisted | 1atter told of a last appeal made to wife for her return to him. men in the' United States navy at The nub of their fun is the night shir | end of the story. Except for a joke, no enlisted man in the navy ever did, and it is virtually a 100 to 1 propos enlisted man in the navy ever will, wear such a highly domestic and home-like gar- ment as a night shirt. The bluejack ep in their underclothing. The flax: occasion unworthy t he would be HIAFFARELLL the new leader | of the famous Royal Itallan soon to be heard in this said to Be one of the dest of leaders. and his rent from that of a e famous conductors | e the public. report in proper r betc He has made a |in our navy who would break a aight | Station: good impress! in every city where the rt out of his dittybag or locker and | 1Then band has played and the public of this | Put it on before siiding into his hammock | highly b city will surely be charmed with his | Would become the laughing stock of his | of thirty p and down in the world whole ship’s company, and, in due covrse e the days of his ap! st of time. when word of the thing got | e wenditts lkiban Soas _ e e rre Attt e % - | around among the fleets, of the whole | ship, crawling out of his hamme father were both talented musicians and | Navy, from Tangiers to Tahiti nightshirt when poked awake composers and two of his brothers| 1ine night shirt, in the first place, fsn't e im to prepa are distinguished musicians. Another | a garment that is adapted to the pur- brot! Government official and | poses of men who have to hop Into and | a wonderful ling: to Uncle Sam's Chiaffarelli is liked by the members of the band because of his quiet. unassum- er. He is very much wrapped work and is & great student. | out of the swinging sleeping bags that | are called hammocks. It is no slouch of a job to grab a-hold of a pair of hammock | hooks and pull yourself about five feet He is also a composer of rare ability and | from the deck of 2 ship Into ome of these one of his compositions will be played by | swaying and closely hung hammocks, the band in this city. He is possessed | and many’s the lubber that has had to of great talent as a musician and can | stand for hard jolts and black and biue play nearly every musical instrume spots for weeks after the beginning of his | first cruise aboard a man-o'-war owing @ | (o the difficulties In the way of “turping n" neatly and cleverly for the noviev. turned of the swinging bags, 8! | And climbing into a ship's hammoek is | a stunt that would be enormously com- | | plicated, it not virtually impossible, even | when a man-o’-war's man gets piped « ! the old-time, deep-water, heavy- | | for of his hammock he hasn't got any t the time he got weather man, with the night shir: to|to slide out of a | hamper the free and unconfined move- | jamas, h E | ments of the legs. | dittybag or locker. By | "In the second place the bluejackets have | through with such an operatiom as that | got to be ready, when they turn into| he would unquestionably be yanked to | their hammocks, to stand for all sorts of | the mast by the master at arms I ship's calls and alarms during their | footed into the ship's brig or p | sleeping hours—fire quarters, all hands to | at any rate. with extra duty, for | quarters, all hands abandon ship, arm | pess. | and away, repel boarders, clear ship for| The jackies turn into their hamme { action and a score of other games that| their Government-straight navy slightest probability bluejackets of the United States | will ever wear pajamas Even if the pajamas are dished o the flatfeet by the paymaster's jack the-dust, that won't make the sai wear the things. The pajamas wi have to be doffed by all hands at a = call to quarters in the middle of night, or when the regular watches we 8 in Republican of Vessels Off Coast Nominee of Japa.u. | are being constantly sprung upon them, | derwear, and when they’re prodded | Gay and night. by exceedingly conscien-| of their hammocks, on sudden ship's cal | tious executive officers for drill purposes. | or on sudden calls to watch, all they've YOKOHAMA, Ogf. 29.—A coilision oc- [ And what an idiotically diverting spec- | got to do is to slip on their bell-bottoms | e curred in a fog to-day off Hakodate, | tacle a ship’'s company, say of 30 or|and their shoes—an operation requiring | Japan, between the n Yushen | more flatfeet, would make of it if, the|about forty seconds—and there the ' Kaisha Company’s Progress and the | call to fire quarters suddenly sounding | Nightshirts or pajamas for the slam-bang, salt water rangers of U Samuel’s fleet of frigates? Ask them!— ‘Washington Star. k. Of the 100 | in the middle of the night, they hopped | rd the Tokai- [ out of their hammocks and then had to ved. proceed to shed their night shirts before Tokai-Maru. The latter s passengers and crew on be Maru only fifty-six were s ADVERTISEMENTS. BAHRS For Public Administrator For Tax Collector SMITH (NCUMBENT.) Regular Republican Nomince " Far Assassor; WASHINGTON DODGE Demert; Nowiz For Sheriff Henry H. Lynch __Rebublican Nominee for a real good smoke 1is only If you’ll remember : to ask for a For Sheriff PeTErR J. CURTIS gk tbe Bawds S