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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY JANUARY 6, 1904. VINTH CAVALRY WILL MANEUVER to Be Reviewed b_\'i Major John Bigelow Jr., the‘ [roops New Commander of Squadron | %~ NO CLEW TO SLASHER| SRR As | [dentity of Soldier That Made Assault on Mrs. J. M. Car- ney Still Remains a Mystery Charles John T. Captain John B >op @1, Captain Les- will begin at 8:30 B concluded at 10:30, ighth Infantry, which heridan bound for vesterday mnrn1'|2 There the regiment wi y to go on shore and r a few days. The scheduled to arrive here 14th inst., when the regi- go into the cantonment re- ccupied by the popular Seventh azor wieider that attacked Mrs. y last Sunday night and right cheek has not bee X Christian most to loc who i deed missing t remains d th: but e assaila ——— TORPFDO-BOAT DESTROY ARE NOT UP TO STANDARD cent Tests of the Decatur, Chaun- ainbridge and Dale Prove Unsatisfactory. J 5. Advices cles here indic f torpedo-boat destr tly tested cey in er on a run from Norfolk roved unsatisfa were the D sridge and D: Lieutenant Lloyd H. voyed by the cruiser re Board of Inspection and which Captain C. J. Train nt, accompanied the flotilla. behaved very badly and d in the heavy seas. ated that i that the boilers foamed kir ‘; steam. In order to s part of the crews t on rnard of the Buffale. —_——— Stanford Student to Be a “Middie.” Were ser TANFORD UNIVERSITY, Jan. 5. G. W 07, of Guthrie, O. T., j »d the appointment to the Ann lis \rx\’. Academy from Okls hc The appointme: by the Territorial Congre ve from Oklahom. Kneisley going East will do special work the niversity of California in n for tne entrance examin- Annapolis. While at Stan- during the r he was a specidl stude POSTUI CEBEAL KENOWS NOW. Doctor Was Fooled by His Own Case for a Time. It's easy to understand how ordi- ry peopie get fooled by coffee, when doctors themselves sometimes forget the facts. A rience: I had used sician speaKs of his own ex- coffee did not exactly ring me, although I had palpita- of the heart every day. Finally one day a severe and nl- tal attack of heart trouble d me and I gave up both tea using Postwm instead, and for years and ¥ believe it was rt palpitation except on one or casions when I tried a small ty rritation and proved to me I t it alone. n we began using Postum it weak—that was because we not make it according to direc- but now we pyt a little bit of in the pot when boiling and al- Postum to boil full fifteen which gives it the proper I have advised a great many of my ends and patients to leave off coffee | ind drink Ponlum in fact I daily give | advice.” Battle Creek, Mich. any thousands of physicians use | '*wvum in place of tea and coffee in their own homes and prescribe it to patients. “There’s a reason.” A remarkable little book, “The Road to Wellville,” can be found in »ach package they took the+ t in civil engineering. t time I have had absolutely | of coffee, which caused se-| vor and the deep brown color. | i Name given by Postum | DEATH REVEALS FORTITUDE OF WAR-BLIGHTED COUPLE Passing of Professor and Madame ,Paget Brings to Light Romantic Tale of Heroic Self-Denial That Debts That Fell With Blast of Franco-Prussian War Might Be Paid GIRL CAPTURES A MILLIONAIRE Hotel Llerk in Walla Walla Will Beeome Wife of a 5. — Madame died to-day at t way, just thir- th of her hus- icien Vietor BERKELEY, 1 M anu. rward there 1 that story of two lives | voted almost a ted to the payment | at even thirty re- | | to i e Weaithy Philadelphia Man e COURTSHIP " BY LETTERS e e Meeting Five Years Ago in Portiand the Beginning of a Very Pretty Love Affair = Special Dispatch to The Cail. | WALLA WALLA, Wash, Dec. 5.— From hotel clerk to a millionaire’s wife | may seem a long jump, but the leap is | | about to be taken by Miss Wanda ! | Bracht of Walla Walla. For the past | few months Miss Bracht has been em- | ployed as clerk in the Louvre Hotel. She left last night for Philadelphia, where she is to meet Dr. C. T. Knowl- | | ton, her future husband. | Miss Bracht first met Dr. Knowlton | in Portland about five\ years ago and | he has bgen .corresponding with her ever since. Miss Bracht is an expert photographer and . was employed in | | some of the Portland galleries while in | | that city. She was also an embloye of | | the Vancouver (Wash.) Indepecndent. | | Dr. Knowlton is a physician in Phxl-: adelphia. Their wedding tour will take | them to San Francisco, after which | they will return to Philadelphia to live. —_——— | POMA INDIAN TRIBE { TO LEAVE FOSTER RANCH | California Northwestern President | | Will Oust Redskins Near 1 Hopland. HOPLAND, Jan.. ®\—The Poma | | Indians, who occupy a rancheria here | on land owned by President Foster of the California and Northwestern Railway, must seek a new home. For | many vears the Indians have lived here and worked on the Foster and neighboring ranches. They have been the recipients of many favors at the hands of Mr.- Foster, but their stock has been allowed to overrun his | ranges and break down his fences. Yesterday he visited Chief Tack and gave him notice that the tribe must | vacate by spring. —————— Falls Sixty Feet to His Death. | ot eragbll- ALwas & 1 DES MOINES, Iowa, Jan. 5.—C. L. Pz indertook to | | Linley, supervising architect, fell six-! in the liquidation of | ty feet to his death to-day at the State ted wite aloo pasticl- 1o . Capitol. While Linley was making an strength of will and for- | | ; | inspection of the locality where i her character. | I MADAME E. M. PAGET WHO | terday’s fire originated the floor gave | and seif-denial | | PASSED AWAY IN BERKE- i precipitating him to the floor| a century did not biot| | LEY ON MONDAY. | of the chamber of Representatives. | t the on, and with a heroism | | | His skull was crushed. most divine Madame Paget sat up in | F—— Ss — |, i g ey GO LR T hbed and signed the paper that | ot geserving students in the French| v e obligatory the dispensation . depart < | members of the University of Califor- tion of her ¢ for the satis- | . oseph Worcester of San |Dia and people of the town, ail of whom of her husband’s debtors’ o is given an oil painting of | had a share in her friendship. With o | r Paget, $500 in cash and her | her husband she had been for years ac- nainder of my estate I wish| giaond ring; to Lucille Ware Leets, | tive in Town and Gown Club affairs. lied to the payment of (hf'f $300 in cash, and to Rev. Mr. Wercester | She was first in almost everything that y in France, due.to for distribution among | made for material progress within and 3 an war, which Pro-| of the estate is| Without thé intellectual center of the sor Paget voluntarily - ". Bartlett in trust, | State; she had a keen mind, originality | the simple language of It th directions to pay the income tq|and withal a generous spirit that en- | tells whole story of and ters of Professor | deared her to hundreds, : ! self-forgetfulness and r hment | prance hird of the principal is| Yhen she came to Berkeley with her | of all worldly affairs witl to be applied to the scholar | husband Mme. Paget at once became tate after years of work. It and the remainder to the pa | identified with the social life of the story w Felicien Pagot, coming | the aebt of the family in France. | town, being the leader in many func- -l or after the war only to| — 5 it tions. | find the ruins. French and | m-‘;\ru. IS PEACEFUL. FOUNDED A CLUB. | Prussian armies had tramped over the| Mme. Paget's dea ¢ 3 2 Sand that brief | swer to the oft-e» it was Mme. Paget that first suggest- stru 1 ruined it almost|might not long survive her husband.|ed the Town and Gown Club, that in- e ki She passed away late at night in the | stitution that now, after eight years, | It needed money then to restore the |rose-covered cottage had known so | exerts such an influence in the civie estate and this yvoung Paget was re-|long on Dwight way. Hers was a|affairs of Berkeley. She was the first quired to »w. He had three sisters | peaceful death, befitting the life of | president of the club and at her death to support i they have lived all these | 80ood doing and philanthropy that she | was its treasurer. She was assisted in | vears on the estate while he struggled 'h«ul led. She had not been permitted | this undertaking by such women as | to pay off the debts of war. [to attend the funeral of the beloved |Mrs. A. J. Ralston, Mrs. Warren Wil- The s ied Mlle. \anuel | husband after his death two weeks ago, | kinson, Mrs. Frank Wilson Mrs. | Marie J Pa fter the great | being herself too ill and wearied from | George W. Haight, Mrs. Freeman, Mrs. struggle was over. She was the daugh- ‘, the long period of pursing that she had | P. R. Boone and others, : I ter of an old Norman family of an- |DPassed through for his sake. She kept| Mme. Paget was very much interest- | cient ancestry and reared in luxury, | her bed and saw her life’s partner |ed in the students of the university and but she gladly took up’the burdens of |borne away to everlasting rest and |assisted many of them over the rough >d carry them un- h her husband and hel | til the very last rmnurnod him. Then she prayed that too. she path to graduation and success. She might die, was instrumental in getting for them The bereavement The Pagets came to America four |28gravated the malady that had come | assistance to go abroad and for other years after their marriage, which took | Upon h"f and eve day saw the light | things. A few years ago she nuefnpted ;flm,, in 1871, « d by the hopes of of her life growing a little dimmer. |to secure a fund for a students’ hos- | fortune in the new land. They settled | She retained the vigor of her mind to | pital and collected some $1800, but the | in San Francisco after an interval of however, and passed away in | project did mot carry. travel and began teaching French and | the presence of friends, to whom she | She was a native of Paris, 69 years | Spanish languages. Mme. Paget was | conflded that she was going to rejoin old. She was educated at the Saust | an accomplished musician and in the | her husband. Circe, the famous girls' school of Paris, endeavor of her husband to pay off the debt hovering over him taughi music also. They were successful from the first and taught Californians in those early days who have since become fa- | mous. i Professor Paget was called to the | chair of Romanic languages at the Uni- | | versity of California in 1887 and the | | 1ittie family of two came to Perkeley, | | which has since been their home. He | taught for sixteen years and only re- | tired a year ago when his health failed | him. When Professor Paget died two weeks \ ago his will was filed, but according to its terms but a modest sum was left | to distribute. People said that he had | given his estate to his wife before his death, as it was not probable he had | left so little. He had earned for a| long time at the university a salary of | $3000 a year and must have saved something. EXPLANATION IN WILL. But the explanation for this meager estate comes now in the last writing of Mme. Paget. All these years of struggle ghey said nothing of thelr work to their friends and only through death is the secret of their lives re- vealed. Mme. Paget had a large sympathy | for the university and even on her | deathbed, as revealed by the will, her thoughts were for it and the students. (It was dictated and signed by her on | December ¥, four days after her hus- band’s death, when she knew that she | had not long to live. In the final sen- tence of the document she gives an in- dication of her strength of character and at the same time a weakness—a fear that she might have been con- | sidered mentally weak by requesting | Dr. George H. Reinhardt to testify that she was competent at the time she 1 signed it. Under the terms of the will she be- queaths to the university her husband’s library and one-third of her estate, which, excluding their late hcme, is probably worth $12,000, for the found- ing of what will be known as the F. V. Paget scholarship fund for the benefit Thr news of Mme. Paget's death was eceived with profound regret by many and was graduated from it shortly be- fore she became of age. ADVERTISEMENTS. STOP THE PAIN WITH AN This painful trouble can be relieved and cured by using an Allcock’s Porous Plaster. Warm the plaster before apply- POROUS PLASTER ing —if not relieved by bedtime, place a hot water bag against the plaster on the shoulder. ' REMEMBER—These plasters pains and aches. have been in use 55 years, h-v- haen mihted mon tlwn any article ever sold, and have made more cures than any otber external remedy. Guaran- teed not to contain belladonna, opium or any poison whatever. et the best—Allcock’s—The Plaster tha. Cures. | of Solon the | be avoided. | resulting therefrom have made their | sential {and they !and Nature does her own | cents a box. SHERIFF SATS [T WAS MlRDER Two ‘Zeudn City Residents Charged With Responsiblutyr for a Young Girl’'s Death i ety OFFICIAL FINDS EVIDENCE + Accused Man and Woman | Fail to Seeure Bonds and Remain in County Jail i Special Dispatch to The Call. i NEVADA CITY, Jan. 5.—William Deadman and Miss Juanita Menares, who were held responsible by a Coro- ner's jury for the death of 14-year-old Virginia Anderson yesterday, were charged with murder this afternoon by Sheriff Walker. Both were brought into Justice Coughlan's court and ar- raigned. The bond of Deadman. was fixed at $5000 and that of Miss Menares at $3000. They failed to secure the sums and both are in the County Jail. The preliminary examination was set for Thursday morning. , | District Attorney Jones states that a vigorous prosecution will follow. It is alleged that they gave the girl volatile oil. Sheriff Walker and his deputies to- day made another investigation of the Menares premises, where the young girl died. They found a cup and spoon, which had evidently been used in pre- paring a deadly mixture. These arti- cles, together with several pieces of glass, which were put together, making a bottle, were found near a creek. Miss Anderson was the daughter of a highly respected woman and the community is much excited over lheJ affair. i —_———— An act of heroism is but temporary, | COLUMBI while an act of charity is everlasting ADVERTISEMENTS. H RICH MEN ARE OT ALL HAPPY | Croesus, King of Lydia, Had Troublcsf of His Own, and There Are Others. Croesus, the John D. Rockefeller of the kingdom of Lydia, was very well-| *‘As rich as Croesus” is a saying about | 2500 years old. He had his troubles, | | however, and some of them were full | grown. He was taken captive once by | Cyrus and only saved himself from be- | ing burned alive by quoiing a saying | Sage. He finally had to | flee his kingdom for pdl"(‘i unknown. Many of the rich man's troubles to- day come from high living and could | They are brought on by | eating all kinds of rich, heavy foods at | irregular times, lack of proper exer- cise, undue mental strain, unnatural | stimulants, etc., and are comrnonly known as indigestion, dyspepsia nnd‘ weak stomach. They are serious troubles all right, but not only can | they be avoided but can also be cured. and that without loss of time or proper food and nourishment. Stuart's Dyspepsin Tablets are the certain relief of dyspeptics, rich and poor alike. There is no such thing as stopping their onward progress now. A great nation has placed its stamp | |vf approval upoen their noble work. | | The thousands and thousands of cures they have effected and the happiness name a household word throughout | the land. i The story of Stuart's Dyspepsia | Tablets can be told in a word. They actually do the work that the weak and wasted stomach is unable to do and allow it to recuperat®and regain its strength. They contain all the es- properties that the gastric juice and other digestive fluids do, digest the food just as a sound and well stomach would. They relieve the stomach just as one rested jand refreshed workman relieves the one on duty that is tired and worn, work of restoration. It is a simple, natural process that a child can understand. You can eat all you want without fear | of results. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets are for sale by all druggists at 50 Druggists all know bet- ter than to try to get along without them, as the demand for them is great and universal. ‘T FAIL T0 COUR’!‘ Lown?xg room. the EMPIR PARLOR, the FOR BARBERS, BA- k.n. bootblacks, bath- houses, billiard tables, BRUSHES £ Bt Syers, fiour milia, S foundries. Ieanaries. paper- | hangers, printers, vainters, shoe factories, stablemen, tlr-rnohn. tanners. tallors ete. AN BROS. mmmm\ou‘ W. T. HESS. Notary Public and Attorney-at-Law. Tenth Floor. Room 1034, Claas Suechsld bidg. o .:l.“l Aittor beloty Powell. Resi mm wl James 1501, DIRE CTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. Cal and Price Lists Mallel mon Applieation. JAS. BOYES & C0. “&iIP " Siierastt | Supportea by JUST THINK OF IT! A Record of Uninterrupted Prosperity for 123 Years Held by WALTER BAKER & CO.,Ltd. The Oldest and Largest Manufacturers of Cocoa and Chocolats in the Worid. 41 HIGNEST AWARDS IN EUROPE AND AMERICA. What is the secret of their great success? Itis a very confidence of the ing body of consumers by taining the tmple one. They have won and held the great and constantly increas- always main- highest standard in the quality of their cocoa and chocolate preparations, and selling them at the ldwest price for which unadulterated articles of good qual- ity can be put upon the market. They receive numérous housekeepers who have used letters from their cocoa and chocolate for many years, stating that lately, when ordering the goods of greatly have been sent other Baker goods, inferior quality to them. They find it necessary, therefore, for the protection of Leok for this trade-mar on every prekags. to those who want their cocoa and chocolate, issue an these fraudulent practices _emphatic warning and against to ask buyers to examine every package they receive and see that it bears,the well-known trade-mark of “La Belle Chocola- tiere,” and the correct name of Walter Baker & Co., Under the decisions of the United States courts, Ltd. no other cocoa: or chocolate is entitled to be labeled or sold as “Baker’s Cocoa” or “Baker’s Chocolate.” WALTER BAKER & CO., Ltd. ESTABLISHED I?.O. AMUSEMENTS. SAR FRANEISCO'Y LEADING THEATEE Last 4 Nights—Matinee Saturday. CHARLES FROHMAN presents Ciyde Fitch's Comedy of Wit and Sentiment, ‘The Girl With ‘The Green Eyes 1 to-do in worldly goods and chattels. | NEXT SUNDAY NIGHT—One Time Only ALBERTA GALLATIN in IBSEN'S “GHOSTS.” ll"!'l mr. |sEATS mEADY MRS, LANGTRY ' the TImperial Tondon, in |MRS. DEERING’S DIVORCE. Theater Co. of BURTON HOLMNMES MAGHFIGENTLY ILLUSTRATED LEGTURES. oova. ITE «...Tues., Jan. 12 1 LOWSTONE Thurs., Jan, 14 ND CANY Sat., Jan. 18 AL Th Tues., Jam. 18 ALASKA 11, Thurs., Jan. 21 ST. PETERSBURG MOSCOW. ... SIBERIA K SEOUL, Capitai of Korea. Sale of Course Tickets, $4. 3 ana sa. NOW oW AT SEERMAN, CLAY & CO.’S. Single Seat ins TO-MORROW MORNING—$1 Qodosusn MATINEE TO-DAY, WEDNESDAY. Jan. 6 Farquet, any seat, 25c; Balcony, 10c; Chil- ! aren, uny ‘part except reserved, 10c A BiG, NEW SHOW, Hallen and Fuller; Dumitrescu, Van Auken and Vannerson; The Sa- Vans; Charlotte Guyer George: Deav Merry Manikins; Joan H den’s Cycle of Love; The Tobins: Ernest Hogan and Mattie Wilkes and Orpheum Motion Pictures. % A ONLY e eance HOOLIGAN Next Sundfly—MllIer & Saylor's company of comedians, headed by the favorite, JACK CAMPBELL, in Hoyt's famous Frisco satire, A TRIP TO CHINATOWN. TIVOLIseE “om! Sl CAREFUL!" For this is the LAST WEEK of the Holiday Spectacle, IXION Or “TEE WHEELMAN,” A Mythological Musical Extravazadza in Three Acts. MATINEE SATURDAY. BEGINNING MONDAY, JAN. 11 | When Johnny €omes Marching Home | USUAL POPULAR PBlcEs—mc 50c lnd .Bc Proseenfum and Mezzanine Box Seats. sl ARE § AWARE YOu THAT Next Monday night the first performance of “THE BEAUTY SHOP” Will be given, eading lady; JOHN PEACHY, new leading man, and everything in a regal manner, An origmnal, local, musical comedy. Amm it will_include our “All Star” cast— Kolb & Dill, Ben T. Dillon and Alien Cartle, Georgia O'Ramey and Althea Twins. A beau- tiful chorus of thirty. Matirees Saturday and Sund; iar prices Seats now on sal head. 1 o OAKLAND RACE TRACK NEW CALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUB. Commencing January 4. Racing Each Week Day, Rain or Shine. Six or More Races Daily. Races commence at 2:13 p. m. sharp. traing stopping at the track tabe 00, n lwo cars, which are reserved for ludies ir_escorts. Retorn rning trains leave track at 4:15 and 448 dng immediatyly ufter (he lnat vace. THOMAS President. PERCY W. TREAT, Secretary. 8, 133 last and i OPERA G RAN HOUSF MATINEE SATURDAY. ALL THIS W EXCEPT TO-MORROW NIGHT. The Great Laughing Hit, JOE KELLY THE PIPE DREAMER In the Big Musical Cut-up, The Head Wallers NEXT SUNDAY MXTINEE. IN CONVICT STRIPES. A Thrilling Story of Life in South Carolina. USUAL POPULAR PRICES, GRAND OPERA- HOUSE--SPEEML THURSDAY EVE! . January 7. 1904, at §:15, and MONDAY AFTERNOON, January 11, at 2:15. Positively Farewell Tour. MME. ADELINA P—A—TTI (THE BARONESS CEDERSTROM.) Direction ROBERT GR. Incorporated. Management MARCUS R. MAYER. NOR ROMUALDO SAPIO, Conductor. Prices. «-92, $2 50, $3, $4. $5 and $8 Seats Now On Sale at the Box Office. OUT OF TOWN MAIL ORDERS, accom- panied by money order and addressed to H. H. CAMPBELL, Treasurer Grand Opera-house, | will be filed in the order of their receipt and seats lumm: 23 near the desired location as possible. STEINWAY PIANO USED. LC Z Belasco & Mayer, A A A Proprietors. E. D. Price, General Manager. 10~.]G“—Tm WEEK ONLY. MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY The Picturesque eru nh Play of a Century A LADY “Does ample eredit to the actors and the stage management. Call. QUALlTY e, glent pro- Evgs., 28¢ to 75¢; Mat. Sat. &$un., 13¢ to Joe. NEXT MON.—Clyde Fitch's Strongest Play, THE MOTE First AND l“ Aleazar THE FLAME. uction. CENTRAL*E: Market Street, Near Eighth...Phone Soum 533 TO-NIGHT—ALL THIS WEEK. MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. Magnificent Revival of the King of Sensational Dramas, 'MONTE CRISTO with HELEN RUSSELL, new | The Unrivaled Masterpiece of Alexander Dumas World Famous Play Staged on Stupendous Scale, with Splendid Scenery and Brilliant Cast. HERSCHEL MAYALL AS EDMOND DANTES EUGENIA THAIS LAWTON AS MERCEDES .10c to 30e 10e, o13c, 25c THE BRITTONS And & Great Show Every Afternocn and Evening in the Heated Theater. TERESTING BABIES IN THE INFANT a8 INCUBATORS. Se¢ Anita and Her Baby Monkey. Visit the Mystic Mirror Maze. Txlul’r.lvnmfl-s. Admission, 10c; Children, Je. E WEEKLY CALL $1 per Year.