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$« THE SAN_, FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1904. LADY CURON \AY RECOVER| Invalid Undergoes Secondj Operation and Surgeons | Ocntimued From Pago 33, Golamn 5. Announce There Is Hope | thrown. General Fomin is in the hos- pital at Harbin. CONDITION YET GRAVE i “_The rumor that General Stakelberg as included in the disgrace of Major- | General Orloff is not il true. - General | Kuropatkin amended his original re- . o s dia Of- | port, in which he had criticized Genér- Mohammedans of India | al Stakelberg, and now exonerates the fer Prayers . for Her; latter from all blame for the Russian 34 1tl | reverse at Yentai,~adding that General Yestoration to Health Stakelberg displayed the greatest g . | bravery. It is rumored that General Grippen- —_— — A successful | LONDON, Sept. 2 ___ | berg, commanding the troops at Vilna, operation was performed ypon Lady|yag'haen selected to command the Sec- Curzon this afternoon. It is announced | ong Manchurian Army, in place of that her ladyship’s condition is grave,| Lieutemant General Linevitch. B RS outlook is more hopeful. NO EXCUSE FOR SEIZURE. The natives of | the deepest concern over wife of Steamship Crusader’s Cargo Was Con- signed to Japanese Ports. ’ tion of Lad urzon, The Mohammedans here the Viceray. The Mo e edey. | PORTLAND, Sept 3L—/Ths Britiah p':;;. ‘Y’c ;’:{. s : ‘;‘“M'r; L 1z |Steamship Crusader, reported captured NEW YORK, Sept. 24.—Mrs. L. Z | by the Japanese and taken to Hako- date, cleared from this port oh August 31 with 2,880,654 feet of lumber and 3900 bundles of lath. Her cargo was valued at $26,650. The vessel was un- Ger charter to the Pacific Export Lum- ber Company and the cargo was con- | migned to merchafits in Shanghai and Taku. At the office of the Pacific Export Lumber Company no reason for the re- ported seizure could be asgigned. The vessel was loaded with a neutral ca go, consigned to neutral .ports, and sailed under a neutral flag. A‘large portion of her cargo wag consigned to the Paul Brunet Company of Shanghat i her daughter Nannie, who ss the continent on the way to the bedside of Lady Cur- critically at Walmer .cesded in catching the Red ¢ steamship Vaderland just as ) OFFICERS DEEP DISGRACE NOBLES 4 FEEL Captain Baron Vom Horn Puts Hu- miliation Tpon Those Whose Peer He Was. . Bavaria, Sept. 24.—The £ MU :a‘ - - i bere | 4nd the balance was consighe® to the b e » DUmMDbETS | (yregon Lumber Company at Tientsin, s f the oldest families in Europe, the port of receipt -being Taku. The officers vessel's route would take her very of the Bavarian army, ' ere as seif-restrained | j,ge to Hakodate dnd it is surmised - as any in the empire, pore that the vessel was merely t emselves as disgraced by | ciopped from the ordinary course by Ce Maximilian von Horn, the Japanese fleet engaged in examin- ing the papers and cargo of neutral vesscls in Far Eastern waters. n of a proud and honor- Captain von Horn, an officer in a| ]t was stated at the office of the Pa- crack alry regiment, only thirty | cific Export Lumber Compafy that years oJd, married and with three chil- | §52 000 war risk could be placed on the wh & favorite at court, has rt martial to six ten years' 1 Crusader and that no better broot of bee her meutrality rieed be had than the 'KUROPATKIN -PUNISHES ORLOFF, WHO CAUSED LIAOYANG DEFEAT, ] ‘ *# AND EXONERATES STAKELBERG | from Teingtau that cholera has brokef i\\'utd began Russian- officers told for- ADVEBTISEMENTS. | fact that she was instructed to stop at Moji for coal. It is belleved that her commander obeyed the order to take on coal supplies at Mojl. The Crusader is owned by the Esk- side Steam Shipping Company, Ltd., of Whidby, Englan e FEAR CHOLERA'S HORRORS. Tsingtau Dispatch Causeg, Deep Con- cern in Russian Circles. ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 24.—Al- though 'no confirmation has been re- ceived at this hour at’ either the War Office or the Admiralty of the répert out at Port Arthur, it is admitted thi possibly it is tryue, owing to the ter- ribly unsanitary conditions around th fortress arising from the number of decaying corpses there. The announcement none the less has caused the deepest eoncern in naval and miitary circles. It is hoped, however, that even if the repert is true the outbreak will turn out to. be a mild one and that it will be quickly checlted By rigid discipline and' the Jisclation of suspicious cases. It is pointed out thdt if the epl- demic, despite all precautions, obtains a foothald, it is likely to affect the Japanesg as well as the Russians. A st Kuropatkin's Army Not Large. GENERAL OKU'® HBEADQUAR- TERE IN THE FIELD, -via Fukan, | Sept. 24.—Before thi reétreat north- | eigners that - the relhforcements braught into Manchuria #ince June! last were only enbugh to counterbal- ance the casuaities up to that date. It this! is true the Russian forees now in Manchuria are no larger-than whken the battle of Telissu (Vafahgow) was fought on June 15. etk ) Story of General Attack Denied. ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 24,—There is no truth in the story published by the Matin of Paris this morning to {z~ | effect that telegrams reach€d the Lm peror at 4 o'clock this merning an- | nouncing that the Japanese were en- gaged in u general assault on Port Arthur. ble and expulsion RANCHER DIES W cards, horses drove Vor ud, forg and deser- ton from and for the first e b 1 n so d upon T al 4 e For & few years Von Horn appeared and a soldier, yet . Mned o, Yssioa- Last Summons Comes to| . o tribute Von Horn Aged Man as He Kneels pa f added to his ~ . . financial difficulties. Burdened by aebt,. Al Reads From His Bible | : by vampires, the Baron forged H.‘v t ,,; " 7 000 e Special Diepatch to The Call { On the eve of discovery he fled to| SAN BERNARDINO, = Sept: 2445 | here he vainly sought to en- John Cowan, a well-known rancher.i ish army. He wandered | was found dead In his shack, about a | ish capital until he met ‘;ije and a half south of Colton to . d, w h_ ;.‘fl his passage ,.4nt He was in a kneeling posture | ° G ’ vest A:rd’fil He tried | o 5 ovidently dled while saving his o o GENe ASAINSt [ rayers. He was an aged resident of | \ o L e section and was well known in wpt seemed to feel .4 ahout Colton, his ranch belng one s he was compelled ;¢ tno most neatly kept in this vicin- o A s ¥ ity. o | ¢ i € he had courted pur- The Coroner viewed th@ body at a ¢d Von Horn and he returned 10 140 pour and held an inquest, the | had expended his last vorgict being death from - natural prennig he went to his 0ld cOlo- | wgyses. »N: ., This stern soldier re- An oren bible was found on the bufte con ating and in- ypeq in front of the corpse, forme police of his presence A T R He was arrested and his court mar- NOTED SCIENTIST DEAD. | tial £ Bavarian nobles and ! et Baron’s crushing professor Niel Finsen Passes Away at | senter cradicate the blot he Ondionbiin | s DaL wpon (NI wopmietion Ad . . LN PRMITAGNY S 3).0 Tichink: sor Niel Finsen, discoverer of the so- | called Finsen rays of light for the Postmasters A pstmasters Appointed. Nure of lupus and head of the Finsen | WASHINGTON 24.—Mable P. e appointed post. 12 Institute here, is dead. .1 Fort Y1 i R e Professor Finsen in December, 1895. | tifield, removed. Julta A, | NAS @warded the Nobel medical priz: | Dolnted pastmaster at Bir. by the Norwegian Parliament. | 1 at Pa ekt B ‘ 3 TR T 5 M Well Known Iron Merchant Dead. | A Gigantic Globe. NEW YORK, Sept. 24.——Archer | A great globe ormamented with the Brown, the weil known iron mer-| fusp of th has been carved in | ¢hant, whose firm has branches in stone « e the estate of an ec- | N3 Western cities, Is dead at his centr nan at Swanage. It! Pome in East Orange, N. J. from | s@nds overluoking the sea und is vis. | Deart disease. He bégan his career as ibi te o distance. One may | @ DEWSpaper reporter in Cincfnnati | and study it in detajl, | @04 Wwa# an author of comnsiderable t note, especially on trade subjects. i it Sankey's Granddaughter Dead. | NEW YQRK, Sept. 24.—Frances Hope Sankéy, favorite granddaugh- | ! ter of Ira D. Sankey, the well known evangelist who not long ago became blind, is dead at her home in Brook- 1 from diabetes. The child, who | was only four vears eld, had been an most copstant companion of the angelist gince he lost his sight. et . Pioncer Woman Dies. Mrs. Sarah Lane, mother of W. E. | Lane, a well-known business man of | this city, passed away at her residence | on Kearny street last Thursday. Mrs. Lane was a native of England and | came here in the early days. Her hus- | band, Edmund Lane, was drowned in Lake Merced several years ago. ———— 2 faces, such as the oceans, decorated with ch are supposed he locality they PATRONS AND SHIPPERS OF THE WESTERN FISH Co, Please be advised that we have dispensed with services of Mr, Ingugiia, who for the past has acted in the ca- of manager of our business ot now interested with us way, and that our interests uture be looked after by Mr. A. Trapani, who for = num- ber 0‘1' years has been and still is general manager of the San Fran- cisco - Fish Smoking‘ and Curing Company, of which we are the principals. Any arrangements or agrée-{/| ments made by or entered into by || him for us will be sufficient guar- anty that the same will be sanc- tioned by our company. WESTERN FISH COMPANY. Former Mayor of New York Dead. NEWs YORK,; Sept. 24.—Former Mayor Franklin Edson of this city died to-day, aged 72 years. ' —_—————— Californians in New York. 2 NEW YORK, Sept. 24.—The follow- ing Californians are in New York. San Francisco—A. E. Barley, Mrs. J. D. Barley, Marie Antoinette; F. S. | Holke and wife, Park Avenue; J. M. | Kaufman, Wellington; R. Schmidt, R. | Van Dyke, Hotel Seville; G. W.! Brake, Herald Square; A. J. Frey, Hotel Navarre; C. F. Mullins, Hotel Astor; Miss K. O. Dea, Herald Square; ¥. Bennett, Cosmopolitan; H. F. Eck- hardt, A. E. Goddard, Astor House. San Jose—N. Clemence, St. Dénis; | L. R. Hicks, Navarre. Santa Ana—O. L. Halsejl, Avenue. Los Angeles—Mrs. Frame, Kensing- :ton; J. P. Hirschler, Broi.dyny Cen- tral; C. G. Lynch and wife, Kensing- {ton; T. A. Simpson and wife, Avenue; T. J. Stephens and wife, St. ?enll; P. R. Strong and wife, Kensing- on. Park | ter miles of the right of way. The cons | orders of the War Department Colonel e | pieture of health, and the health hub- con®amption, dred % a | cure. 18 g | s0_that the body ed bat Park | CELILO CANAL NOW ASSURED State Portage Board of Ore-! gon Secures Valuable (‘on-1 cession From Land Owners | ——— Dinner Go Special Dispatch to The Cail, PORTLAND, - Sept. 26—A. méeting | Exquisite Paris Models in Reception and The Readl... ... T ailor Maid TAILOR-MADE means with us what the word implies—strictly MAN TAILORED— not in effect alone, but in the lines, in the curves, in the finish, HAND TAILORED. All these niceties known to the man-tailored gar- - ments find their way into the make-up of our garments for LADIES and MISSES. The fabrics are mannish, the style of the garments is womanly, girlish, yet mannish in finish, Qur department is one of the largest in the West devoted to Ladies” and Misses’ gar- ments. Itis not a mere experiment,but under competent management, under competent guidance, under the most tasty people, we be- lieve, that exist in the busineSs to-day. They are at your service, and once a customer al- ways a customer. The appointments of our Fashion Salon make it a pleasure to tradein; it’s bright, light and airy, where everything can be seen, wheére everything can be pur- chased in eaSe, leisure and luxuriance. The models jn our Street Gowns and Walking Suits for Fall and Winter are after the celebrated mode's of Paquin, Drecoll, Madame Sarah and Raudnitz. Their chic, their dash, their deftness in color treatment, their- wonderful color. blending, are followed out faithfully in these garments— ~ ..Ready for You Monday.. Priced so as to Get. Your Bysiness .RAIN COATS.. The Dover Model Which is one of the latest French models of a Rain Coat. Wearable on a rainy day or at any time. ..Ready for You Monday.. ...Some... Dainty Ideas in Evening Coats and Wraps held at the office of Governor Cham-! < berlain in Portland to-day clostd the huspital contracts that complete & right of way Igland, | . i\ Private Frank Russell, who deserted | for the Celilo canal for the entire eight 3attery.. il- | miles from -Celilo to Big . Eddy. The Ir0m the Eighth Battery, Field Artil- | P v 8 g ded | final transaction was between the State lery, and who has been apprehended vhile: serving . undér the name of: Portage Board and thé Seuffert Broth- d % ers. The latter have agreed to transfer Frank C. Russell in the Fifteen Cav S » L alry, will by the commander of the to the State about five and three-quar- piop n Battery, Vancouver Barracks, be dischdrged without honor from the Presidio, goes to_.(iovernors ' N. Y. sideration is not named. Those present army. . at the meeting were Governor Cham-| o ! Quartermaster Sergéant Tobe C.! E : berlain, Secretary of State Dunbar, Ma. Cépe,. .Company. - A, Third Infantry jor Langfitt and Captaip Freles of the Upited States engineering department. Vancouver Barracks, Wash., will be . Mt gent to the army general hospital; Rre- A separate right of way has been given .50 san Prancisco, for treatment. | free by both Seuffert Bros and I H. i Taffe for the portage road, the land to x | revert to the former owners whenever FOLICE RAID A - HAREM the canal is completed and the road | SAV abandoned. | ———— Funston Leaves Portland. PORTLAND, Or., Sept., 24.—BHriga- | dier Geperal Frederick D. Funston, | VIENNA, Sept. 24.—The Cairo corre- sons, 1eft Bortiand for Chioago (4-quy | S0 ont of the Neue Frele Prosse siver i e 3Y lan account of the sensational abduc- in the private car of General Manager yjon of the beautiful young caughter of E. E. Calvin of the Harrlnisn system | gnetyn EI. Saddat by the Shetkh Al | @ take charge of the Department of | yyqgef, who is the proprietor and-ed- the Lakes. ! itor of the principal native joyrnal, El £ ’ | Moyed. ARMY ORDERS. | Alf Joussef, it appears, who was deep- WASHINGTON, Sept. 24. — Under |y in Jove with the girl, had taken that extreme measure because the girl's father, who is the sole living descand- ! ant “of the prophet Mahomet, had re- fusged his consent to his daughter’s mar- ‘riage 'with Ali Joussef on the ground that he was not a fit person to be the husband of a girl of such a noble line- age. » ‘All Joussef haying abducted the girl | and placed her in his harem, her father appealed to the Egyptian Government, | with the result that a detachment of armed police was dispatched to Ali Joussef's harem to demand.the restitu- tlon of the girl. $ This request being pefused, the police made a Yorcible entry to the premises, and, in order to be sure that they had taken possession of the persan wanted, they ordered all the falr denizens of the harem, together with théir attendants and servafits, to follow them in a veiled | procession to th= house of Sheikh EI Saddat, where his daughter was finally selected from the rest of the women and detained, Alf Joussef has now“commenced pro- ceedings before the British authorities, and has obtained the services of an English lawyer. TO TOLEN GIRL | 11&2,\'mlnn Editor Makes Away With | Beautiful Maiden, but Cannot Keep Her With Him. Jehn B. Kerr, general staff, upon be- ing discharged from /the army general . PIERCE'S R! Joily Jack Tar. “Jolly” is the word generally asso- siated with the joek “{e Ifi’is th bies over in mirth sud merriment. When @ s People are sick, % especially when ] sickuess attacks the .« 8 lunga the doctor often adyises a eea voyage. - But in the large majority of cages the sca voyage is impossible, it 1s to the men and women of the day world to whom * or change of clmate are impossible, that Dr. Pierce'’s. len Medical Discovery comes as the - est earthly 13, The. effect ‘of this medicine upon those whose lungs are “weak” is re- markable, ADVERTISEMENTS. BAD BLOOD 1 had trouble with my howals whilc o my ' oy SR R T 8 :B.::f H:Eu'flv'fi?# e Tork City, N. neh's & Best for checked or uh.‘lkillfu,llyx ” in i fig out of a h cry” in ninety. e?t.:ud‘: erely fi m’j b that A o Wi B | ees | were | frightful. | et FIFTY-FGUR KILLED [N COLLISION Contimued Erom Page 25, Column 1. their regular meeting point. This ac- tion on the part of the engineer of tha westbound train is made meore inex- plicable because of the fact that the accident occurred in broad daylight { and, according to the best information obtainable, he had the order in a lit- tle frame in front'of him as his en- gine rushed by the. station and a mile |uud a half further on came full upon an eastbound passenger train. The | possibility is that the ill-fated engin- may have been asleep. The trains on time and not making more than thirty-five miles an hour, yet the impact as they rounded a curve and came suddenly upon each other was Both engines and the ma- jority of ‘the cars were demol- ished and why the orders were disre- garded or misinterpreted will prob- ably never be known, as the engineers of the two traing were crushed, their bodies remaining for hours under the wreckage of their locomotives. The collision was between bound passenger NNc. 12 and west- bhound passenger No. 15, from Bris- tol.” No. 12 was a heavy train, car- rying three Pullmans, two day coaches and mail gnd baggage cars. No, 15 was a light local train. The greatest loss of life eccurred on the eastbound train, while. in the westbound train only the engine crew were killed. Re- trains were dispatched from Knoxville ‘within an hour and all the physiclans in the vicinity of the wreck were doing all they could when the local corps arrived. The first train arrived here from the scene of the wreck at 4:20 o'clock,. bringing about seventy of the injured. SIX DIE ON RELIEF TRAIN. Six of the injured had died while en route to the city and after their bodies were taken off the train pro- ceeded to a point near the General Hospital, where vehicles were In wait- ing and a large force of physicians were ready to receive the wounded. the next train from the wreck arrived shortly after 8 o'clock. It brought the bodies of forty-three dead. The six others who died en route brings the list up to forty-nine and there are at least six more at the scene of the wreck, none of the bodies of the frainmen having yet been recovered. John W. Brown of Rogersviffe, Tenn., a newspaper editor, was in the rear coach of the westbound train, When the fearful jolt came, he said, all the seats in the car were torn loose and peonle and seats were hurled to the front end of the car. When He re- covered from the shock he heard the screams gnd groans of the injured and dyving in every direction. PASSENGER'S . STATEMENT. “I left the car,” sald Brown, “as soon as I could and walked to the main part of the wreck. It was the most horrible sight I ever witnessed. I saw a woman pinioned by a piece of split timber, which had gone com- pletely through her body. A little child, quivering in death’s agony, lay beneath the woman. ‘I sat the child die, and within a few feet of her lay a woman'’s head, the decapitated body being several fect away. Another lit- tle girl, whose body was fearfully east- | Congressman Gibson Was en route to | Russeliville, Tenn.. to deliver a po- litical address. — Il b i o, her mother. I have since learned that y8he was Lucille Connor of Knoxville innd that both .of her narents wers | Imanzlfd. was .piteously calling for | killed. " I heard one woman, terribly Locate Asbestos Mine. i mangled, praying earnestly to be| SAN BERNARDINO, Sept. 24.—A | spared for her children, but death en- | ;oo R e ek, with a nu |sued in a few minutdp.. Both engines | and all of the coaches of No. 15 were - most of a discovery of a depesit of Id""’"“'““"“' the smoker and baggage | 1S 00 T T oty fork of Lyttle The sleepers remained | {car included. 2 - | din o B T _| Creek. This is the second discovery jon the track”undamaged. Both en-| .s ashestos in this country within a L s togethar | into one mase of| month, the first being at the base of | ruins, The carg which were demolished | Mount Baldy. were piled on the wrecked engines.” | Congressman Henry R. Gibson from T SERESE: 55 N i ‘ongressm; v R. S | . " . [the Second Congressional District of | _WASHINGTON, Sept. 24.—Captain | Tennessee, was a passenger In®a day | W- H. Linn has been detached from ! coach on the eastbound train. He and | duty at the navy yard at Portsmouth, | another man. whose name is not|N. H., and ordered to Honolulu to as- { known, were the only persons to es-| sume .the duties of commandant of | cape alive from the demolighed car. ! that station. ber of companions, is making the ADVERTISEMENTS. | | { | | \ i | | - ' { | i i Ornamental ad useful table, $5.90 Qak, golden fipish, with quarter-sawed veneer top. Has good-sized undershelf and gracefully shaped legs. Measures 24 inches square and 30 inches high. An all around handy table, and not expensive. Carefully packed and shipped to any point within 50 miles, freight charges prepaid. 2 y (Fon'nerly the Cglifornia Furniture Co.) 261 to 281 Geary St., at Union Square I