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THE SAN FRANC SMALL COASTERS COLLIDE AND RETURN FOR REPAIRS Ocean Is Too Narrow for Two Schooners, Which Try in EVA AND BUENAVENTURA ARE DISMASTED c bined gross tonnage of the| rs S Buenaventura and Eva 1t to 300 tom and vet s on the night of March € sky and in fair nd the breadth of the| too narrow for them to| other They came halting | + vesterday, tattered, torn and the skipper of each blam- t of tne other for the both vessels. Buenaventura's bobstay. ngale and head gear were car- and will need extensive re- peairs before she is ready for sea again. Eva is worse plight, for she st ber mizzen-mast and with its fall the broken stick brought down all the rigging and gear depending upon it. e San Buenaventura left here Feb- ruary 23 for Tillamook and had only reached latitude 38.36, lohgitude 124.50, when the collision occurred which sent back for repairs. The Eva left eka for this port four days ago and hed on board 250,000 feet of lumber. Both capta gave ver- ons, each from his own side. The| time was 11 p. m. and the night \\s,s: cle Captain Ivengard of the San Buena- | said what he had to say in| o away in ay the starboard tack. The as running before the| into the San Buena- carried away the bob- and head gear.” oldier, the San Buena- s all her scars in front. rnstrom of the Eva goes detail. He says: { ere running with the wind points on the port quarter. ow asleep, when Clarence second mate, called me. tant I heard the crash of I rushed on deck and d run into us and quarter, head on. Our was gone two feet above the entjre mizzen rig- were hanging in the the mainmast-head.” as made fast to the wreck- d i daylight, when hoped to be able The wind fresh- v the boom and i the rest of the X to save the savs he port bow a steamer. Sud- the bright light n light took its helm was put hard | d the San Buena- d luffed. the in Bjornstrom's been avoided. He uld #ave been no Pacific would ugh the safe rs had the Eva saw_a He i lity off Meigxgs for the col e arrived Satur- to Ster- from Steamship Company’s liner | ein Lawlees, is due to-morrow | Grays Barbor . Mar. Humboldt [Mar. 3 P and & Way Ports. Mar. 1 Portland & Astoria Mar. ey & Pt OrfordMar. dro & Way Pts. Mar. & Astoria.. & Tacom and March 6. Coos Bay direct 13 Los Angeles Port 2| Grays Harbor pm Pler 10 | Los A |10 am!Pier 2| -.J1:30 plPier 9 | 11 am(Pier 9| pm‘ Pler 27 | | 2 10 & 1 San Pedro & March 8. Grays Harbo; Humboldt am/Pler { pm)Pier am/Pler am|Pler 1:30 p|Pler pm|Pier am!Pler 11 m Pler 20 | pm/Pler 23 Cr Willapa bor .. Hono. & Kahului.| Marchk 10. Humboldt .......... Seattle & Tacoma. March 11. = Sun oo whoe am‘Pler 20 pm Pier 20 | | Point Arena pm|(Pler pm!Pier am Pler und Ports.|11 am|Pier b, Y. via Ancon..l12 m/Pler Hamburg & Way../12 m /Pier Acapu Denderat. - Astoria & Portland|ll am|Pier Gravs Harbor 4 pm|Pier March 11 am Pier { 2 pm|Pier Puget Sound Ports. |11 am/Pler FROM SEATTLE. v Ports. Wy Ports 6! o1 .10 10 1 . 16 damage will be |3 Water Front Notes, |3 | day. except when there are but three tides, as | eign precedes the height, and then the number | Harfora Stmr Queen, Alexander, San Diego | ence. Btnr Maggle, Whitney. Halfmoon Bay. 3 Stmr Noyo_Johnson, Bureka. - e Br ship Chiltonford, Atkinson, Newcastle, BREMEN—Sailed Mar 5—Stmr Maine, for | Aus. ! New York. 1 | _Br ship Colonial Bmpire, Simpson, Mel- | ROTTERDAM—Sailed Mar 5—Stmr Noor- | bourne. | am, for New York. | | | Tillamook; returned on account of being in | collision with schr Eva. | bazy; wind NW;' velocity 4 miles per hour. | schr Mary E Foster, for Honolulu. | Manila. i Lorraine, OUIET SUNDAY FOR PRESIDENT He Remains at Home While| Thousands Gather About the White House Grounds 'RECEIVES HIS FRIENDS | +| Fairbanks Showered With | the Congratulations of His Admirers at His Church Vain to Pass. -~ Weather Report. ((120th Me: an— Pacific Time.) SAN FRANCISCO, March 5—5 p. m. | following are the seasonal rainfalls to as compared with those of same date last date season and rainfall in last twenty-four hours: Th Last WASHINGTON, March 5.—President Roosevelt passed the first Sunday after a3 Bluff amento ‘%% his inauguration quietly at the White | 1 2 House. Surrounded by the members of ;g2 his family and his house guests, he, 6. ¢0 spent the day in recuperation from the ' e 3 {3 fatigue incident to the heavy mental | R~ T and physical strain which he under-i — e 4 went during the inaugural ceremonies. | £ H ] Z 3 It was expected that the President ' S B 22 £ ' would attend religious services to-day, PRR A L El Z. E and in anticipation of his leaving the | = 1 El 3 £ White House thousands of people : g sathered in and about the White House | grounds as early as 9:30 o'clock. | Baker . No restrictions were placed on en- Em"r:i“ trance to the grounds, and throughout | iecing 5 the day thousands of people wandered | SE. Farallon. . about the historic executive manslon.;‘ 2335355232 TZ2T2| emmnduay, Flagstaff . They swarmed about the main en- K:fu:‘\d«q.‘; trance and peered through the closed g v g glass doors and windows. | Mt. Tamalpa The White House, of course, was . North Head closed to all visitors except the per- | l;l‘m;{:l‘xutl sonal friends and relatives of the! Portland ¥ Roosevelt family. During the day the ! Red Bluft .00 President and Mrs. Roosevelt received Roseburg 8 .00 informal calls from many friends and | éi o :)Yo at both luncheon and dinner large | = 2 ‘00 companies were entertained. | San L. Obispo.20.98 66 N .00 It became evident early in the day 68 b that If the President should leave the | 56 iy NW ¥ -00 White House to attend services at hlsi 15030 52 42 W Ciowdy v church he would be surrounded both at Walla..30.14 66 44 SW Clear .00 the church and in going to and coming : Winnemucca ..30.08 6§ 26 NE .00 from it by an almost uncontrollable | Yums ........20.86 78 B4 SW .Cldy .00 crowd. He was advised strongly not ! WEATHFR CONDITIONS AND GENERAL | 10 leave the White House under the | FORECAST. circumstances and finally yielded to | the admonitions of his friends. Vice "President and Mrs. Fairbanks ! attended service this morning at their usual place of worship, the Metropoli- tan Methodist Episcopal Church. At the conclusion of the service the pas- tor, the Rev. Dr. Frank M. Bristol, and a large part of the congregation gath- ered about the Vice President's pew and extended to him their congratula- tions on his induction into his high of- ! fice. ‘While thousands of visitors to the inaugural ceremonies left the city last Falr weather prevalls over the north- e&rn portion of the Pacific Slope and cloudy and eomewhat threatening weather over the southern. Showers and thunderstorms are rey Northern Arizona and Southern The pressure has risen over the plateau and Rocky Mountain regions and fallen slightly along the coast. The temperature remains from 5 to 20 de- grees above the normal and the changes have been slight, cast made at San Francisco for thirty ing midnight March 6: lifornia north of Tehachapl—Fair Monday; light northwest wind. a south of Tehachapi—Cloudy Mon- gay, hrobably shpwers in the mountaine; light | night and early to-day, other thou- Nevada | sands remained over Sunday. The day was fair, but the air was sharp with except foggy in the morning; frost. g'‘Seeing Washington” automo- Loe Angeles and vicinicy biles afid street cars were thronged to acramento and viclnity—Fair Monday, | their capacity and the principal thor- Fresno and vicinity—Fair Monday. | oughfares of the capital were congest- G. H. WILLSON, Local Forecaster. |ed with humanity throughout the day. BRI s p e T ke L ol 8 TS| naj ra- o Sun, Moon and Tide. tion period for thirty years when the nited States Coast and Geodetic Survey— | weather had been so uniformly pleas-“ ant for so many successive days and comments upon “Roosevelt's luck” and | “Roosevell's destiny” became trite in | repetition among the vast crowds which thronged the capital. —————— Time and Height of High and Low Waters | at Fort Bay Supe! NOTE- Point, entrance to San Francisco Published by official authority of the ntendent. The high and low waters occur at y front (Mission-street wharf) about 25 s later than at Fort Point; the height the same at both places ! LANDLORD OF TENEMENT PUTS TAX UPON BIRTHS | Also Grades Rents According to the | Number of Children in | | Each Family. L | NEW YORK, March B5.—Thirty e 0:17 5.0 2| S8, S o 2 femilies from the tenement at 8 Goe- §|3ed 49 o reck street will march to the Essex- | A e e 5 street court in a body to-morrow and | 1 [ 2:11 12‘ 43 demand relfef from the exactions from Landlord Elias Russ, who is de- | nounced by his tenants as the militant apostle of race suicide. Russ, it is alleged by his tenants, ! has graded his rents by the number | of children in each family. The main ! cause of complaint, however, is that he taxes each child born in the tenement at the rate of 50 cents a head. This| appalling taxation has driven the ten- | ants frantic and they will plead for | | redress. NO n the above exposition of the tides the early morning tides are given in the lert hand column and the successive tides of the | day in the order of occurrence as to time: the fourth time column gives the last tide sometimes occurs. The heights given are in addition to the soundings of the United States Coast Survey Charts, except when a minus (—) given is subtracted from the depth given by the charts. The plane of reference is the mean the lower low waters. e e SRR —_— SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. TO PROMOTE UNIVERSAL ARRIVED® | BUREAU OF AGRICULTURE | Sunday, March 5. Stmr Bruoswick, Bllefsen, 15 hours from Jtalian Government Places the Work | Fort Brags Stmr South Coast, Olsen, 13 hours from Under the Direction of Casper. { Stmr Arctic, Nelson, 24 hours from Eureka. Stmr Fulton, Panzer, 23 hours from Port Three Ministers, ROME, March 5.—Under the direc- tion of the Ministers of Foreign Af- falrs, Agriculture and the Treasury a supervisory office has been formed for | work connected with the foundation | of an international institute of agri- | culture. A general committee has been Stmr Aurelia, Erickson, 30 hours from San Pedro. Stmr M F Plant, Nelson, 40 hours from g Stmr_ Homer, Donaldson, Grays Harbor. Schr Eva, Bjornstrom, 3 days from Bureka. SAILED. Sunday. March 5. 71 hours from gramme for the international confer- | Bark Santiago, Larsen. Honolulu. Schr Jennie Griffin, Gibson, Bodega. Schr Alice Cooke Penhallow, Port Gamble. RETURNED, Bunday, March 5. Sohr San Buenaventura, hence Feb 23 for GLASGOW-—Arrived Mar 8—Stmr Korean, | from New York. MANCHESTER—Arrived Mar 3—Stmr 8i- berian, from Boston. LIVERPOOL—Arrived Mar 5—Stmr Cam- pania, from New York. Salled Mar 5—Stmr Bohemian, for Boston; stmr Umbria, for New York. GLASGOW—S8ailed Mar 3—Stmr Sarmatian, for B PTON—. TELEGRAPHIC. on POINT LOBOS. March 5 10 p m—Weather ' Cko{ TITAM: ved Mar 5—Stmr St | LONDON- led Mar tmr Cambr POINT REYES— Pacsed Mar 5, 9:30 a m— | for Boston: stmr Minnesota, for Philadelphia: Tug Dauntiess, with stmr Bee in tow, from . DOVER — Sailed Mar 5—Stmr Finland, Bureka for San Pedro. | from Antwerp for New York. TATOOSH—Passed in Mar 5—Br stmr Wel- | lington, hence Mar 2 for Ladysmith, | Passed out Mar 5—Stmr Tremont, for China; | DOMESTIC PORTS. Memoranda., Per schr San Buenaventura—On Mar 3, 11 p m._ wind was NW, I was on the starboard watch tack; the schr Bva was running before the wind and ran into San Buenaventura and | carried away the bobstay, martingale and head- | | gear and had to return’ to port for re Per schr Eva—Mar 3, 11 p m, long 12¢ 50 W, we were running with ti wind about two points on the port quarte | T was below in my berth asleep when I heard Salled Mar 5—Stmr Geo Loomis, for Sag | the second mate. Clarence Brown, come rush- | Francisco; Br stmr Elleric, for Portland, ing down the companion way, calling me and SEATTLE —Arrived Mar b—Stmr Jefferson, | In the very instant I felt and heard some ves- | from Skagway; stmr Lyra, from China, |zel crashing into us; I rushed on deck and ! Safled Mar 4—Stmr Tremont, for China. MONTEREY—Arrived Mar 5—Ship Marion Chilcott, from Honolulu. HARDY CREEK—Sailed Mar 5—Stmr Marghfield, for Sen Diego, FORT BRAGG—Safled Mar 5—Stmr James | § Higgine, for San Francisco, i FEUREKA—Arrived Mar 5—Stmrs laqua and Bureka, hence Mar 4 i Sailed Mar 4—Schr Vine, for San Franeisco. | SAN DIEGO—Sailed Mar 5—Schr Maweenia, for Everett. i ISLAND PORT. | HONOLULU—Sajled Mar 5—Bktn § G Wil- der, for San Francisco, i FOREIGN PORTS. ! ! Passed in Mar 5—U S stmr Heather, from & cruise. ASTORIA—Arrived Mar 5—Stmr Alllance, from Coos Bay; stmr oke, from Coos Bay; stmr Columbla, hence Mar 3. Salled Mar 5—Schr Virginia, for San Fran- cisco. PORT TOWNSEND—Arrived Mar B—BJ" stmr Blierie, from Mo i; echr Expansion, from head on our quarter. the mizzen mast gone two feet above the saddle and the entire @ mizzen rigging gone and mast hangin pring stay to the main masthead; after get- | ting the mast gear clear of the hull a line | was made fast to the mast and we hung on | untll daylight, when an attempt was made to save all the rigging and gear, but only suc- ceeded in saving the an wind and eea Increased. second mate and crew on his watch made the following state- ment to me after the collision: The man on the lookout reported to second mate a bright light on the weather ( bow about points and he thought at the beginnin, as light or a vessel I ADELAIDE—Arrived Mar 4—Ship J Currler, from Port Gamble. S5 OCEAN STEAMBRS, 2 NEW YORK—Arrived Mar 4—Stmr Minne— appea: in that instant the helm was put hard aport and apoils. from London: ronia, from Liv- the other vessel was so close 2 colllst could mot be avolded unleas the other: veesel Tpool Mar 5—Stinr St Paul, | had put her from Southampton and Cherbourg; stmr La Yl from Havre, Sailed Mar 5—Stmr Menomined, for London stmr Koenig Albert, for Naples and Genoa stmr Kroonland, for Antwerp; stmr Philadel phia, for Southampton: stmr Citta di Torinido, for Genoa, etc; stmr Btruria, Liverpool. ANTWERP—Arrived Mar 5—Stmr Kingsto- jan, from Philadelphia, ST MICHAEL—Arrived Mar 5 gt 2 public. from New York. for Genoa, ecer bearing more not ke ther | by the wind, and also claim that had she | been kept on the wind we would have gone clear of her. —is The Overdue List. | The vessels on the overdue list are quoted for reinswrance es follows: Jane Guilion, 15° CHERBOU Safled Mar 5—Stmr New | per cent: Freshfield, 65 per cent; Francois York,_for New York. et Rl Siidiet, GENOA—Arrived Mar 2—Stmr Sicilia, trom | 90 ver cinti CHL 10 ver cent: Caimera, 5 New York. per cent and Mars, 15 per cent. | prohibit the sale of poisons, | try to stop the sale of liquors. Why not re- | | class said, chosen for the arrangement of the pro- | i found a schooner had ' collided with us and was | | ISCO CALL. MONDAY, MARCH 6, 1905. DIVINE TALKS | TRAINS CRASH ON THE IDEALS| AT FULL SPEED —_—— Rev. George Stone Tells of | Two Persons Killed and Six Political Advancement| Injuredin Wreck on North- and Triumph of Freedom| ern Pacific in Montana REFERS TO ANARCHISM | ORDERS MISUNDERSTOOD Clergyman Would Bar Sale of Pocket Arms as Well as Poison and Intoxieants Rev. George W. Stone delivered an| MISSOULA, Mont, March 5.— interesting sermon at the First Unita- Two persons were killed and six in- rian Church yesterday morning on ! jured as the result of a collision of a “The Influence of the Ideals.” Dr. Stone noted the advance in political | progression and paid a glowing tribute to the victory of the RepuMlican party. He said in part: These thoughts have been suggested to my | mind by the resuits of the iast Presidential | election, and the events of the campaign | which preceded it. These are now remote | enough to be regarded without passion or | prejudice. In the course of events it has happened that politics bas, for once, passed | beyond Its accustomed limitations; has risen | above petty personalities; has emerged from | the smoke of industry and commerce; escaped the noisome vapors of the barroom and brew- erv. to stand under the open heavens, in the clear light of the twentieth century; to act upon the momentous question: Can the | President and rulers of this republic be | chosen by the believers in righteousness and | justice? Or to put It ancther way—is char- | acter indespensable in politica? If there are | such belngs as good angels, who watch over and report the grogress of humanity, how they must have shouted for joy when they saw the freemen of this nation roll up the great- | est majority for character, which was the real issue, as against all other requirements for leadership, in this the foremost nation of the earth. All partisan issues were over- | shadowed by the greater one whether char- acter, fairly earned, can be destroyed at the behest of a political party. There was no mistaking the answer to this question. Whatever prejudices may have existed here- tofore, against reference to politics in the puipit, may, temporarily at least, be dismissed for politics. of its own voli- | Engineer of a Freight Runs Beyond Stopping Point and Head-On Collision Results LS Cities express on the Northern Pacific at Bearmouth this afterncon. The express was thirty minutes ders to wait at Bearmouth siding. En« gineer Sheehan of the freight misun- derstood his orders and proceeded east. As his train rounded the curve east of Bearmouth it crashed head- on into the express. A high bank shut off the view of both engineers and no attempt had been made to slacken speed. Both trains were thrown from the track and the malil and express cars telescoped, but the passenger coaches came to a dead stop and remained on the track. The dead: W. F. WILCOX of ‘Helena, division chief clerk of the railway mail ser- vice, on tour of inspection, killed. J..L. BILLHAN of B{'lenn. fireman of the express, crushed and mangled; died when removed from the wreck. soula, fireman of freight, scalded and burned, injuries to chest; may die. Joseph L. James of Missoula, engineer, leg broken, left arm bruised, head cut; serious. Missoula, engineer of the freight, back injured; serious. Robert L. Stew- art of Helena, malil clerk, back and head injured. Mrs. T. H. Ferrier, El- lensburg, Wash., tourist passenger, neck twisted and body bruised. Ma- rie Taylor of the “Virginian” theat- tion, has placed itself under the protection of those spirftual batteries which alone can defend and preserve it from confusion and destruc- | tion, This progress of politics toward morals, ‘during the past two decades, has no | parallel in our history. It will be discerned | | rical company, nose broken. . when each national election is compered with The dead and injured were brought the one that preceded it. But the full effect | 4 Was not peryeptible until the last election, | 5O tl;l cm’b:l" S a0l trdin, The tl:e when 1t stood out strong and clear. Jured are being The adoption of the Australian ballot law, | County Hospital. as it Is known, by the State of Massachuset in 1868 seems to have been the beginning of this progressive period. Since then progres toward righteousness has been sure, but pain- | fully slow. No reasonable person will claim | that perfection has been attained, or even ap- | proximated, but every competent observer of political events will admit that ss has | been made steadily toward political virtue. | On the 6th day of September, 1001, for the | third time in the history of this nation, its chief magistrate was stricken down by the | hand of an assassin. This persistent attempt | to inaugurate government by revolver has at last tmpressed the nation with a_sense of its responsibility for the lives of those it calls | upon to serve {t. I have sometimes thought (by the way) that the time had arrived for a law prohibiting the manufacture and sale of revolvers, or any weapon that could be | in and through which we live and meve and concealed about the person. We attempt to | have our being, we may catch inspiring on the ground | giimpses of a new ideal for man. The old that their use is dangerous to life; we also | Bible, with its light shed from patriarch and prophet, has thus far served to show us the path of righteousness. Wisdom has beamed cared for in —_— e—— Royal Priest to Call on the Pope. ROME, March §5.—Prince Max, a priest and brother of the King of Sax- ony, has arrived here to present his hLomage to the Pope. The Prince de- nies that his presence in Rome is in any way connected with the troubles between his royal brother and the lat- ter's former wife, the Countess Mon- tignoso. SRR e R temple of religion, leads us forward to greater triumphs than any recorded in past history. With all this revelation of the divine power, volvers? TIs it not true that more lives are lost, destroyed, than are protected and saved | upon us from its sacred pages and religion by this murderous device? Think about it. | has nestled amid fits storles, les and proverbs. But on the threshold of this new LABOR AND CAPITAL FIGHT. These monstrous crimes of assassination awoke the nation from its delusive dream of satety, while ‘a demoralized party spirit was loose among the “masses. The greed for gold, the lust for power that weaith might be se- cured; the tyranny of party, of capital, of la- century the race looks out bible than the one our fathers knew. This greater bible is the universe of God. Upon its sacred pages we may read the record of his doings. The race has followed its ideals; it has been led from barbarism profound to a barbarism less profound. . Civilization has bor—these were seen in.their true light, and | dawned, and with the coming years will shine the people rallied to the support of the young | upon us with all its glories. ‘The product of and untried leader, who found himself, unex- | civilization will be shown®in the character pectedly, In the seat of authority. The moral | of the masses. Prophets the world has always fiber of this man soon revealed itself. -In every | had; seers. who occupled the heights and act, official and personal, the natfon soon dis- | answered the call, ‘‘Watchman, what of the covered that it had a chief governed by con- | night?” But the true measure of advance science. indifference to precedent at|is to be found in the character of the masses. first produced amazement, but chiefly among | It is the revelation afforded by the recent those who assumed a monopoly of wisdom in | election, to which reference has been made, the profession of politics. that gives us hope for the future. A new When this feeling of surprise had passed | and higher political Ideal was then recognized away the hypercritics became suspiclous and | by the masses. This means better fegisla- sald, “This man is catering to the so-called | tion, better government, & sterner justice, good people for support; he is fishing for 'pop- | more practical righteousness. The pulpit may ularity. Thus said these men who had spent | advocate it and Inspire men to study the their whole lives in this same fishing. Another | problem for themselves, but the work will be “He is visionary, therefore disap- | done only when the ideals of the masses are pointment awalts him; his {deals are high, but | lifted to a higher level than that indicated he can never realize them.” The timid sald, | by selfish consideratlons. == s Ho 15 inexpertenced and will soon be overcome | The vocabulary in which religion ls ex- by the leaders of his party, and made to do | pressed may change, but religion will still their bidding; he will soon’ see ‘that no one | manifest itself in character. Let us be patient man, no{ even a President, can stand against | With mankind = Character ls a growth, net a the machinations of those who have grown gray | creation; it must have thme o grew. frst in_political service." the blade, then the ear, then the full gorn in It was not long before soclety was thrown | the ear’n Let us SH7Ive foF 1R Iceal set into confusion by that me$onb|e battle royal, gvolor:_‘\,l: ':;k: be. "‘". s ot e e between Wall atreet and Wilkesbarre: between | We 2 o the hosts of labor and the so-called captains | Shall be perfect, your heavenly Father is* of industry. The suffering poor, also some | perfect. suffering innocents, who were nelther poor nor upon a greater freight train and the westbound Twin ! behind time and the freight had or-; instantly | The Injured: A. W. Smith of Mis- | Thomas L. Sheehan of | ———————————————————————————————————————————————————————————— I should ald in the punishment of crime | Mr. and Mr. Willle James to Be En- NO SIMILARITY IN SIGNATURED Andrew Carnegie Amused by Sight of His Name| on the Chadwick Notes| TEEL KING AS WITNESS | R el 'Will Appear in Court To-Day to Be Sworn to Testify AD Requires no honing nor stropping. Has 12 blades with Makes self a Price .. double edges. shaving one's real pleasure. $35.04 on Behalf of Government ! ———— CLEVELAND, O., March 5.—Nathan | Loeser, trustee of the Chadwick assets, | and County Prosecutor H. R. Keeler | called by appointment upon Andrew ' Carnegie at the home of Sylvester T. Everett in this city to-day and brought with them the famous $5,000,000 note and the equally famol trust agree- ment. The officials obtained specimens of Carnegie’s handwriting for the pur- pose of comparing them with the hand- writing on the paper which Mrs. Chad- | wick used as security for many of her transactions. Carnegie was amused | when he saw the documents bearing his name. The dissimilarity between the signature which Carnegile wrote for | Keeler and the signature which was reputed to be his on the bank paper | was marked. { Carnegie asked if he ¢ould be ex- cused from coming for the second trial which Mrs. Chadwick and her husband | will have to undergo upon State Indict- | ments. Carnegie said that he was will- ing to come to Cleveland in the inter- est of justice as often as necessary that he regarded it as his duty as a citizen to do so, and that every citizen | whenever found. .- : Carnegie sald he would be in court at 9:30 o'clock to-morrow morning to | be sworn as a witness in the Govern- ment case. i Professor Gould of Cleveland, a handwriting expert, was present dur- ing the conference between Carnegie | and the trustee and Prosecutor Keeler | Le: and made some Interesting commeant | upon the two styles of writing, as | shown by the alleged forgeries and the signature of Carnegle. Carnegie, in the course of his talk with Prosecutor Keeler and Trustee Loeser, repeated his former statements that he had never met Mrs. Chadwick —had never even heard of her until the | final crash in the woman's financial | affairs came. —— e FRIENDS OF KING EDWARD COMING TO PACIFIC COAST tertained by Whitelaw Reid. NEW YORK. March 5.—Mr. and Mrs. Willle James, perhaps the most favored by King Edward of any cou- ple in ,England, have left New York ! for California. Their reception in New York was of | the warmest, the fashionable hostesses of the city rivaling each other in the lavish entertainment offered the no- table visitors. The Jameses will be entertained by the Whitelaw Reids at Milbrae, the D. O. Mills place, while on the Pacific Coast. Mrs. James is the most intimate friend of the daughters of the British King, their assoclation dating back to early childhood. Upon her mar- Tiage she became the mistress of the splendid James country place, West Dean Park, near Goodwood, where the King and Queen and the Prince and Princess of Wales have frequently been their guests. —_————— Agree on Ocean Rates. LONDON, March 5.—The confer- ‘ence of the trans-Atlantic steamship companies has been concluded and the rates for all classes have been rear- ranged. The schedule will be pub- lished shortly. The increases in tariffs will be immaterial, but an agreement has been arrived at between the com- panies to prevent a repetition of last year's rate war. —_——— The Rev. Archibald Forder, the only Christian missionary in Arabia, is on a leave of absence in the United States. unwise, asked that this merciless war be stopped, to the end that they might be warmed. Justice cried aloud in the streets, and no man heard her. Then the President, although again suspected of self-Interest and hypocrisy, also ambition, used the mighty in- | fluence of his office to terminate the contro- | versy that was making such mischief among ! those who were innocent of any transgression. By slow degrees, and in many ways, this mas- terful leader established himself in the con- fidence of those who can always govern this nation when they choose to act together. I refer to that class which President Lincoln, of Dblessed memory, used to delight In calling ‘the “plain people. The day of judgment comes for all admin- Every administration has an abundance of friends when it is new. Happy the one that has that abundance when its rec- ord 1s made up. The McKinley administra- tion closed with honor, with troops of friends, and the man who finished it was awarded hi: just share of the praise. Mark what followed. With comparatively little excitement the con vention of the dcminant party met and ratified the unquestioned choice of lits voters. With less excitement, less demonstration than usual: | by & larger vote than ever the people, with small regard for party lines, gave a majority hitherto unparalleled, for this man who had been distrusted by party leaders, disilked by professional politicians, hated by all thieves, speculators and conspirators against the wel- fare of the mation. TRIBUTE TO ROOSEVELT. You may ask, what is the meaning of all this. and why do you find it necessary to refer to it in a sermon? I answer, because of its significance. It is a more perfect illustration | of ‘my subject—the influence of the - ideal— than can be fotnd in the Old Testament or | the mew. Here is a man, prominent enough to be known of all men. . He formed a high : ideal in his mind, long before he entered the : public gervice. In all the struggles and en- tanglenfents of his life, he has kept this Ideal | before him; kept it litfed high where he could ser i and strive for it. Manifestly he es- teeme this ideal of more importance than the plaudits of men. He trusts it implicitly, and it has already led him to the summit of earthly fame and honor. It was the influence of bés ideal, that lifted him above his fellows. And now let me suggest what I regard the highest scrvice Theodore Roosevelt has rendered the worid. It is this. He has in- fluenced the minds of the youth in this nation, A for great . He bhas demon- strated that it is better to love justice than to ove gold: that character is indespensable in those who seek the highest places in soclety; that moral courage is more worthy of ad- ! miration than bravery on the fleld of battle. | In the end, this ideal will replace that cloth=d in the giit and tinsel of the military and naval seryice, Some day It will bring about fhe transfer of the soldier to the Police De- partment, where, in the evolution of national 'ovammmth_‘h:“ belongs. lgnmanh. the u—{; of the brigl and best young men this nation will be influenced f the career of the President who was hiz highest ideal, who defled the and trusted t] I governed by law; to ject dent With it comes a_ devel individual but sweep lanet or tenderly provides for | the fall of a sparrow. May we not cail It ' God in history? Old phrases take on clearer meanings when illuminated by the light from new stars in the firmament of knowledge. ADVERTISEMENTS. A A A A A A A A A A e A e i, | Buy Tonopah Home stock and just see ~ _ifitdoes not bring'hapvpln.ess.»» STAR SAFETY RA- BOR !s an_excellent in- trument. Regular $2.00 value. 1 sell it for 3 GOoOD make, as low as. . Razors honed ai HonIng ......... 2 bars Williams' T oraitetrmnayat g Mai orders promptly filled. THAT MAN PITTS F. W. PITTS, The Stationer. 1008 MARKET ST.. Ovp. Fifth, SAN FRANCISCO. and ground. Shaving STATEMENT —OF THE— CONDITION AND AFFAIRS —OF THE— Northwestern Mutnal LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY F MILWAUKEE, IN THE STATE OP Wisconsin, on the Jist day of December, A. D. 1904, and for the year ending on that day, made to the Insurance Commissioner of the State of California, pursuant to the re- | quirements of Section 813 of the Political Code of sald State, ASSETS. Net value of Real Estate Owned by the COmpany ............. $3.374.607 58 Amount of Loans secured by Bond and Mortgage on Real Estate g 4 44 93,386,078 20 ans madq collateral ......... ceenooo.. 16,050,480 60 Premium notes and loans In any | form taken in payment of | premiums on polictes now in | foree SR A 313,740 48 l - i 71,843,349 98 271,458 78 3,316,581 OF 154,155 34 Interest accrued but not dus 2,729,589 90 Net amount of premiums in pro- v cess of collection and of de- ferred premiums 2,008,080 Rent due and accrued 26,357 1 Total Assets LIABILITIES. s and ma- due and endowments, Claims for death losses and ma- tured endowments in process of adjustment, not due . Claims for death losses, ported, no proofs received.. t present vaiue of all the ou anding policies, computed ac- cording to_the Combined Ex- perfence Tables of Mortality, with 4 per cent interest, and American Table, 3 per cent.. Amount of all unpald dividends to poliey holders ..... Tontine surplus payabie to policy 307,004 64 139,329 18 ra- . holders 3 All other labilities . Total Liabilities General Surplus .... INCOME. Cash received for premiums on new policies during the vear. Cash received for remewal of premiums during the year.... Ccnsideration for supplementary contracts not involving Life Contingencies Cash received for interest... Cash received for rents Total Income EXPENDITURES. Cash paid for losses and ma- tured $8,274.408 33 Cash paid to annuitants 50, Cash pald for surrendered poi- icles = 8,015,268 38 ners Traveling expenses of managers of agencies .. Medical examiners’ E) i | | Janasey 1, 1806—Insurance tn force. $6.506.000 January 1. 1897—Insurance in force. 6915000 January 1. 1808—Insurance in force. T. £ Jacuary 1, 1889—Insurance in force. 8,042 January 1. 1900—Insurance in force. 9,359,000 January 1, 1901 Insurance in force. 10,720,000 January 1. 1902—Insurance in force. 11.330,000 January 1. 1904—Insurance in force. 16,242, January 1, 19061 in foree. 18395000