Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
HEMORRHAGES CURED Mr. E. A. Karner’s Life Wasn’t Worth the Snuff of a Candle Until Cured of Consumption by Duffy’s Pure “The Effect Was Lik: Magic Citizen a pros npletely THROAT AND LU I Felt Better From Firs’ mere of catarrhal or and ambition 4 Malt Whiskey. of St. Louis, rifted - into cold Only avbd his life d rugged, The the , us He says: had an idea bronchitis. Med NG DISEASES Don<e.” consumption of trouble went deeper lungs, and by Feb- Continued From Page 31, Column 6. no signs of life on board. wreck. The Queen was drawing twen pilots considered safe. The Czar thing, but her master refused to re orders and would have to follow tha vessel. The Salvor and Czar then de parted for Bamfield. the City of Topeka arrived with Gen eral Patterson on board. return to Victoris, pick up my passen gers and resume Francisco. A little while after we lef eighteen the Queen.” Among the passengers who accom panied the Queen on her -ene of the wreck were a number o Island navy yard. were two chief boatswain's to the wrecked Valencia. OFFER IS REBFUSED. | “If you will risk | mates will risk our lives,” is what Jor: gensen says he said to Captain Cous | Queen couver coast. refused his offer. Sullivan and Jorgensen each tell dif. ferent stories and Captain Cousins de nies them both. 3 “Nobody volunteered,” Cousins yesterday, “and if they had would not have allowed them to go.” According to Jorgensen he and Sul 1 | | | | Barrett and Second Class Fireman | O’Brien all offered their services. . Hemorrhages fmpover- | yng time the Queen was relieved by the !t Whiskey. The effect was | CIty of Topeka no boat could have crept into my heart, re- | been launched or would have lived in so frequent. I could take |the high cross sea that was running. 4. thanks to your won- | The City of Topeka launched a boat to ce_more a Strong, | j D% the i h W & C€ InoTe 4 SUIONE. | help tow the raft on which were elgh teen survivors, but that was | had departed for Victoria. Capt Cousins speaks bitterly about the refusal of the tug Czar to make another attempt to reach the | wreck or even to stand by the Queen. [ The Queen went within three guarters out her master reported that the wreck was under water and that there were “I wanted the Czar to stay there and make A further attempt to reach the ty-two feet of water and was already 200 yards farther in than the Canadian was the only boat that could have done any- main, saying he was under the Salvor's ‘We stayed there until 11 a. m., when Agent Pharo and Dock Captain | ; I was ordered to my voyage to San the Topeka picked up the raft with people on board, which had |left the Valencia when they sighted t to the enlisted men of the United States navy en route from Bremerton to the Mare Among these men | | mates, | | Jorgensen and Sullivan, who say they | volunteered to take a boat from the a boat I and my ins while the Queen lay to off the Van- He says Captain Cousins said Captain | livan, Ordinary Seaman Brady, Seaman Captain Cousins declares that up to | some | hours later and long after the Queen STEAMBOAT CAPTAIN MUST 60 TO PRISON t | f I n of a mile of the wreck and was in k! helps nature rebuild the | muddy water when the Canadian pilota | %= ! — br harner tells the whole | insistod upon Captain Cousins’ “not FORMER STEAMBOAT MASTER - , with otographs and | going any closer to th WHO HAS BEEN SENTENCED . Tron it has cured of CORSUMD- | mare by msiod o h:a:’;“::'e g::::: 4 TO TEN YEARS' IMPRISONMENT. ; u colds, indigestion, .dyspep- : < s e e s Pure Malt iskey Alee: BLITARCE pw}; |and had she struck she would have € g « s the gr promoter of health and old | been In the same fix as the Valencia. y = Sy o8 A A e WHAT A WAITER SAYS, Former Master of the 4 as u can at «ll’gruxgg s L. Anderson, a waiter on the Queen ¥ 3 It Py 0. oche: 24 " is the only whiskey recognized by Government as a medicine. | visited the Call office yesterday and made | a statement to the effect that Jorgensen Slocum Given Ten- pure, contains no fusel ofl, and ix nold in bottles only: never in ~ y flask or bulk. You will know the zenuine by the “0ld Chemist” trade-mark on f{l':h. i‘;};‘;i’; ",,‘;‘ ;"t‘:mge" but made the lakhel. See that the strap over the cork is unbroken. Refuse substitutes and Ton O D Sibedian yilots Yeaf Tefm imitations sometimes offered by dishonest denlers. They are harmful and wili | 200 10t to Captain Cousins. The pilot 2 mot_cure you. Tefused the offer. - e . R IR IR, When we first got there,” sald An- : LIFE BOATS LEAKY. rock a oo » ter Survivor Willis Comdemns Officers of | oo 0 Valencia mnd Ship's Equipment. Do, 0 Jar Wil- \Al( of the U the is loi spiri of 2 in uipment of | there was but was drewn | agement and u rtow. 177" wooden a piece of | stroke off the 8. S. Grant ud in his praise of F. , Who kept the party of survivors and also of the rescue ts, no one who understood its man- an it was stgered by a fire oarlocks broke at the. fi oars. Recognizing | uperior officer he calmly saluted and ‘Lieutenant, I report sir. on the after end of the hurricane deck. with the Salvor steamed away. they got cold feet. F. t | Island,’ and Jim agreed with me. in Business in the One Spot WE TAKE STOCK NEXT And must close out these special price sale Shoes a prove to you this week that we are living wp to ow will sur be overcrowded, so come early Monday. 25th Year [p KATSGHlNSKI Philadelphia Shoe Company opportunity to secure a high-grade bargain for little money. moted for years as the great money-saving store of this ¢ 10 THIRD ST, Only a Few Steps From MARKET ST. THURSDAY Don’t miss this We have been y and we will r reputation. Our store t once. We do not guarantee to fill mail orders on specmlisals shoes. FINE SHOES SAGHIF!GED HIGH-GRADEs AT LESS THAN % PRICE 4 Bhoes. with Mid or| . Ledles’ finest makes of r S °='H it Lt e it - oes, = Kid Lace Shoes with kid or kes of short lines| cloth toos, latest coin toes, P ar this| €ither plain or with' tipe N hand-turned or__extension " to. B soles and L. XV French heels. All surplus and extra lines of $3.60 to §5.00 shoes sold at a xreat sac and s fice. ) 35 - B0€ | pEDUCED PRICE .. $1.85 spring becls, 4 b Band E NURSE'SRESULA-| ALASKA SE.L TION SHOES | WATERPROOF Viel X1 regula- with ful Men's_Alasks and Nova Scotia Seal Shoes, durable and waterproof; Ladies tion Nurse Shoe. sold in this cit Our price, soles, $4. i6 THIRD STREET SAN FRANCISCO 45¢ BARGAINS IN FELT 60008 Children's and Misses’ Red and Black Beaver Felt Jullets and Slippers. Five different ¥inds bunched to- wether and sold at less than factory cost. Child's sizes, § to 11..48e Misses’ sizes, 113 to 1%.50¢ §1.05 BOYS' STEEL SHOD SOLES Youths' and Boys' Veal Calf Lace Shoes, with ex- tenston soles and steel quilt- ed hottoms, guaranteed to give the best wear. Widths D to EE: sizes, § to 11, 1% to 2, $1.16; 2% to 5%, $1.35. OPPO:ITE THE XAMIN:R B'LY'6 and then | fire had been extinguished.” at that | occasion was offically by his employers and by writers. ‘wind. the cruised in the lee of the steamer unti f~the danger from fire had passed. ing the Valencia, which the Queen herself was rolling. experience, to the Valenéia it was because, judgment a boat's crew to certain death. Sty i ns PETERS’ BODY IB‘E"“"IEb. mains of Husband. VICTORIA, Jan Langley this morning received a tele- gram from Mrs. Peters, | the wreck as that of her husband, D. M. after the Jast raft had left the ship. all on board beneath. the surface. be seen on the Valencia’s mainmast and The €zar refused to go ih again and | I guess “The Queen went in a little closer, and weather than this, Jim when we saved the passerigers from the Corona on Lews “Hampshaw algo’ said that the sea was rougher at the time the Queen took fire the boats were launched and the passengers stayed in them until the Captain Cousins commanded the Queen time and his bravery on that recognized both under- The Queen took fire in a gale of usins put all the passengers, except such as could help his crew, into the boats and launched the boats, which But | this was out at sea and in very different | water from the angry breakers bombard- and on the edge of Captain Cousins’ reputation for personal bravery and the quality of his seaman- ship have both stood the test of perilous and it may be taken for granted that when he did not send a boat in his he would have been sending | Wite, of Valemela Vietim Clalms Re- 2.—Chiet of Police Los Angeles, | identifying ofie of the bodies secured from Peters. . She describes him as a man & feet 8 Inches in helght, complexion dark, wetght 200 pounds, age 40, with the fore- finger off the left hand. The descrjption exactly tallies with that of one of.the bodies picked up. Chief Langley has tele- graphed Mrs. Peters that he will notify her when the body is brought to Victoria. J. Segala, the heroic. fireman who es- | caped from the wreck, says that G, H. Jesse of Victoria was one of the passen- gers who remained aboard the Valencia He clajms to have a distinct recollection of the young man and believes that he was one of those swept to destruction by the huge wave which carried the wreck and Sl derson, “it would have been easy to| NEW YORK, Jan. 27.—Captain William xample of lscipline was | [Unch @ boat. Affer the Czar reported | H. Van Schalck was to-day found guilty | that there was nobody on board the | of -criminal negiigence in having failed -to than when Willis arrived at | wreck Captaln Cousins hafled the Czar | have fire drilly on the steamboat General i saw Lieutenant Col- | and told her captain that people could | Slocum, which *he commanded -in “June, | 1904, when the vessel was burned, with the loss of more.than 1000 Iiyes. He was immediately sentenced to ten years’ im- prisonment by Judge Thomas of the United States District Court. An appeal will be taken. \ disagreed as to two other »m the Salvor, to whom he’ gives | I thought “we were going to send in a| The jury saving his life. He is most | Small boat, but no move was made in |counts, in which he was charged with ondemning the o rs and | this direction. T remarked to Jim Hamp- | criminal negligence in the “tolerance of the lifeboats, In No. 2 boat | shaw, the chief steward, ‘it was rougher | life-preservers of a poor quality op the steamboat. The convictlon of Captain Van Schaick was. the first resulting from prosecutions of persons indicted on acount of the Slo- cum dfsaster. Late to-day United States Marshal Hen- kel tagk Captain Van Schaick te the Tombs, where he was locked up. The friends on whom the captain had depend- ed then gave bail, and he left the city temporarily. He expressed the helief that great hope lay in an appeal and that it would ultimately. result in an acquittal for him. Captain Van' Schaick had seen more than forty years' service in steamboat work on the Hudson and the waters about New York. —_— BUNKER SEES HIS WIFE AND LITTLE ONES GO TO OEATH Continued From Page 31, Column 3. 1 “Why were the life preservers made of reeds and not of eork?” Bunker opened several of these life preservers which floated on to. the rocks mear where he was and found them made of reeds. “Why did six members of the crew Iand near Cape Beale in -ome of the ship’s boats without passengers?” “Why did the Queen and two tug- boats which stood near the wreck om ‘Wednesday Jeave her to her fate?” One hour after they left the wreck, Bunker said, the wreck of the steam- | ship collapsed and more than fifty per- sons floated to sea with no one to pick them up. g ——————————— COLUMBUS, Ohlo, Jan. 27.—'"It fe not true that 1 have arranged for a formal conference with Aliorney General Hadley of Missour! for the purpose of using the evidence he has se- cured [n Cleveland in a sult to oust the Stand. ard Oil Company from Obfo.’ sald Attorney General FEllis to-day. 'ol’rl-l,byiu the system for valuable information pfihfl mmm%m& Is to love children, and no “home can be completely happy without them, yet the tmfaly through wlud'l the ex. mother maut usually is anger and fear that she looks forward to the critical hour with apprehension and dread, penetrating and soothi ellays nausea, netvomnsn, and all unpleasant gy THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JANUARY 28, 1906. 'CAPTAIN COUSINS OF QUEEN SAYS TUG CZAR COULD HAVE SAVED PEOPLE ON 'VALENCIA _ on s st VICTIMS ON i | |Revenue ~Cutter MEET WRECK THE TRAIL oA (x&ll.mt Rescuers Travel Fifteen Miles Over Almost Impassable Path to Bring Aid to Men From Bamfield SHOES OF THE DEAD WORN BY SURVIVOR: Grant on Way to Seattle With the Saved and Bodies of Those ‘Who Were Claimed by Sea st g Ttk VICTORIA, B. C., Jan. 21.—All the sur- vivors who reached shore near the scene of the wreck of the Valencla have now been cared for, the nine who had been | stalled at’the Darling Rivep on account of the flooded waters reaching the steam- ship Balvor at Bamfield Creek last night. They were in a bad condition. Great credit is due to the party from the Salvor, headed by Captain Ferris which left early Wednesday and traveled an almost impassable trail for fifteen miles to meet the survivors. After a night spent on the trail they started fou home with the survivors. Before return- ing Captain Ferris visited the wreck. He reports the beach literally covered with | wreckage and at that time five bodles were on ‘shore, being identified. A second party left the Salvor yes- terday morping. They went as far as Pachena, carrying packs of provisions and extra clothing. At 3 o'clock they were joined by a landing party sent from | the United States revenue cutter Grant. | At Pachena provision was made to guc- | cor the survivors. i The party was sighted at 3:10 p. m. on | a point-of rock, having taken to the beacr as the trail was too hard for the men to | navigate in their famished condition. "the | Associated Press correspondent was the | first to reach them. He found F. F. Bunker, assistant superintendent of | schools of Seattle, and F. Marshall on | the beach in a bad condition, the latter | having walked the whole way suffering®| from a sprained ankle and experiencing severe pain. The remainder of the party | had taken to the trail. Bunker bad lost | his coat and shirt and was wearing a | blanket with arm holes cut in it. Mar- shall's ankle was in bad condition. two men were taken to a telegraph hut at Pachena-and given food. Soon after- ward, while these two were being cared for, the rescue party arrived with the other survivars. All were completely fa- tigued. The entire party was equipped with shoes, those who had been without having been supplied with shoes taken | from the corpses washed ashore. The sur- vivors are loud in their praises of the | rescue party ftom the Salvor. The traii | is_in a frightful condition. Richmond, Mousley and McWha, operators, were the first to reach the s vivors. The telegraph men were com- pletely worn out, having swum severai streams, but it would have been impossi- ble for them to bring in the survivors without assistance from the Salvor's party. The survivors who were picked | up by the Salvor yesterday at Toquart, | the men found on Turtle Island and those | brought in by the rescue party, have | been placed on board the United States | revenue cutter, with the exception of two who are too {]l to be transferred. The bodies secured by the Salvor have also been removed to the revenue cutter. The Grant will leave Bamfield at day- light to-day for Seattle. ‘Arrangements | have been made to have the Grant take | charge of the bodies at the wreck. There | are eleven bodies reported washed ashore. | One has been- identified through papers found as that of Mr.. Doherty of New York. The name of W. Doherty appears in the crew list as a fireman. Another has been {dentified as that of A. F. Grif- enstan of San Jose, Cal PRAISE FOR BUNKER. F. F. Bunker and the other survivors who made their way over the trail suf- fered many handships before they were transferred to the T'nited States steam- ship Grant, after being succored by the | Salvor's crew. Hunker Was loudly praised by his fellows, he being a man of | great vigor and bravery. When he reached Pachena he was clad only in his trousers and had his boots tied with 'a piece of string to hold them together. His shoulders were covered by a blanket, he having given his shirt to a fellow suf- ferer. From this party the Associated Press correspondent, who returned by the Salvor, learned: that the signals seen on the shore by the tug Lorne, as a resuit of which the Egeria's bluejackets were sent to endeavor 'to make a landing on Thursday, were not those of further sur- vivors, having been.made by one of the party of niné journeying from Darling Creek. This disposes of the belief that others escaped, 4nd the total number of survivors is shown to have been but thirty-seven out of a total on board the steamer of 154 The survivors ‘who dflfled into Barkiey Sound on a raft speak highly of the pravery of both the steward and the stewardess and their deportment. They say they left the ship when the steward and stewardess were engaged constantly in passing food to all, and long after the crew: took to the rigging the steward and many of his waiters passed up meat and sandwicl to those lashed ln the yard- age of the wreck. £ . GALE ON ’I‘m’DAY. The night of Thursday, when the ship- wrecked poeple were in the rigging, was a terrible one, as a high wind, which was almost responsible ‘for the loss of ‘the sealing schooner Casco, which had saled from Victoria on Sunday last, was blow- roe reported night the sea] ’u within a few yards of wrecked off Cape Beale, and if she not cleared the point her com- pany of ‘twenty-four would doubtless have been all lost. ‘When the sealers told of the storm, pklc! Captain Munro sald was one of the worst he had ever experienced; those at Bamfield thought that none of the peo- ‘in the rigging of the Valencia would ve survived that night. That same day @ telephone message was recewved from Lineman Logan and the land party which went by the land trails to the wreck from Clo-Oose, and the lineman told a traglc the wreck break up at noon wr;luxm -nvno} Agonizing Eczema Body Covered From Head to 5 Months in Bed—Burning, ltching —Blind at Times. Another Creat Cure by Hood’s Sarsaparilla A medicine that will cure the worst cases of scrofula, eczema, psoriasis and other blood diseases is sure to be Sue- cessful with all similar troubles. Mrs” Wynne's wonderful cure should convince you that Hood's Sarasaparilla is the medicine for you to ‘take. “I had a very bad attack of eczema, that terrible skin disease. No one can imagine the agony I endured. “For five long months I lay in bed, tossing this way and that for bodily comfort. “l had two doetors and was on a bread and milk diet for more than five months. No meat. potatoes, cereal or fish. I was white as a ghost from bread and milk, “T did not have the eczema in one place only, but from the top of my head to the soles of my feet. My hair all fell out and I was blind at times. “I had boils and 4 carbuncles at one time, was a mass of scabs and pus. \ Oh. the Burning and Itehing and the treatment with all. kinds of salves and oils! I did not have water on my face or any part of me for over five months, Instead, I was washed from head to foot in sweet oil, with a little My carbolic acid. drug store. house was llke a who said that in all his experieace he Never Saw Such a Sight as I was. e wanted to take me to a clinio m New York, but I said no. “About that time a friend sugses' -that I try Hood's Sursapariila. My hus band got me a bottle, and from the first I began to improve, but it took a num- her of bottlcs to relieve me of that ter- rible affliction. “Now I am quite well, and feel § Owe My Life to Hood's Sarsaparilla. h\l» tes- ¥ verified thi So. timony ean be fully leading = doctors of FRED WYNNE, 8§17 field, N. J. SPECIAL—To meet the prefer medicine in tablet putting up Hood's Sarsapar tablets as well as in the usual liquid "vr!:‘l reducing Hood's Sarsapariila tract we have retained in tb tive properties of every me except the alcohol. Sold by ¢ by matl 'r your drug does. C. had survived the terrors of the previcus night. The three shots heard by those on the steamer Queen as she stood by the wreck on Wednesday were the sounds of at- tempts made to throw lines ashore. Line- man Logan telephoned the ' Assoclated Press correspondent at “Pachena that three lines had been sent shoreward. The first _fell short, the ond reached shore and was caught by Logan, who was mak- ing it fast to a piece of rock when it broke. The third fell short, striking the face of the rock. FAIL TO LAND LINES. Those on the rock saw the failure of the attempt, and when signals® were made the shouts could not be heard above the roar of the breakers, though the wregk was only fifteen yards away. The men on the wreck waved their arms, indicat- ing that there were no more lines. The last hope had gone, and scon arfterward, when the steamship Queen had just left the scene, the men on land saw the end. Before long the wrecksge began to wash on the rocks, an ‘l there the first five bodies were fou all man- ner of freight was then washed ashore, | and the Nitinat Indians and those of Cloo-Oose and Pachena have since been busy gathering what they can. The Nitinat Indians purpese to hold a | potlateh in a few days with the goods they have secured. The parties at the scene are preventing any looting, how- ever. The government agents are organ- izing" posses of (Bwliang’ o sedreh for bodies, ‘especialiy= i the Barkley Sound direction- and. near Ucjuelet, where it is expected the majority-of the bodies wiil be recovered, as, the tide sets in‘‘hat di- rection. This afternoon a-dispatch from the Associated Press correspondent at Dr. Lyon’s PIRFEOT Tooth Powder Cleanses and beautifies the teeth and purifies the breath. Used by people of refinement for over a quarter of a century- Convenient for tourists, PREPARED BY P54 %eg;»a.z.zu Ucluelet reported the finding of a body on Erickett Island, west of Turret Island. in the Broken group, and later the co respondent at Cape Beale told of anothe body, that of Fred Erickson of low baving been located near Cape Beale The Dominion Government has decid to hold an investigation into the wr of the Valencia, and as a sult of this it is considered that the que on of bet- ter protection for shipping on the west coast of Vancouver Island will be gone into fully and steps taken to secure the necessary arrangements. Captajn Gaudin the local agent of marine, h; not yet Deen | advised of arrangements for the inquir 11t is doubtful if a Coraner’s in be held here, now that the be ered are befng semt to Seattle. ernment inquiry will answer pose. 1 he Gg this” pur- Each instrument is sti You have long want Here is a chance to get very easy terms. Kohler & Chase, oak..... Hunter, mahogany . ..... Guild, ebony ........... Schmitz, ebony .......... Erard, walnut Soufleto, ebony .. Frances Clough (English Fischer, ‘1905 design. ... Fischer, 1905 design..... Fischer, 1905 design.... A Good Piano For $6 Down and $6 Monthly.... Read This Bargain List. All these pianos have been used, but will be sold under the Kohler & Chase guarantee, which means your absolute protection. Many of them were exchanged for Pianola pianos (pianos with a piano player inside the case) Kohler & Chase, mahogany .....$425.00. Winthrop, walnut ........ ... .$350.03. Hobart H. Cable, oak ....... .$450.00. New England, ebony... ........$35000.. Iverson & Sons, mahogany ....$300.00....8157.00 Haines Bros.,, rosewood .......$450.00... $289.00 Kohler & Chase - Largest Piano House on the Coast. Established 1850 CORNER POST AND KEARNY H good for years of service. ed a piano in your home. one at a small price and on Reg Price Sale Pric «er-.-$375.00. .. $266.00 -$291.00 - $227.00 - $329.00 veee.-.$40000. .. $248.00 -$150.00 veee..$300.00....8188.00 -$250.00. ...$100.00 .$350.00.....888.00 .$400.00. ...$109.00 piano) $300.00. ....$40.00 .$425.00. .. $880.00 --$450.00. .. $390.00