The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 4, 1895, Page 2

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2 _— THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, AUGUST 4, 1895. DALY THE DYNAMITER Parliament Will Cause a New Election in Limerick. CONVICT NOT QUALIFIED. One Bill Relating to Rents in Ireland to Be Passed Be- fore Adjournment. THE FUSION OF TWO SECTIONS. Conservatives and Liberal-Union- ists Soon to Join Issues Under One Banner. [Special Cable to The United Press.] LONDON, Exc., Aug. 3.—Among the first topics that will be brought up for dis- cussion en Parliament meets on the 12th inst. will be the election of the dynamiter, Daly, to represent Limerick in the House. On the 15th Mr. Balfour will move the production of proof of Daly’s conviction for participating in the dynamite outrages and on the 19th will move the issue of a new election writ for Limer The Parnellites intend to raise the question of amnesty, but Speaker Gully will probably rule that it is irrelevant. Daly is now in Portland prison. This fact in itself ren- ders his election void. It is understood that the only bill that | will be passed before the adjournment of the House will be the one proposing the fixing of judicial rents in Ireland until 1896, in view of the Government land-pur- chase scheme that will then be introduced. The summonses to the Government sup- porters in the House of Commons, even to | the Liberal-Unionists, have all been issued by Mr. Balfour as the Government leader in the House. Thi: ken in connec- | tion with the speech delivered last night by Mr. Chamberlain at a dinner given to him by the Birmingham Conservative Club indicates the eventual fusion of the two sec- tions of the Unionist party—the Conserva- tives and Liberal-Unionists. [he estimates are likely to be passed at the beginning of September. Adfter the | adjournment Parliament will not meet again until February. It is credibly reported that Prime Min- ister Salisbury will shortly cause to be created several peers, including Sir Alger- non Borthwick, Bzron de Worms and Mr. | James Lowther, ail members of the House | of Commons, and Sir Edward Malet, | British Em dor to Berlin, whosein- | tention to retire from the deplomatic serv- | ice has already been mentioned in the dis- | patches of The United Press. Lord Salis- | bury will also raise Lord Londonderry to a dukedom and appoint him to aucceed Lord Lansdowne, Secretary of State for War, who will have tendered to him an offer to | succeed either Sir Edward Malet or Loré Dufferin, British Embassador to France, who will also shortly retire. | The Queen will entertain next week at | Oshorne House, her residence on the Isle of Wight, Lord Salisbury, Mr. Balfour, the Duke of Devonshire and Mr. Chamberlain, all of whom are members of the Cabinet. | They will meet Emperor William atdinner | there. The Daily News, the morning Liberal | organ, yesterday published an article in | which it dealt in a most generous manner with Lord Salisbury’s foreign policy. It said that as Secretary of State of Foreign Affairs he had always been cautious, pru- dent and circumspect, and added that his share in the partition of Africa in 1891 was taken in closer concert with Germany than | with any other power. The Liberals, it further said, certainly will not complain of his cultivating the most friendly and cor- dial relations with Germany. Lord Salis- bury is the one English statesman who strenuously and earnestly endeavored to | withdraw the British troops from Egypt. England has this year the largest apple crop that has been seen for many seasons. In all the European countries the crop is larger than usual, with the exception of France, where the crop is only good. American apples, if any are needed, must be of the fanciest varieties and reach Lon- don in October. | The German potato crop will probably be a failure, owing to the continued rains. Prospects of a blight are already setting in. Owing to tize immense size of the crop, its failure would cause a large increase in the imports of food from the United States. The drought that prevailed during May and June caused a loss to the scotch farm- ers of naarly 3,000,000 pounds. Potatoes | will rea moderate average. The con- | dition of turnips is bad. Barley will reach the average production. In oats and wheat there is a deficiency of 25 per cent. There isonly half a hay crop. Fodder will be very deficient during the coming winter. On the other hand the prospects for the grouse shooting are the brightest for several years, the birds being numerous and healthy. All the moors have been taken for the shooting. There will be a great exodus northward for the shooting, which begins on Awgust 12. Mr. Glad- stone will go with his friend, Mr. Armis- tead, to the latter's shooting lodge in Inverness, in September. He will make a long visit there. John Morley, formerly | Chief Secretary for Ireland, will be the guest of Andrew Carnegie, near by. Her- bert Asquith, formerly Home Secretary, has taken rooms at a hotel at Carnoustie, in Forfarshire. The Attorney-General and the legal advisers of the Government are exercised over a curious state of affairs discovered in connection with the duration of Parlia- ment in the event of the Queen’s death. By the actof 1698 it was provided that Parliament should not last more than six monthsafter the demise of the erown. This applied to Scotland and Ireland after they entered the Parliament of the United Kingdom, but the reform franchise act of 1867 enacted that the demise of the crown should not affect the duration of Parlia- ment. This act applied only to England and Wales. A similar reform franchise act was in 1868 passed for Scotland and Ireland, but does not contain any clause referring to the demise of the Crown. Hence, in the event of the Queen’s death, Scotland and Ireland would haye an elec- tion within six months thereafter, unless Parliament should extend the clause of the English act of 1867 to them. In view of the Queen’s age and the size of the present. Parliamentary majority, indicating that the House will last for seven years, the matter becomes of practical importance, while the delicacy ot the subject makes it difficult to 1mmediately adopt another act thereon. Pilgrims at the Vatican. ROME, ITaLy, Aug. 3.—Sevency-fiv§ pil- | the rims from New York, Massachusetts, ennsylvania, California, Ohio, Maryland and Washington arrived mn Rome last evening. They are under the direction of Father Smith, director of Throop Semi- nary. The pilgrims attended mass in the Holies Basilica this morning, singing Na- tional hymns. Afterward they visited the Vatican gardens. They will be received by the Pope either Monday or Tuesday. S et May Threaten Europe’s Peace. NEW YORK, N. Y., Aug.3.—A dispatch from Berlin says: There is no telling how seriously the peace of Europe may be dis- turbed by the fetes in celebration of the ! twenty-fifth anniversary of theinaugura- tion of the Franco-Prussian war, and which will be inaugurated to-morrow at Wissen- berg. Wissenberg, where the first bloody battle of the war took place, is on the Bava- rian frontier of Alsace, and thousands of veterans have gone there. AR O ] Suicide of a Diplomat, BERLIN, GERMANY, Aug. 3.—Assaf Sad- ulah, secretary of the Turkish Embassy here, committed suicide this afternoon in his residence in Bendler strasse. He had previously telegraphed to his wife, who is a Viennese, summoning her from Herring- hoff, where she was staying, and the lady with her two children arrived an hour or so after his death. The motive for the deed is unknown. LB Twenty Miners Perished. LONDON, Exe., Aug. 3.—None of the twenty miners left in the flooded mine at Saltcoats, Scotland, have been rescued. The flowing water jammed the entrance into the mine with debris, and though at- tempts to clear the way tothe pit have been made it is still choked up. Itis be- lieved that all perished. MASSACRE OF CHRISTIAK Women From the Presbyterian and English Churches the Victims. Chinese Officials Who Instigated the Riots Have Been Duly Promoted. LONDON, Exa., Aug. 3.—A dispatch from Shanghai gives the details of the re- ported massacre of Christians at Ku Cheng. The ladies who are said to have been killed are believed to have been members of the Church of England, the Zenana and the American Methodist Episcopal missions. ccording to the dispatch they were butchered after suffering atrocious out- rages. A number of other foreigners, in- cluding a woman and her children, were killed. The dispatch declares that the Chinese officials connived, if they did not instigate, the attack. The revival of the outreges is attributed to the apathy of the British and American Ministers, despite the increasing anti-foreign feeling that is displayed. Foreigners in Shanghai regard the com- mission sent out to inquire into the recent riots at Cheng Tu as a farce. Many of the officials who were charged with complicity in these riots are being 3TON, D. C,, Aug. 3.—What steps the State Department will take with reference to the massacre has not been determined and probably will not be until fuller details are cabled by Minister Denby or Consul-Geperal Jernigan. Immediately upon the receipt of the dispatch from the | latter acting Secretary Adee informed the Navy Department of the affair with a view to ascertaining if any United States naval vessel could reach the scene of trouble. The dispatch from Mr. Jernigan gave name of the place where the massacre occurred at Kuckeng instead of Ku Cheng. Neither Kuckeng nor Ku Cheng could be found on the maps at the State and Navy departments, but a place called Kin Cheng was found, and this is believed to be the correct locality. Itis situated on & small stream in the middle of China, on the Yang-tse-Kiang River, and in a portion that forbids even the | Machias, the smallest United Statés gun- | boat on the Asiatic station, from getting within at least 400 miles. The Miss Harlow named in Mr. Jerni- gan’s dispatch as having been wounded is believed to be Miss Mabel C. Hartford of Dover, N. H., in charge of the Methodist i n in Kin Cheng. Her assistant is . H. Rouse, and two other Metho- dist female missionaries, Miss Mabel Allen and Miss Sarah Peters, are located at places near by. The Church Missionary | Society has a large mission at Ku Cheng, and the five English women who were killed are probably attached to it. At the State Department it is believed that the massacre is simply another out- break of fanaticism such as was rampant during the Chinese-Japanese war. The greatest riot at that time against Christians occurred at Cheng Tu. The American mission-buildings were damaged, but no Americans were killed. Minister Denby protested on behalf of Americans at Cheng Tu and the Chinese Government gave assurances of its intention to punish the outrages. The British missions at Cheng Tu were also damaged, and Eng- land has just sent an officer to make in- quiries into the affair with a view to de- manding damages. Seeiae s WRECKED IN A BLINDING STOEM. The Ship Arabia Crashed Upon the Diego Ramirez Island. NEW YORK, N. Y., Aug. 3.—Captain McLeon of the ship Arabia, of Bath, ac- companied by his wife and child, arrived this morning from Montevideo on the British steamer Etona. The Arabia was wrecked on Diego Ramirez Island, sixty miles south of Cape Horn, on May 26, during a blinding snow- storm. She was bound from New York to San Francisco with a general cargo, and left here on March 14. _When the ship struck, all hands, twenty- six in number, took to the boats and were landed safely on the island, which is un- inhabited. There they remained six days, when the British ship Achilles, from Pisa- gua for Hamburg, was sighted and her at- tention attracted. All hands put off in the Arabia’s boats and were taken on board. The Achilles altered her course and landed the shipwrecked people at Montevideo, whence Captain McLeon took passage in the Etona. —_—— Will Receive His Passports. NEW YORK, N. Y., Aug. 4.—The Her- ald’s special cable from Buenos Ayressays: Rio de Janeiro advices state that the Bra- zilian Government has received informa- tion from Baron Blanc, Brazilian Minister of Forelfn Affairs, in relation to Italy’s claims for alleged outrages perpetrated during the revolution, in which Italian subjects were killed. The note of Baron Blanc contains the information that he will not treat with Brazil's Minister in Italy, and it is supposed that the latter’s passports may be handed to him. et Mrs. Talmage’s Condition.g DANSVILLE, N.Y., Aug.3.—The wife of T. De Witt Talmage,who halxleen here for her health for some time, is still very low, though a slight improvement was reported to-day. She is staying at the sanitarium here, and Dr. Talmage has caneeled a number of lecture engagements in order to devote his entire time to her care. ‘Their son from Pittsburg is also here. The re- covery of Mrs. Talmage is said to be ex- tremely doubtful. STERN MUST ANSWER Cannot Escape Penalty for His Conduct at Kissingen. PENALTY IS LIGHTENED. Some Courtesy Shown This Country in Behalf of the St. Louis Man. AFFAIRS IN THE FATHERLAND, Emperor Willlam to Make Speeches During the Celebration of the Veterans of '70. [Cable Letter to The United Press.] BERLIN, Germany, August 3.—The Tageblatt publishes an editorial article to- day upon the case of Louis Stern of New York who, was arrested at Kissenger a short time ago for insulting Freiherr von Thuengen, Deputy Commissioner of the Spa. Concerning the case the paper is rather severe upon Mr. Stern, who through the later developments of the matter has lost much of the sympathy which was at first bestowed upon him. “The tiresome Stern case,” the Tageblatt says, ‘‘is beginning to assume a political coloring. The fact that Americans sojourning at Kissingen who were not acquainted with the circumstances and espoused Stern’s cause does honor to the esprit du corps among them, but we shall be surprised if the American Embassy identifies itself with Stern’s case. Stern did not act properly, and Americans can- not expect to be treated differently from Germans at German watering places.” Upon reading this article the correspond- ent of the United Press sought an inter- view with Count von Lerchenfeld-Kefer- ing, the Bavarian Minister to Prussia, who said that the case had no political import- ance whatever, adding: “The American Charge d’Affaires recog- nizes this fact and has very properly re- frained from troubling the German Foreign Office with representations, but relying upon his personul and friendly relations with the Bavarian Legation, he has ob- tained that official support which was alone given him from motives of courtesy toward the embassy of the United States. Neither the Bavarian Minister nor the Bavarian Government can interfere with the course of the law courts, but the Bava- rian Government on August 1 addressed a letter to the United States Constl at Bam- berg, informing him that the Government has used its good offices to cause Baron von | Thuengen to withdraw the libel suit he had instituted against Stern or plead for the imposition upon Stern of the smallest pos- sible fine. But the Criminal Court at Schweinfurt has begun proceedings against Stern on the charge of resisting an officer, under paragraph 113 of the criminal law and punishment upon,conviction of this offense must follow. Stern, however, obtained the advantage that the case will be tried in tbe minor court at Kissingen, where - the punishment will be much lighter than if the case was tried in a higher court.” The Commissioner of the Spa at Kissin- gen has forbidden the sale on the streets of the Neue Bayerische Landes Zeitung in consequence of the violent language that paper has used in treating the case. | The Empress and her two eldest sons, Crown Prince William and Prince Eitel- Frederick, started this evening for Stettin, where they will proceed to Sassnitz on board the German dispatch-boat Adler. The Emperor at the same time will take a special train for Brunsbuttel, where he will embark on the Hohenzollern for Heli- goland, making a brief stop there before proceeding to Cowes. The Emperor has just had completed a new electric im- perial standard for the mainmast of the Hohenzollern. The flag is four square meters in size and the designs and colors | are shown by electric lamps. It will be first shown in practical use on the night of the Emperor’s arrival at Cowes. Emperor William on August 18 will lay the foundation-stone of the Kaiser Wil- helm National memorial. Prince Hohen- | lohe will be present at the ceremony. The | Emperor on the same day will celebrate | the battle around Metz-on-Templehof field | surrounded by all the regiments of the | guards. On the 19th the Emperor will attend the | great anniversary celebration of the vet- | erans of the war of 1870, which will also be | held on Templehof field. Fifteen thou- | sand veterans will be present with bands | and banners. On all these occasions ths Emperor will make speeches. A new German political party has been formed at Colmar entitled the Democratic party of Alsace-Lorraine. It demands complete political equality for Al- sace-Lorraine with other Federal States, instruction in French in the na- tional schools, the right to post public notices in French and to produce plays; also free education, the separation of church and state and a reduction of mili- tary burdens, The correspondent of The United Press is authorized to deny the statement that the Bavarian army will soon be amalgamated with the army of Prussia. BASEBALL AT TACOMA. Portland Beaten in @ Game That Lasted Zen Innings. TACOMA, WasH., Aug. 3.—In the Pacific Northwest amateur baseball game here to- day, the Tacoma Athletic Club beat the Multnomah Amateur Athletic Club of Portland, by a score of 13 to 11, in a ten- inning game. At the close of the first half of the ninth inning, Portland had 11 runs, Tacoma 8. Then, with two men out, the score was tied in the last half. In the tenth inning an opportune two-bagger by Gates, the Tacoma left-fielder, w:en two men were on bases and two men out, brought in two runs, winning the game. It was the most exciting game of the season in Tacoma. Weldon, late pitcher for Stanford, pitched the tenth inn! g for Tacoma, shutting the visitors out. —_—— On the Ball Field. BROOKLYN, N.Y., Aug. 3.—Brooklyns 13, 19, 2; New Yorks 3,7, 4. Batteries—Kennedy and Dailey; Meekin, German and Farrell. Um- pire—Burnham., BOSTON, Mass.,, Aug. 3.— Bostons 9, 8, 4: Philadelphia 6, 9, 1. Batteries—Stivetts and Ganzel; McGill, Bean and Grady., Umpire— amslie. BALTIMORE, Mo, Aug. 3.—Baltimores 1,9, 0; Washingtoris 0, 6, 1. Batterles—McMalion and Robinson, Anderson and McGuire, Um- PR RG. P kg, 5.—Plttsburgs5, 7, 8 , PA., Aug. 3.1 H fil::re‘l':ng; 4, 8, :’l zlfnlmrflnv—flnlwhy' and o an Aimmer. 'mpire—0’; LOUISVILLE, K, Avg: DenLouisvitios 7, 11, | 3.—To-day was the last day of the regular 1; Cinecinnatis 0, 5, 4. Batteries—Wehying ;nd Warner, Rhines and Vaughn. Umpi evne. CHICAGO, 1L, Aug. 3.—Chicagos 6,12, 2/ St. Louis 0,'4, 2. Batteries—Hutchinson an Kittredge; 'Kissinger, Breitenstein and Miller. Umpire—McDona! R e ZIEGLER SHOWED TWICE. Finished Third in Two of the National Cireuit Races. TOLEDO, Onro, Aug. 3.—Five thousand people witnessed the National Circuit blcy- cle racesat the fair grounds here this afternoon. The majority of the events were hotly contested, but a slow track and a strong head wind prevented any fast time being made. In the two-mile handi- cap, class B, Earl H. Kiser of Dayton crossed the tape first, but Cooper of Detroit claimed a fournnd was awarded first place, Kiser being disqualified. Half-mile open, class B, C. M. Murphy, Brook- Iyn, won; Eatl Kiser, Dsyton, second; Otto egler, San Jose, third; Arthur Gerdiner, Chi- cago, fourth. Tie, 3-5. alf-mile open, class A, W. J. Klinger, Green- ville, Ohio, won; Bernard Oldfietd, Toledo, second; F. Krueger, Toledo, third; Ed McKeon, Greenville, Ohio, fourth. Time, 1:14 1-5. One mile, handicap, class B, Tom Cooper, 80 yards, won; Frank B, Rigby, Toledo, 70 yatds, second; F. J. Titus, 30 yards, third;'W. F. Sims, Washington, fourth. -~ Time,2:28 25 Two-mile handicap, class B, Tom Cooper, 150 yards, wos ©. Johnson, Cleveland, 96 ards, secon 3. Titus, 50 yards, third. ime, 4:41 1- One mile open, class A, C. 0. Lasky, Toledo, won; R. Frey, Bloomaale, Ohio, second; N. W. Church, Tolédo, third. Time, 2:41 1-5. One quarter of a mile open, class B, E. C. Bak, Buffalo, won: J. P. Bliss, Chicago, sec- ond;' L. D. Cabanne, St. Louis, third; F. B. Rigby, Toledo, fourth. Time, :32 4-5. wo-mile handicap, class A, ledo, 140 yards, won; A. J. Loneway, New Riegel, Ohio, 100 yards, second; M. Brown, Bloomdale, Ohio, third; C. O. Laskey, Toledo, fourth. Time, 4:50 1-5. One mile opén, class B, E. C. Bald won, F. J. Titus second. Otto Ziegler third, J. P. Bliss fourth. Time, 2:17. ON THE EASTERN TRACKS, Two Races Won by Favorites at the St. Louis Meeting. F. Kiueger, To- At the Other Big Courses the Con- tests Were of a High Order of Merit. ST. LOUIS, Mo., Aug. 3.—The track was fast and the attendance large. The first two races wer:t to favorites and the third to a long shot. Flora Thornton, 3 to 5 fa- vorite, in the fourth, ran unplaced. Favor- ites took the two last races: Six turlongs, Jim Head won, Frank Farmer second, Asblahd third. Time, 1:15%. Five ‘fnrlongs, Dare Dollar won, Kingstone second, Helens, Belle third. Time, 1:03. One and a sixteenth miles, Oak Forest won, Ohcot second, Blue and White third. Time, 501;. One'imile, Magnet won, Amelis May second, Cicily third. Time, 1:42!4. Seven and a half furfongs, Libertine won, Linda second, Fartarian third. Time, 1:34. One and a sixteenth miles, Sullross won, Thegdoxs H second, Mollie R third. Time, 1:488{, KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 3.—The local management gave an extra card to-day, ten races being on the programme. Three races were for trotters and pacers and the next seven for runners. A mateh race be- tween Willie L and Bridget attracted rlemy of speeulation, and Bridget repeated her victory of several days ago. Four favorites, two outsiders and one second | choice won all the money. Most of the finishes were very close and exciting. Six furlongs, Gus Strauss won, Black Satin second, Sir Charles third. Time, 1:18. Four and a haif furlong Green Prewett won, Redemption second, fug third, Time, :57%. Four and a half furlongs, Roy won, John P second, Ben Harrison third, Time, 58‘,% Match, five and.a half furlongs,” Bridget won, Willie L second. Time, 1:10%4. One mile, Charlie-Weber won, Monk Overton secona, Craft third. Time, 1: One mile, Collector won, Little Nell second, Virgin third. Time, Five furlongs snd alf, Gateway won, Emma Long second, Vulthernext third, Tire, 1: A BAKATOGA, N. Y., Aflfi.‘&—l’lve furlongs, Rapatap won, Don Farg second, Jack of Spades third. Time, 1:01. One mile and a turlong, Saragossa won, Lov- dal N‘econd, Rey el Santa Anita third. Time. 1:56; 81 Farlongs, Clifford won, Rey del Carredas second, Bellicose third. Time, 1:143{ Five 'and @ half furlongs, La Vienta won, Right Royal second, Sweet Favordale third. Time, 1 0§ short steeplechase course, one mile and a half, Sayonara won, May Blossom second, Bucephalus third. Time, 4:11%4. In going over the last hurdle in the homestretch, Alchemist fell, hreakx’ng his neck. Jockey Veach fell under the horse and was carried out unconscious. OAKLEY RACETRACK, Omio, Aug. Oakley meeting, and but one extra day, Fireman’s day, will pe given Monday. Five furlongs, Marjorie won, Keeps second, Kitty B third. Time, 1:02! Six furlongs, Elise won, Swiftly second, Staffa tbl-“l:d' l;Ehl;“e'i Q‘-l G Fasij d, ive furlongs, Squire ‘won, asl Becon Sidkel third. ‘1‘"2?,., 1:02. 5 : . One and a quarter miles, Voorheis won, Free Advice second, Blue and Gray third. Time, X and 8 half furlongs, Miss Perkins won, sle_\; Ione second, Jennie Miles third, Time, St. Maxim won, il and_scventy yards, t4 Lake third. Time, ette Belle second, Leo Six and ahalf furlongs, Santa Maria won, The Reaper second, Prince Imperial third. Time, 1:20. BRIGHTON BEACH, N. Y., Aug. 3.—One mile, Watchman won, Now or Never second, Shelly Tuttle third. Time, 1:43. Five furlongs, Lorrania' won. Little Dorrit second, Ecbea third. Time, 1:08%, Six farlongs, The Coon won, The Swain second, Lady Richmond third. Time, 1:16. One mile, Charade won, Gutta Percha second, Hermanita'third, Time, 1431 One mile, Sue Kittie won, Chiswick second, Little Tom ‘third. Time, 1:4814. Two miles, Harry Alonzo won, Aloha second, Primus third. Time, 3:47. Edwards to Race Again. SAN JOSE. Car., Aug. 3.—Wilbur Ed- wards, the speedy bicyclist, has made up his mind to resume racing, and will make his reappearance on the track at the Garden City Cyclers’ meet, September 9. e AUCTION SALES OF FRUIT. Principal Dealers in Chicago Not Agreed . on the Subject. CHICAGO, IrL., Aug. 3.—South Water- street merchants differ on the question as to whether a part of the street is support- ing a closed auction. Dispatchesfrom Cali- fornia to the effect that the Merchants’ Fruit Auction Company was organized for the purpose of conducting a closed fruit auction are declared by some to be entirely erroneous. Martin Fry, manager of the Earl Fruit Company, derides the idea of a monopoly and declares that the claim is too absurd for serious consideration. *California peo- vle can ship over any road,” said he, “and all talk of anybody being dissatisfied over any deal with therailroads is bosh. That is not the reason of the organization of the new auction company. The secret is that the Water-street dealers want to bar out the E_eddler and huckster. This the Union Auction Company refused to do, so they 2ot together and organized another Mer- chants’ Auction Company.” e QR Greenville’s Centennial. GREENVILLE, Onro, Aug. 3.—One hundred years have elapsed since at Fort Greenville the treaty of peace was signed between General Anthony Wayne and the Indians, and to-day the centennial was celebrated with appropriate exercises. A salute of 100 guns was fired this morning, and later there was & large ade, a fea- ture of which was s band of Indians clad in the raiment of pioneer days. The formal exem this mo?zn w&r&:&nn&:‘d‘zy an immense t| the on. ° city being re-enforced W thousands of visitars from the country round about. TOURISTS FLOCKED A Hunters From the East Rush to Jacksons Hole. FOLLOWED THE TROOPS. Bad Class of Settlers Found in the Country of the Bannocks. SOLDIERS NEEDED TO ARREST. There Promises to Remain a Lively Feud In the Land of Elk and Scenery. MARKET LAKE, Ipano, Aug. 3.—The following letter was received to-night from THE CALL correspondent who is with the United States troops in Jacksons Hole. 1t is dated August 2: The belligerent settlers of Jacksons Hole have discovered, now that it is too late, that calling in the United States troops to “‘clean out the Indians” has acted very much in the nature of a boomerang. The evidence continues to pile up against the character of many of the men who were engaged in the killing of the Indians. Captain Ray of the. Eighth Infantry said vesterday that he had pepulated Jacksons Hole by driving from the Shoshone and Uintah reservations during his service as Indian agent all the horsethieves and out- laws that infested them. There are undoubtedly men living in Jacksons Hole who cannot live safely any- where else. One of the worst examples of Jacksoffs Hole justice is that of old Two Sacks, an old biind Indian tanner. He was fined $75 and his elk skins confiscated, although it was shown at the trial that Jim Walker and Ed Hunter, the deputies who arrested Two Sacks, had sold him seven of the skins found in his possession. This is vouched for by Bishop Wilson him- self. ‘When Justice Rhoades was asked by THE CaLL correspondent why the parties of white hunters were not arrested for xiding the game, he replied that they would be if he had his way about the mat- ter, but that public sentiment was against arresting tourists and he could find no one willing to undertake the contract, as they had been a benefit ta the country. Justice Rhoades deprecates the killing of the In- dians, but admits that there isa lawless element in Jacksons Hole that cannot be controlled. A large number of hunting parties, mostly composed of wealthy Easterners, flocked into the Jacksons Hole Valley in the wake of the troops, and now that it has been definitely learned that the Indians are going south, many more will undoubtedly follow. The evident danger is now that instead of a conflict between Indians and the United States troops it will be between the troops and settlers. It is believed here that the contemplated arrest of settlers cannot be accomplished without the aid of soldiers. It will also be hard to convict the men here among their friends, and the prosecution will be looked upon as persecu- tion by their friends, just ‘as the Indians considered the killing of their braves a massacre. The inevitable result will be that the Indians and settlers will feel all the more bitter toward each other, and whenever the Indians return to the Hole the conflict that was undoubtedly averted by the troops this time will occur. This feud is one that will not end until the game is all killed or the Jacksons Hole country added to the National Park gs a game preserve and put under military control as Agent Teters suggests. ‘When General Coppinger heard yester- day of the excitement among the settlers in Swan Valley he ordered Company C, Captain Corliss, of the Eighth Infantry, to proceed there at once. This was before the official investigation disclosed the fact that the Indians in that vicinity were all peace- ably returning to their reservations. The company will probably not remain long at Swan Valley. A special telegram from the Bannock agency says that Indian Agent Teters to- day wired General Coppinger from the res- ervation, where he arrived last nighi, that all the Indians who had been absent from the Fort Hall reservation have returned and that all is quiet. Agent Teters also sent the following telegram to Washington to-day: Commigsioner of Indian Affairs: All the Indi- ans who were absent from the reservation re- turned, had a big council and requested me to telegraph you their heartfelt good wishes. They had not harmed a white man and would | start haying, leaving their grievance to the | justice of the white men. TETERS, Agent. DILEMNA OF EUROPE, Continued from First Page. last report, however, seems to be too | histrionically complete to be true. As the election turned out, it is hardly likely that Gladstone's appearance in the campaign with his Armenian atrocities would have made any difference in the result; but he did intend making this appearance, and then abandoned the idea in a furious rage at Rosebery’s attempt to saddle him with the odium of selling peerages. It can hardly be said that the Geographi- cal Congress had added much to the sum of human *knowledge. Many learned gentlemen devoted a whole day proving that Africa is the most salubrious imagin- able place for white colonists, but no in- tending immigrants have thus far present- ed themselves, and, indeed, the death of Joseph Thompson on the very morrow of this debate turns the comedy of it into rather bitter pathos. Thompson is not yet 37, and was by long odds the finest character among the modern British ex- plorers. He was even modest about what he had done, which suggests almost dizzy igolation from his fellows, and he killed nobody in his travels. He had been dying by inches here in England for nearly five years from the effects of the jungle fever. Although Slatin Pasha and several other Central African celebrities spoke, no new light was thrown on what England is really curious about; that is what the French are at in the upper Nile country. Much more interesting ground was opened by the y8ung Norwegian, Borchgrevink, whose story of Antarctic exploration was accepted by all as the event of the week. He is supposed to be the first white man who ever set foot on this vast continent, which he estimates to be twice the area of Europe. He says that & ship can winter perfectly at Cape A dair, where he landed, and thence there will be only 160 miles to the south pole. He offered, amid loud cheers, to lead a party to the cape, winter there and go with dogs and sledges to this pole. The tales which he told of novel formsof animal life and the specimens of mineral quartz which he exhibited evoked great enthusiasm, and the congress unanimonsly voted Antarc- tic exploration the most important thing now remaining to be undertaken, and a special committee is to appeal to the scientific bodies of the world for help to carry the work out. England’s peculiar passion for referring everything to commissions of inquiry and for placidly disregarding all their recom- mendations has often been dwelt upon. Lord Davey’s committee to examine the workings of limited hability companies and suggest improvement in the companies act evidently laid this to heart, for they report nothing. Itmay not with safety be entirely ignored that there are over $5,- 000,000,000 of paid-up capital involved here, which exceeds the joint stock investments of all the rest of Europe, and the present law gives such cruel scope to sharpers and swindlers, big and little, that its reform is probably of more actual practical importance than anything else in Eng- land. This committee of Judges, eminent lawyers and accountants, after a long study of the subject, report practically in favor of doing nothing. Four definite proposals were considered. The first that that every company must have some pro- portion of reserve liability like a joint stock bank was rejected on the luminous ground that it would make the company shares less desirable as an 1nvestment. The next that the State should have an official charged with the investigation of the companies, as the friendly societies are now examined, was rejected because it would throw responsibility properly be- longing to individuals upon the State. The third suggestion, which was not to make the registration final till after the first meeting of shareholders when they were in aposition to know what theaffairis like and whether they want to go onor not, has been recommended by a parliamentary com- mittee for twenty years, but this com- mittee throws it out; whileas to the fourth, which deals with the most vital point of how to secure an exact and trustworthy computation of the profits, it advises that this be referred to another authority for further consideration. The chorus of con- tempt with which the report is received by the press borrows an added point from the memorandum issued by Justice Vaughan ‘Williams, one of the members of the com- mittee, who is in no pains to disguise his disgust at its foolish conclusions. He is the Judge whose rough handling of fraud- ulent company promoters already shines by contrast with the ‘‘Laissezfaire” atti- tude of the rest of the English and French, and the hope is publicly expressed to-day that he will himself draft a reform bill which will give to the papers something tangible to rally round and make a fight for. In the otherwise ephemeral brochure just issued in Paris on the Franco-Russian relations there turns up a personal letter by Queen Victoria to that oriental ruffian, Dhuleep Singh, dated Windsor, July 8, 1886, which I fancy the royal biographer will shy at when the time comes for him to get his volumes out. If the mostaccomplished satirist of our times should have exerted | himself to compose a letter which carried the burlesque of all the Queen’s little idio- syncracies of tact, good taste, political sense and literary capacity to unkindest perfection, this is surely what he would have written. Only one English paper re- printed it, and that with no comment save that it is of extreme interest. Every person of Welsh blood in America has heard of Llew Llwyf6, who began to figure in Eisteddfods fifty years ago. Sev- eral timesduring the last dozen years these dispatches have chronicled his final disap- pearance from public view. Once, I think, he was supposed to be dead; later it was said ‘that he was a poor, old wreck, exist- ing somehow in great obscurity. This week he burst forth at Eisteddfods in Llanelly to everybody’s surprise in first- rate form and walked off with the prize for an epic poem amid roars of applause. He is now over 70, but he talks jauntily of the career still before him. A unique piece of testimony to the power of popular fiction deserves record. There is a part of Western London abutting on Kensington called the Shep- herds Bush, which is an eminently re- spectable semi - detached villa neighbor- hood. Itsinhabitants have long been dis- satisfied with its name, which they have desired to chanee for something or other to Park Chester or Addison for choice. The agitation at last reached the point of a memorial and of discussion of their griev- ance with the authorities, who thought that Shepherds Bush a fine old historic name. Then the reason for the objection emerged. 1t seems that Miss Braddon al- vs_makes all her characters of lowly tion reside in Shepherds Bush and that other novelists have fallen into the same habit by unthinking imitation, with the result that the locality is in fashionable disrepute and the rents have dropped heavily. Harorp FREDERIC. DANGEER. No Lives Lost in Forest Fires on Mackinac Island. DETROIT, MicH., Aug. 3.—A special from Mackinac Island says that the com- mander of the United States ship Michi- gan reports that the vessel left Beaver Island Thursday. The entire south end of the island appeared tobe covered by fire. The Michigan came to anchor off the harbor, but was not called on for assist~ ance. Captain Hart, of the steamer F. C. Hart, direct from Beaver Island, reports the fire as confined to the south end. It is burn- ing nearly out, and aside from the destruc- tion of a few crops and fences there is no great loss. Residents of the island feel perfectly safe. il hAS ZLunatics Frightened by Fire. DAYTON, Omo, Aug. 3.—Panic reigned in the Ohio Southern Insane Asylum to- day when an alarm of fire was turned in. One of the inmates saw smoke issuing from the stage floor n the amusement hall. His cries attracted the attention of all who were not confined to their cells. Many became frantic. The fire was soon extinguished. The loss was small. Peculiar In combination, proportion and process, Hood’s Sarsaparilla possesses peculiar cuntlvuApowerl unknown to any other preparation. This is why it has a record of cures unequgled in the history of medi- cine. It acts directly upon the blood and by making it pure, rich and healthy it cures disease and gives good health. Hood's Sarsaparilla }u the only true blood purifier prominently in the public eye to-day. $1; six for $5. Hood’s Pills cure hebitusl constipa- tion. Price 25 cents. RESIDE) Bnus" FOR BARBERS, BAR- Esm bootblacks, ' bathe bouses, niliard_tabies e e e tar-roofers, men, BUCHAN ) Brush Manufacturers, 609 SacramentoSte NEW TO-DAY. WE ARE GOING TO 0UTED Allour former eforts, and there will be no'hing but the greatest shoe buys ever known for the nexe four days onl = SO % = Write Us. Call On Us. Send to Us. 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This is the enemy which in time destroys even the muscular power, and all power of mankind. ‘Would you protect yourself against any possi- bility of this calamity? Ignorance of thé symp- toms is no excuse for permitting the weakness to grow on you. If you would study this subject for your own good send for the little book, “Three Classes of Men,” which will be mailed free, closely sealed. It is plain and honest and its contents are instructive. MANHOOD RESTORED. DEER PARK, Wash., January 16, 1695. Dr. A. T. Sanden—DEAR STR: 1 will now let yog know what effect your belt had on my case of im= potency. I was, you might say, compietely impo- tent when I started to wear the belt. I felt its good effects the first week, and in three weeks my Powers were almost perfect. I wore the belt seven weeks, and it has restored my sexual strength com= pletely, and from that time (a year and & half ago) it has remained perfect. 1 have been recommend- Ing your belt wherever T get chance, and you will Teceive many orders from here. I remain yours Tespeottuliy, JOHN FLEUTSCH. DR. SANDEN’S ELECTRIC BELT Cures nervous de- bility, 10ss of mems ory, 'lame back, rhematism, kid % sulting from exe cesses, exposure, overwork, etc, 85000 will be fore felted if the current cannot be felt immediately upon charging it. Warranted for years. SANDEN ELECTRICCO. Council Building, Portland, Or. LI PO TAI JR.’S Herh Nanitarium, No. 727 Washington St., Cor. Brenham Place, above the plaza, San Francisco, Cal. Office hours—9 A, M. to ;flgqltollndbtos BAN FraNcisco, June 1, 1895. 613 Geary street. After three vears of acute suffering from bron- chitis and Insomnia and having been treated dur- Ing this time by physicians of both the old and new schools without the slightest {improvement I con- sulted Dr. Li Po Tai Jr., who at once found the cause of the trouble. After & course of treat ment with him I can pronounce myself cured. [ feel T owe my life to his skill. _ DORA LONG. VINTINE KING OF TONICS! PRICE, ONE DOLLAR. BROOKS' HOMEOPATHIC PHARMACY, 119 POWELL STREET. »

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