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TURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 27, 1897. PRICE FIVE CENTS. SAN FRANCISCO, SA XXIL—NO. 1S0 INVADING ENGLISH ~ |TO-DAY THE CUTTER BEA AND FRENCH FORCES WILL SAIL TO THE NORTH CLASH IN AFRICA TO RESCUE THE WHALERS ) \'_(;LY')IE M.BALLOT: THE GOVERNOR tch to the | ne reports | aken pl h at Ni e accuracy | g thata French Lagos hinter- g papers danger re of the two ETHE FRENGH TRY.NEAR NIKK] Q__ z hinterland | some time past, A VIEW OF SAY, THE INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY CORNER ON THE MIDDLE NIGER in should line. | | THE CUTTER BEAR LEAVING SEATTLE. As ‘the Vessel Will Appear When She Starts Upon Her Long Voyage to. the Frozen North. ; :i**tit*'*i*ttfiifi*ttit*'fi**tt****i**fifi*‘kti'kt*fitfi*ttfii’*i**"fi*i*t*iii**fi*tfifi&l'k*‘ HOW “THE CALL” HAS : OUTFITTED THE BEAR. SEATTLE, Nov. 25.—Outfits have been furnished by THE CALL to the following officers of the Bear and members of the overland relief expedition: Captain F. Tuttle. First Lieutenants J. H. Brown and David H. Jarvis. Second Lieutenants C. H. Cochrane, John C. Berry (THE CALL correspondent), B. H. Cam- den (Examiner correspondent), H. G. Hamlet (Chronicle correspondent), E. V. Bertholf (THE CALL correspondent). Chief Engineer H. W. Speer. First Assistant Engineer H. N. Wood (THE CALL photogr apher). Second Assistant Engineers H. K. Spencer and J. 1. Bryan. Surgeons:” Dr. S. J. Call, Dr. E. H. Woodruffs (THE CALL’S surgeon). Steward William Boundy. Explorer F. Koltzschoff. Each man was furnished with the following articles: Eskimo dogskin parkie and breeches, dog- of any territ it was resolvea t commissioners to reconsider b matter, and, as a result, in the | course he next ten years four separate | 1ded. 5 “SEATTLE, Nov. 26. “John D. Spreckels, Proprietor; The Call, San Francisco, Cal.: “In the annals of newspaper generosity there may be instances S dary com- Britain and France to nselves as to the frontier n both parties have extended, but in my experience I s '“": e "9_13 IN THE LAGOS HINTERLAND {know of no casc that equals the | ngat the establisn- | a lack of knowladge of the physical con- | — e | unselfish patrigtism and bound- empire and di-| formation of the country behnd, or the | CTTVVVTTTTTTTTETIWETITITY | Jess generosity with which The | g e T NEWS OF THE DAY g |Call has furthered the humane : | Ca as 2 where greater liberality has been | -5 0 establish heall- | hmitation thereof. O.'y a general agree- ment was made in regard to “hinterland’’ roject to send a relief-ship to the proj p t sion, 2nd th emen 1 E I R R e s rescue of the unfortunate men cut cisco: On Saturday, fresh wesi- 3 off by the ice floes of the Arctic Weather forecast for San Fran- the | ment between the nations whose claims he purpose of ne- | agjoined. Souti of the equator the lines | ¢ native ruler. | perween® the holdings of the several fortunate | nations and also of the Conzo Kree State a French | have been long since settled been who was | most of those to the ncrth, including the the | lateral boundaries runn.ng back for some bad | distance fr-m the coast between the s treaty | British, Frencn and Germa ions before De | on the Lower Niger and the Guinea coust, boundary lines was left t special agree- eriy winds. ; 3 DU S s ‘1 e from the comforts of civilization. Frenc and Englisn Clash. The first to agitate the sending of a relief expedition to the far north, and having succeeded in inducing the Government to or- der the Bear on thisspecial cruise, The Call has most generously ex- fitt*kt}i***fitfifi**i**fi***ttt*fl;:ilikifi***ikiitttt*fi*k**tkkkk* I'e Bear Sails To-Day. SECOND PAG The Marion Goes South, Death in a Cell. Oil Found at San Diego. as well s Liberia and the old THIRD PAGE. | to have | and Portuguese holdines further north. | g = st e SRl Sl b 24! S - : : 5 : S b e el i ;‘""{‘j“" ‘“;’“[“"“ ]‘“”“""' {tended every possible aid that | x qin boots, silk mitts, buckskin gloves, silk hoods, fur cap, half-dozen silk socks, half-dozen Arctic try iying in the great bend of g THEe Carr's New Era Train. nichERcend Bt ol cxneiit m‘{ socks, duck vest, two suits silk underwear, suit chamois-skin underwear. stream aud ye: unsettied, Fra and assert claims that overlap by thousands of squ miles by a treatv between the two provision was made for limiting m of the Algeria | ud by a line extending from the | town of Say on the Miidie Nizer across | to Barawa on tbe west side of Lake Tchad. I'he exact course of the line was leit for | e‘ermination, and tha claims now | the respective parties a!l are at incieasing variance, though no | ed between | er and between t arrangements so as to insure q is, however, an early sailing and to furtheren- hance the success of an expedition that at best is fraught with many | dangers by so liberally caring for the material wants of the volun- teers who are about to sct out on In addition, the members of the overland expedition were supplied with sleeping blankets, duck parkies, wolfskin robe, fieldglasses, rifle, knives and complete outfit. A library of over 200 bound volumes and book and sheet music were also furnished for the wardroom of the Bear. Extra provisions for the crew were furnished by THE CALL and shipped from San Francisco. . The stores, including groceries, provisions, wines and cigars for the ward- 5 room mess, were procured in Seattle. this project. ‘The whole amounted in value, for which cash was paid to various firms, to “The many acts of Kkindness, 87069 78. | courtesy and liberality that have | :fi*i***fiitiii*fliit*tfii*fifiit**ttt**'kt*ti*fitt'kfitt*tfifli*fi*ffi*t**fi*ti‘ktfi*ttl*t bopidiienr Bl e o THE EXAMINER'S VERY LIBERAL CONTRIBUTION. # | 3 s The Examiner contributed provisions to the amount of $1565 8s. equipping the officers and erew (jingion dock and was added to a big pile. The Examiner Baseball club contributed goods to the amount of $1565 8s. with outfits complete to the minut- | of other boxes and barrels heaped up in est detail and supplying the front of the borth where the revenue cut- | Rddsk dot sk sk ke s sk ek ek o e ok ok ok sk ok ok ok ko ko Aok o with a high grade of prov CHRONICLE ALSO HELPS. The Chronicle contributed a let- ter of instructions to the officer who is to look out for that journal’s FOURTH AGE. 5 : Destroys a Public Record. § : 2 : e I L A L R R LR R R R R R R R L R L R R L R R R R KRR R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R AR R LR R R R R L AR ER R R L] Strung Up the Captain. Secretary Loug’s Report. Thorne’s Defense an Alibi, Alger Mov for San Pedro. FIFTH PAGE. Races on Bastern Tracks, ¥ been a co g 1 and French forces at said to bave been ca troops. News of the Water Front, It Was Not Bianther. D:ats of Cavt. W. A: Phillips, More Durrant Litization, SIXTH PAGE. Editorial. Fe ek Ak K ke ek e A A 30K AR AR A ok e Ak A e ok e e - YOk ¥k e Colonial Oft o ite nas for sertous. and was the ng lately in Paris of ns for the cable settiement, which, bhowever, has not been reached. a £ it as properiy helonging to hinteriand, the French have d in from that direction ssion of the country south s 1ar down as a line drawn 1 the Niger River soutb- s evening | west 10 Carnotville, near Saki, on the e from Lag easterr ter of Dahomey. This i« a or is current among Ia n of what they claimed at a collision between 4)0 treaty of l*’fif'. ‘guwh the | b el e Faim Ot a subject of the treaty. e R s “‘_° ROy ion thereof the French ill prove to be founded on t officizlly announced ict between the French and some s orzans and by the publication at the western ex:ension of egal hinteriand would be limited having instigated an expedition B el e it e that means so much to them. | bly commente; P y the men “FRANK TUTTLE, | on the cutter who have been the | K FRAAKA Legal Non- Partisanism. Heaping Coals ot Firs, Press and ce in France. America Gaisv, Britain Loses, THE CacL | | s > £ ! “Commanding the Bear.” | recipients of these favors. They s L i are most appreciative, and mar- | SEATILE, Nov. 26, —k‘l“ d5 fo':luck (hn; | vel at The Call’s o A afternoon a great truckload of boxes an ! vel at The Call’'s forethought in Beolot it siinga drord ot (G Ghe A iletins, The Andre Prison at Tappan, British forces | BT ther stated, are British. T the Niger > i ¢ Per:ona's and Queries, ENTH PAGE. Advancin : Colonization Work, War Over Oaklan i Miik, Phelan Criticizes the Hospital, Missing Man From New York. EIGHTH PAGE. R.2.2.2 82 382 83233 23 SEV kK O K Aok K 08 si ter Bear is lying. It was the last load of | 1qin Tutile expects to start down the ERE LIy el supplies furnished by THE CALL for the | girai1g by 6 o’clock to-morrow night. Jand luxuries sm!l "‘f will tend to expedition ;hasAw:xl start to-morrow for When the Beat begins her voyage she | strengthen a-d fortify them for the relief of the 265 men who are ice-bOURd | i1} witnout a doubt be the best equipped | the hardships to be endured. | "";h“ Arctic. sEn 4 of any expedition ever dispatched to lhef “rr e eve o-morrow morning the supplies will | Arctic. Officers and men dwell on this, |/ Lbon thejcns of the departure | "0y Yinto the hold of the staunch | an they are unanimous in the opinion | | of the United States revenue cut- | jjggie cutter, and by noon the start will be | that to Tre CaLL belongs {he credit for | | ter Bear to the froz:n fields of the | made on the journey, on the success of | the expeditiun itseif and the unparalleled which so maay lives depend. Everything | equipment. They are aware that it was b N -Half of myself | else is on board. The last of th- soft coal | Ty Carr that first told of the perilous interests during the progress of the tending upon beha ‘ Of ;n)scn and | Guq stowed in the bunkers this afternoon | si uation of the crews of the eight whalers expedition. men our most grateful apprecia- | and a carload of hard coal, for u-e in the | frozen in off the northern coast of Alaska, | tion and public acknowledgement | stoves on the Bear, was sacked and piled | and cailed upon the Government to send *‘**************f*‘**'**“‘ between decks. relief to them at once. the nat. Itdid succeed,'however, in pil- g The < It will take several hours to get all THE| Then came the offer of THE CALL to fur- | fering from a charity fund it held in trust ed by The Call. Thatour mission | ;1 supplies that are still on the dock | nish the outfiz complete 1f the Govern- | few hundred doilars, on whicn it at- ‘This was | tempted to build a repu:ation for philan- thropy. Witn these diverted proceeds in he will manage it somehow, and then | that the Governmen! could not supply sshaéhzfl%i}l‘;‘x"fis?‘ffi g’l‘::";;‘ “p‘::lrdJa;‘k e | | | & General Sporiing News, NINTH PAGE. Battle Creek Fish Hatchery, Searching for Baden Suspect, g Supervisors Object to Bongs, 3 I north T cannot refrain from ex- ! o P ‘g — - the STRUGGLE FOR TERRITORY. | b¥ a lite drawn south irom Say to Carnat- ville, ation of claim limiis the | d against the tles and Exp=ditions of the| french and Engiish in the Grab | iiel Ate it ol T6; the Hils Srianit | right 10 the extension of the Lagos hinter- pariition of the African continent | 428 g;‘(’m"\‘v:'\“ nOrLh/RGd West 8y a fing 2 o | dra 52 st and down (0 meet en the several nations cf Western | {1, western hound of Ashantee, en- e wes axreed upon between them- | tirely inciosing ihe Yuman, Togoland #el¥es by the treaty of Berlin in 1884 Tue | and'French Dahomev, us the French had coast land and theexien- ‘tfrifg ke paut "v}'id:rr‘;nin :hL'd_\'ll;:erPcoun- i e ¢ ina- £ + Leone, Gambia and thie Portu- niluerice oF dOmIni- | gese couairy an the westconst, by tabing & | and holdin: pos ession o1 the territories TENTH PAGE, Commercial News, ELEVENTH PAGE, News From Across the Bay, ek Ak Ak kA kK RARRARA AR K AKKK K of the unparalleled favors extend- TWELFTH PAGE, Racing at Oakland Track, THIRTEENTH PAGE, will ultimately be successful we | on toard, and Captain Tuttle is in despair | ment would furnish the sh | have but - little doubt, and - when | of finding room to stow them away. But|due to the st:temeat from Washington | more of less | peiween Senegal and the Kong oo | 265 unfe ate whali 2 4 | 2 ong e § h p 267 'ortunate whali 2 cach one, especially England | The Frenca have establishe | Births, Marriages, Deaths, jehepa6o g et i "8 MEN | o crew will turn to and clean up the | the stores because of lack of funds. e e Ot ntil actual conf ct began to | POSIS &t most of the important FOURTEENTH PAGE, ‘are rescued from the ravages of f gecks of the litter thal is thickly strewn | The officers of the Bear know how well | withstand the r.gors of the winter as his ome definition of the re-| I‘“:L““fl';;"CU‘::_H‘:EYJ“S:;HWSHe EEp BUE Trinity Now Is Rectorless, starvation and mental suffering | over them now. THE CALL has fulfilled its agreement. It superiors of the wardroom, u;mh.lakc[r. be- its of the several claims bad | g% ' - selves with a ey New Car B\ heir h i By noon the limes will be cast off and | has nct supplied guite all the clothing, f ieving in the Iair promise of the Hearst- ew exploring expeditions, s C : Tes' New Car F and returned to their homes in a 'y 000! pp! q! 2, for e ¥ i o toch metianel | endere the Bear will turn her prow to the icy | the vermitorm appendix of the New York | &S and true to his improvident nature, shine and pl 5 5 2 i ts of life, witt land of sunshine d plenty truly north on her errand of mercy. A stop | Journal, envious of THE CALu's efforts :Kin::::"p"rulfrwl‘g:;'w:f,:,,oh":;,'dwfi,; then will wives, mothers, daugh- | wi:l be made at Port Townsend to take on | undertook to care for the crew, after outfit, he found himself on the eve of de- ters and sons bless The Call for | board a few Government scores, but Cap- | first making a tutile effort to pass arouna | parture for the far north with but little 10 be made. [ipines : <k 4 : E= 3 3 | Lugard made to N kki ani Liaim a| X r_u as I“; Ll.lm\L line was concerned | couple of ves:s ago, and to making some the limits of the boundaries of each I informal trea:i*s with ibe rulers of those claimunt were dofinitely determined, but | places and others in the Borgu country. Jenks Found Guilty. Boots Barred at Ingleside. Cummmummmu