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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, NDAY, AUGUST 14, 1898 noon. Captain General Blanco informed the members that as the representative of the Madrid Government he had called them together to notify them that the peace protocol had been signed by Spain and the United States. Captain General Blanco said he could not s e the precise terms until he re- ceived dispatches from the Government in Madrid. These dispatches had not vet been published and the people are still in ignerance of the conditions. I am informed that General Blanco will publish the peace proclamation in the Official Gazette to-morrow. Perfect order is maintained in the city, but the people are anxious to know on what basis peace has been ar- ranged. L SAMPSON AND SCHLEY ORDERED TO NEW YORK Will Remain in That Harbor While Their Flagships Are Under- going Repairs. WASHINGTON, Aug. 13.—Admirals Sampson and Schley will sail to New ¥ on their respective flagships, which have been ordered to that point. issued last night covered of both admirals, but did fically state that these high officers would -go to New York. It is aid at the Navy Department that no ecial on has. yet been sition of these officers and the commandof the various battl and cruisers during the period of ir of the warships, but the offi- main with their hington occasionally probabl Tw ¥ SOLD LIQUOCR TO IMMUNES. rour Cafe Proprietors of Santiago Sent to Prison. 1 Cable to The Call and the 13 Copyrighted, 189, by e SANTIAGO DE CUBA, Aug. 13- rs of four cafes in this Cabana, Favorita and ere sent to prison this morning. Gen- eral Wood, military governor, charged them with ha sold liquor to ol- diers. He ordered their arrest because a disturbance made last night by ew York mes Gor- The Luz— of Companies A and B of the of Second Regiment who were intoxicated. AN ARMISTICE AT SUMMERLAND Immunes, Special Dispatch to The Call SANTA BARBARA, Aug. 13.—Hos: tilities have not yet been resumed at Sumnierland. The peopie hive been tracing step by step the cunningly laid of the corporation to seiz wrland by a coup d'etat. Inter- ting facts bearing on the scheme are coming to light every day. Treadwel the S thern Pacific fir located and recorded, in e name one Davis and others, a lot of over patented pueblo lands granted in private ownership, and over the lands below high water mark on the Sum- merland beach. It is known that these ims were recorded by and on behalf adwell, though in other names. \en Treadwell applied to the Board of st of Supervisors for a wharf franchise This was opposed by H. L. Willian who had a franchise about expiring, his pecun y circumstances not hav- in time. The Board : urged to and did ignore Mr. Wil- ' contest on the ground that Treadwell was ready to go ahead and accommodate the people with a wharf ommercial purposes, which as v eded to col e with Southern Pacific Company. In obtaining the franchise Treadwell selected an attorney not identified with the business of the Southern Pacific Company. His franchise once obtained gan to show his hand. He bored 1 on the beach at the foot of hik wharf and kept on Kkeeping pace in with the growth of the wharf. franchise was a practical joke on the Board of Supervisors of the county. He tb began to openly brag of being by the Southern Pacific Com- apital, He clalmed the control ilroad rights of way along the and tola Thomas D. Wood if 1en od roadbed he wished a siding for shipments of his 0il he ( eadwell) would promote it or could grant it, as he held this land of the Southern Pa Company along the beach under lease. His first discomfiture was the ac quiring by Mr. Wood from H. L. Wi liams of a large tract of oil land front- ing the beach. When Treadwell started out with met with resis of the § pon the scene of action and the legal bluff began. Agreements of comprom i w finally drawn up and ten- dered, in which Treadwell, in the name of Mr. Davis of Elizabeth, N. J.,, and in his own name, agreed to do most anything if he were only allowed to run by with his were not so egsily deceived. His would- be dupes knew full well that once across the lands of the State with its wharf the Southern Pacific Company would laugh them to scorn. These recent acts of the Southern Pa- cific Company have caused the commu- nity to consider and deeply resent tha treatment of Santa Barbara by this corporation in reference to connecting this section with the outside world, having violated all its pledges in re- gard to the closing of the gap, which is about fifty miles in length, and the closing of which would make a direct line from San Francisco to Los Ange- les through Santa Barbara, thus short- ening the distance and time greatly be- tween this part of the State and the northern part. The determination was expressed to-day by parties who had 5”"‘(“‘(11' rights of way or executed con- racts for grants of ray 1mdme-dlatu1y 2 rights of way to and to commence procee 2 a forfeiture of the ’;rrnntidings Sl COTTAGE CITY REACHES VICTORIA FROM ALASKA Brings News of a Big Strike Seventy Miles Below Tagish—Stam- pede to the Diggings. VICTORIA. B. C., Aug. 13.—The Cottage City, which arrived this evening, brought news of.a big strike seventy miles below Tagish. One man is said to have worke, out $700 in one dar. A big stampede oc- curred to the new diggings, practically depopulating Skagway and Dyea. Even those working on the Skagway nailroa and having business concerns at th gateway center joined in the stampede. - The Cottage City had no go.u ahoard, and the only passenger from Dawson a8 Inspector McGregor, Canadian troops going in by the Stick- een rntum tn;c;}‘t;;‘\”g:e;‘t_hlrddauons. They cannot get s s from Glenora fathe alculties of the trafl. - OWInE sl Immunes Off to Santiago. SAVANNAH, Ga., Aug. 13.—The trans- port Minnewaska sailed at 4 o'clock thi; afternoon for Santiago with the Thir Regiment of United States Volunteers, Colonel Ray’s immunes, numbering 1100 officers and men. fictitious placer mining claims | Ve notices of recession, | Acting Chief of ' the Hostility of the Press a Misconception Copyrighted, 1898, by the Associated Press. BERLIN, Aug. 13.—The Associated Press correspondent here has had an interesting interview, on the subject of the Spanish-American war, with a gen- tleman, who, in the absence of Baron von Buelow, who is away on his sum- mer holidays, is acting chief of the For- eign Office, and who may be regarded as voicing in this conversation the gen- eral official view of the subject dis- cussed. | The gentleman began by saying: | “Baron yon Buelow, on leaving, cau- | tioned me that no expression of opin- | ion contrary to Germany's policy of strict neutrality was to be promulgated. That we mean to observe neutrality of this description I think the world now know From the start the For- eign Office has made it invariable to say nothing that could be interpreted as offensive to either side, and we have |in no way tried to influence the Ger- man press in favor of the United States, except on a single occasion. At ‘flrs[ there was so much hostlity on the art of the German press toward the | United States that we took every op- portunity to arrange for the appear- ance of articles of a different tone. “Almost the only aflinity existing be- tween Germany and. Spain is found in the monarchical institution, while the | bonds uniting Germany and the United | States are numerous. It is true that | at the commencement of the war Ger- { mans were much influenced by the fact | that a powerful nation was attacking | a weak.one. . This was a strong strain | upon German idealism, and the sense of justice which characterizes the Ger- man peoplé, and the mere fact that vou were the aggressors in this case somewhat prejudiced the German mind against you, quite irrespective of the merits of the controversy. Besides, it must not be forgotten that Germans, in | the matter of political education, are | still somewhat unripe. It is not long | since they became a homogeneous po- litical entity. ~1t is partly due to this ! fact that Germansjare given 10 reachs ing hasty conclusidns on guéstions of’) politics. . Hence sprang a great amount of public comment in favor of Spain | in the earli | talk, however, ought not to be quoted against the German Government, in re- gard to which there has been, 1 think, no just cause of complaint by Ameri- As a matter of fact, during,the past fortnight the tone of the German press has been much more favorable to ‘the | ing permitted him to bulld the wharf | United States, and hardly anything di- | of Supervisors | rectly hostile has appeared in_any of | The Berlin butchers this week promul- | the more important papers, while the number of;journals openfy friendly has considerably ‘increased. ~ The 'papers | now point. ott that the authorities at | Madrid and Manfla and the Spanish | press were largely responsible for the the | excitement rising out of the Irene inci- | dent, as they. misconstrued it, and pre- ceding incidents in a manner that necessarily aroused suspicion in the United States. A good sample of the average of the editorial articles nowadays is furnished in the Lokal one of the most violent anti-American sheets in Berlin. In an article printed to-day this journal draws a parallel between the Turko-Grecian and the Spanish-American wars, and says that the differences between the two cases er stages of the war. Such | Anzeiger, until recently | STRICT NEUTRALITY 'GERMANY'’S POLICY FROM THE START the Berlin For; eign Office Speaks of War. of His*'Country Due to of the Motives of the United States. is mainly in the fact that Greece was the attacking, and, not like Spain, the | attacked power. | This, the Lokal Anzeiger goes on to say, was only a formal difference, for Spain, after annoying and injuring a | powerful neighbor for a long time, had | finally engaged in a war for which she | had not the necessary strength. To | defend her possessions only imposed | sacrifices upon her, and she was bound iw lose. If, on the other hand, she had | sold these colonies, she would have realized a large sum. “By her unreasonable attitude,” the Lokal Anzeiger continues, “Spain as- sumed as large a measure of responsi- | bility as Greece. Both Spaniards and Greeks are blind and.full of conceit.” The newspapers here to-day discuss | elaborately the new situation and the changed conditions growing out of the war. The conclusion reached is that the United States must hereafter be reckoned a great naval power, and that I’ v will be obliged once more to { her navy in order to hold her | own with the other powers. The Deutsche Zeitung, discussing the annexation of Hawaii and plans of the | United States as regards Pago Pago, | says: | “This means a chanee in the balance | of power in the South Sea, regarding { which Germany cannot afford to .be | silent.” The paper concludes a somewhat ag- gressive article by saying: ‘“We have confidence that the leaders ‘nf our fqreign policy will do all that | is required to prevent the disturbance | of German interests and influence in | Samoa.” | The Vossische Zeitung says that the | war has ended as the majority of com- petent judges expected from the begin- | ning that it would end. Spain, = the | Vossische Zeitung says, undertook the | struggle without a chance of success. | The Americans, the article says, owe | | their success, besides their military su- | | periority, to a harmonious joining of }&ll important factors. | Admiral von Knorr, commander-in- chief of the imperial navy, informs the correspondent of the Associated Press | that during the approach of autumn and winter the German navy will be | more strongly represented in American waters than at any time since 1891, when Germany took a leading part in the settlement of the Chilean trouble. | Five warships—the Geier, Hela, Moltke, Sophie and Nixo—with a total tonnage | of 10,500, and carrying fifty-seven guns |and 1534 men, will be kept there. The meat fatnine that prevails throughout Germany is causing much LU ‘c M s =, Map of the country between the baitu op the Chino-Russian fi ment to Russia, and which thwart. the Yellow Sea on the south, jected extensions of the Trans- Mongolia to Vladivostok and Port Arthur, for needed concessions have been made by the Chinese Govern- THE SEAT OF DANGER IN THE FAR EAST. Russian frontier on the north and showing the route of the pro- Siberian Railroad from Tsuruk- rontier through Manchuria and which all Great Britain is attempting to SEEK T0 SHELVE FTTHUGH LEE Politics in the Camp of Shafter. RACE FOR CUBAN HONORS TORAL’S CONQUEROR WOULD BE GOVERNOR. Delegation Comes From Santiago to Use Its Influence at Washing- ton in the Califor- nian’s Behalf. Special Dispatch to The Call. dissatisfaction among the poor, who are | unable to pay the increased prices. Vil- | lagers on the Silesian frontier daily | cross the line and visit the nearest Russjan. towns to procure cheap meat, gated resolutions expressing indigna- | | tion at the Government's policy of pre- | | venting meat imports, which has| | caused a great scarcity of meat in the | | home market, | Emperor: Willlam has finally decided | | that the city of Berlin may accept a | legacy of several millions of marks left | by a disreputable usurer named Simon | Bladt, on condition that a statue be | erected to his memory. The case has been pending for several years. The municipal and provincial author- | ities along the Rhine have decreed the | removal of glaring advertisements of | an American cereal preparation which | had been placed at one of the most | conspicuous and loveliest spots along | the river. N0 MORE TROOPS ~ FOR PHILIPPINES | Present Plan of Secre- i tary Alger. | DEPARTMENT AWAITS - WORD | FROM MERRITT. TUnless He Asks for Reinforcements the Men Now at San Francisco Will Not Be Sent to Manilas | | Special Dispatch to The Call. 13.—The Wash- NEW YORK, Aug. !ington correspondent of the Herald | sends the following: A cable dispatch | went to General Merritt last night from the War Department asking if he needed any more troops. The inquiry | from the Government was prompted by the belief that the troops already | in Manila would be sufficient for gar- | rison -purposes. ~General Merritt has | with him now 11,000 troops, and 4000 | more are on the way. The present plan, therefore, of the administration | seems to be that the 5000 which were originally intended to be part of the expedition for which Secretary Alger | urged@ General Merriam a few days ago to provide transports shall not now be ent to Manila. It is not supposed un- | der present circumstances that Gene- | ral Merritt in his reply will ask for | more troops. | 1 asked Secretary Alger to-day if he would point out to me fust about what | the situation would be.in Manila under | the protocol, as far as it concerned | Spanish and American froops. I re- | minded him that no provision had been made as to the manner of evacuation of Manila by Spanish troops, and asked him what would be their status in the interim. 19 £ He' told_ me. that in the first place there was no doubt that.the Spanish army under orders from the Madrid Government would cease hostilities and | PEACE. CHANGES SITUATION| -called wharf; but they | lay down its arms. said the ques- tion looked like a simple one. “It is true,” said Secretary Alger, “that we may be called upon to help sustain the Spanish army now in Man- ila, but the soldiers would be practi- cally regarded as our prisoners, and United States troops will be as much in authority in Manila pending nego- tiations between now and the treaty of peace as the United States army in Porto Rico or Cuba.” Under instructions sent last night Rear Admiral Dewey is to raise the | blockade of Manila and suspend all | hostilities. The imstructions . sent to-day set forth .the terms of the protocol relat- ing to the Philippines .nd direct that immediate steps be taken for the oc- cupation of the city’ by American | troops. THE TOWN OF CADIZ IS QUITE GAY AGAIN Fetes Being Organized to Cheer the Residents and to Attract Visit- ors to the City. e Copyriahteds 18 by Thmes S don Bennett, CADIZ, Aug. 13—The so-called flying squadron, consisting of Alfonso XIII, Buenos Ayres and Ciudad de Cadiz, in command of Captain Barraza, is being prepared to go to Southampton to meat Cervera’s men. t is unknown yet at what Spanish port Cervera will land. The French steamer Cheribon, char- tered for the repatriation of the Span- ish troops, H@is sailed for Santiago, where she is due on August 23. She has accommodations for more than 1000 troops. This town is quite gay again. Peo- ple are organizing fetes to raise their drooping spirits and to attract visitors to the city. The gates, which have been closed since the war, are now re- opened and remain open all night. The fleet has been continuing its target ex- ercises. The results are falr, S i WARSHIPS CEASE THE BOMB' IDMENT 0 Informed by the Spanish Command- ant at Manzanillo That Peace Had Been Declared. SANTIAGO DE CUBA, Aug. 13.—Ad- vices were received by General Shafter to- day -to- the effect that Manzanillo was hombarded yesterday, day and night, and again this mornmgs.‘ General Shafter at once cabled to the Spanish commander at Manzanillo that peace had been declared, requesting him to advise the American commander of the. fact under a flag of truce, which he did, and the shelling of the town ceased. Advances made on furniture and planos, with or without removal. J. Noonan, 1017-1028 Mission. | dispatches to McKinley and Alger. BOSTON, Aug. 13—A New Orleans special to the Transcript says: The transport Berlin arrived vesterday. There is considerable importance at- tached to her voyage. Just as she was preparing to leave Santiago there came a rush message from Shafter to wait for four passengers. The quartet proved to be Colonel Dick, Captains Mason and McKittrick (the latter Shafter’s California son-in- law appointed from ecivil life) and Dr. Goodfellow. They are the bearers of Os- tensibly their mission is to acquaint the authorities with the true condition of affairs in Santiago. They will show that the “round robin” was written with Shafter’'s knowledge, consent and ald. That the state of the troops was really desperate and that the object of the combined appeal was to bring speedy release and not to reflect upon the War Department. That is only one of their missions, and will serve to satisfy Roosevelt and other officers who are supposed to have incited re- sentment_by talking too plainly. Dick is"a political leader in the Ohio stalwart counsels, and it is safe to say that he is charged with matters of much more confidential and momentous bearing. The public has all alons been led to believe that Lee was intended to rep- | resent American arms and diplomacy in Cuba after the struggle. There has been no definite promise and no authorized announcement—just a sort of general understanding, but it is a misunderstanding. Shafter has been the administration candidate from the very start, and his assuming the re- sponsibility of complaints construed into reflections upon Alger's manage- ment will not affect his title. It will only serve to make him the head and front of the offending and make it easier for him to do all the explaining properly and aid his popularity with- out injuring the administration. When Dick leaves Washington again the whole question probably will have been settled, the patronage decided and other little private matters arranged which could not well be trusted to mail or cable. ‘What will become of Lee is another question. He had his own place as Consul General on plain or practical American lines without regard to party, and when placed in command of the large camp at Jacksonville proved himself equally capable. The sanitary arrangements are per- fect and the rules strictly enforced. The city is guarded against disorderly invasion. The sick are cared for at a ADVERTISEMENTS. HothVeather Takes your strength. You lose your &p- petite, feel dull and weak and every movement {s an effort. Hood's Sarsa- parilla will help you. It will tone your stomach, create an appetite and rouse and strengthen your digestive powers, Try a bottle. It will brace you up won- dertully. Sarsa- HOOd,S parilla Is America’'s Greatest Medicine. $1; si. for 35. Prepared only by C. E Hood-: Co., Lowell, Mass. HOOD’S PLLLS are the favorite cathartic. 250 Pug Noses, Hump, Flat, Broken, Ill-shaped Noses made to harmonize with the other feat- ures. Operations painless. Consultation free. Charges moderate. Dermatologist JOHN' H. WOODBURY, 127 West Forty-second st., New York. Send for illustrated book. hospital at a health resort some dis- tance away, and the men from all over the country are devoted to their leader. He has made no mistake of word or | deed, and it will be very hard for the administration to shelve him. Even Bryan’s ‘presence in the camp has not | produced complications or dimmed | Lee’s leadership. | The plan may be to give Lee aposition |in Havana with Shafter in general con- | trol ,and then there mav be another | story. In'the meantime the various | commands assigned to Lee have fought | off being detached for any sort of duty. They all expect that he and they will be sent to Cuba within the next three weeks and they will all go with him, | fever or no fever. LEE TC COMMAND THE GARRISONS IN CUBA NEW YORK, Aug. 13.—The Washing- ton correspondent of the Herald tele- graphs: Major General Fitzhugh Lee has been ordered from Jacksonville to ‘Washington. I am informed that he will be made one of the military com- missioners of Cuba. I am informed, moreover, that he will be in command of the garrison of the Department of Cuba, with troops to be designated later, and will be sent to Cuba as soon as sanitary conditions permit. PRESS OF PARIS BELIEVES WAR IS -CLOSE AT HAND Opinion General England W That Russia and ill Measure Swords. France Entertains the Idea That America Will Lend Armed Support to Great Britain. | Spectal Cable to The Call and the New York Herald. Copyrighted, 135, by James Gor- don Bennett. PARIS, Aug. 13.—As to the situation in the far east, there is a tone of satis- faction noticeable in such papers as comment upon this matter because England has apparently received a check. The trouble in the east is in fact the dominant note in the French press now that the Spanish-American war is sinking into the background for the time being. Most French papers devote their leading articles to the situation in China, and there is but one opinion—namely, that Russia and Eng- land will measure swords before long. Both countries are getting themselves into positions whence it will be impos- sible for them to withdraw or go for- ward, and that means war. The Soleil is one of the serious roy- alist papers here. Its leading article on Thursday put French opinion in a very ‘decided form. This article is headed “The Giant.” Its subject is the extraordinary growth of the United States foreign commerce during the year that closed July 1. “This enormous increase over last year,” says the Soliel, “shows that war has not prevented the expansion of the United States. war is only a prelude to the tragedy that is going to be played upon the in- ternational stage, in which the United States will have the principal role. Spain_ is the first obstacle the United States has encountered upon the road to their development. They have swept it away with as much ease as a cat would kill a mouse. We believe: the | ominous cloud that is moving across | from the Philippines seems about to break in the far east.” In fact, most of the papers here ap- pear to think a conflict is inevitable. Although not always openly expressed, underlying most of the comment it is plain there is an idea that the Eng- lish and the Americans will stand shoulder to shoulder in any complica- tion that may arise in China. ot e IMPERIAL CUSTOMS Y UNDER RUSSIAN CONTROL LONDON, Aug. 13.—A special from Shanghai, received here to-day, says: The China Gazette states that the Rus- sian Government holds Li_ Hung On the contrary this ) Chang’s promise, made during his visit to St. Petersburg, that China would place the imperial customs under Rus- sian control whenever the interests of the two countries demanded the change. Li Hung Chang is said to favor M. Pavloff, the Russian Charge d'Affaires, superseding Sir Robert Hart as inspec- tor generalpof the Chinese customs. Russians have obtained control of large tracts of land along the route of the proposed new Chwang Railroad. ENEMY’S BATTERY QUICKLY SILENCED Spaniards Driven From Asomanta, One American Being Killed in the Fight. WASHINGTON, Aug. 13.—Adjutant Corbin to-night received the following ca- "E, Aug. 13.—General Wilson re- ports Major Lancaster with Potts at 1: p. m., 12th inst., quickly silenced enemy’s battery at Asomanta, near Aibonito, and drove him from his position and rifle pits; no infantry fire on our part. Lieutenant John P. Haines, Fourth Artillery, struck by stray Mauser bullet—not seriously. A shell from enem gun burst just over one of our pickets, killing Corporal Swan- sen: wounding Corporal Jenks, Company I consin, neck and arm; Pri- vate Vought, same company, seriously wounded 'In abdomen; Private Coe, same company, wounded in chest, seriously. “MILES.” i e HOW TO DEAL WITH THE INSURGENTS Instructions Sent to the Governors of Porto Rico and the Phil- ippines. MADRID, Aug. 13.—The Government to-night telegraphed to the Governors General of Porto Rico and the Philip- pines instructions for carrying out the terms of the protocol signed by the Uni- ted States and Spain, and to prepare for evacuation. Instructions were also sent covering the policy to be adopted in the event of ‘the insurgents refusing to ob- serve the armistice. R Officers Who Are Tired of Soldiering. WASHINGTON, Aug. 13.—The follow- ing officers have resigned: W. K, Nay lor, Fourteenth Minnesota Infantry; Se ond Lieutenant E. D. Elston, Missouri Infantry; Second Lieutenant W. C. 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