The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 14, 1898, Page 8

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AUGUST 14, 1898 ADVERJISEMENTS. AGUINALDO WAS BUT A PUPPET IN | MAN HANDS GER Admiral Bpectal Correspondence of The Call. CAVITE ARSENAL, July 9.—This _quaint old port, the most important --prize to Admiral Dewey’s prowess, is in full po: sion of the first American expeditionary army under General An- We are waiting, as near- 1y as I can gather, for the second expedition. How soon that will come no man knows, but its arrival is looked for daily.. The insurgents, under Gen- Aguinaldo, are not - aiting—or at events ¢ they are not. I had it from an officer of the staff of the “Dictator of the Republic of Philippines,” for so my cables will have yrmed you he has proclaimed him- , that the insur s are being con- centrated for a general assault on the S h lines of defe: 10-morrow. do most of their fighting at t means an assault at, say 4 inday morning. derson. eral all t0-d al Dew would stop it, as he could easily enough, if he believed there was danger of success. The truth of the matter is Aguinaldo has been playing fast and loose with the Americans, and.he has been and is being abetted in this by the Germans. | Their purpose— the purpose of the mans—in this is plain. They would 5 re nothing better than for the in- surgents take and loot Manila in order that the inability of a small force of Americans to protect lives and prop- erty in the town, and in order that the intervention I do not be- necessity for for niight become app: ign t. - lieve Americans here would be found wanting, nor do I believe, as I fore, that Dewey would fail any 1 he failed at Cavite to up- and order. General Ande: 1 miral both understand their They will keep order, and if second ~ American expedition s he with the Monterey before Spanish fleet ge in from Cadiz. will be taken in good time. would surrender now if nderson would take the re- of protecting them. | > been a number of parties s to reconnoiter the in- the Manila The S ion. I have been out sev- but have seen little more sultory fi The in- st hospitable. They in- all eat with them when- ‘Urged by the Kaiser’'s Officers to Attempt Treachery to | the patients reaching 104 degree Dewey. of California boys went swimming yes- terday and were badly stung by a spc- cles of large jellyfish. Nobody was | badly hurt, and the stopped that amusement now. SOL N. SHERIDAN. AGUINALDO A CLOWN, HIS WEN RUFFIANS Are Cruel to Captured Women and Have Not the Sense of the | American Indian. WITH THE EXPEDITIONARY | FORCE AT FORT SAINT FRANCIS. | Cavite, July 7.—To-day news as late as July 1 has reached us from the outside | world. Everything is in atu quo. Stores are still being landed and gen- eral policing of the arsenal continues unabated in energy. The quarters are gradually presenting a cleanly appear ance, and drains are being built to car. ry off surplus tater. The rainfall i heavy, although without wind or much change in temperature. The men are | experiencing certain difficulties which change of climate has brousht about In the Second Oregon Regiment at sick | call this morning a long line of men was waiting for treatment. The pre- vailing trouble is diarrhoea, which may turn into dysentery unless properly | treated. There is also a peculiar fever without any attendant symptoms be- yond a very high temperature, some of with a strong bounding pulse. This is treat- ed medicinally, but the best remedy found so far has been continual spong- ing with cool water. With each abdom- inal bandage the Red Cross Society is- sued a small circular setting forth that mangos might be eaten with impunity. The harm that this advice has done may easily be guessed when we can see the results of mango eating in a fever called in Hongkong “mango fe- ver,” and by the eruptions and boils on the men caused by the same fruit. com- had The number of men sick are few paratively, but there might be le: it not been for the advice of a ph cian, who parts his name and hair in the middle. Any native will tell vou that mangos bring boils and eruptions and that until a foreigner h: been here three months or more and thor- oughly acclimated he must not touch this fruit. The native Filipino is much a Malay, doctors have | t American outposts, in the midst of bamboo forests, in the thatched hut of these measly, serawny natives, I have found the pianos, fine mirrors and the carved walnut bedsteads that Ameri- can curio seekers would give hundreds With an intense hatred of the native looted his church isoned the priest or shot him, but still clings to the old faith. You will meet but few without the scapular of his patron saint, some with ‘two. Douviers, one of Aguinaldo’s lieuten- ants, who told me of fourteen of the ts being shot, sald that there was a great difference between the religion and the man sent out to the Philippines to_teach it. Skirmishing goes on Aguinaldo and the r»anish prisoners riving. This is not y. reason of brilllant feats of arms but more ' by reason of hunge! Since Dewey interfered with Aguinaldo in behalf of better food the Spaniards have been faring better than ever they did in their own army, At 5 oclock I can hear desultory firing going on in the town. Aguinaldo is be- n one and one-half miles of Man- led town. From Mr. Allison, h gentleman, who yesterday sought the protection of the English Consul and who has dwelt in Manila a long time, I learn that the Spaniards >d all of the trees on the . called the Luneta, and led collection of tropical S gardens. They ave planted sharp bamboo palings for pace of ten feet wide inside of the lls, with the points upward, and have dug a trench inside of the bamboo lings at a distance of ten feet. These daily between Spaniards, and are continually brought about b ainst an attack by A are worthy of that doughty Chinese warrior, Mr. Confu- but have no place in modern war- Flour is $27 a sack and meat and r necessities correspondingly high. condition prevails, when Au- i might ly make an honorable and claim the protection of » soldiery. If Aguinaldo fore the arival of the American réinforcements therc will be loot and pillage, hment and cruelty. Then the black eves of the Filipin ative the bo: ciu o will snap and he will use the knife of will make good ears! Unjust treatment has bred r: ous hate. and the sins of their forefathers will be visited upon d. aniard! sti is quoted as saying that th » of the big German fleet re- him of “the cormorant waiting he death in order to pick the and he | has been a decided cooling of ‘tions of these quondam friends | has become known that Ger- | -oaling station as the on. Germany is play- | ing a double e, giving advies to Aguinalde and. coquetting with Au- gusti. The German admiral's ;launch has | been to and .fro between insurgent | headquarters and the German fleet | many tim nce our arrival. The Ger- | opship Darmstadt with soldiers | ‘ted soon. ~The German are the Kaiserin Au- Wilhelmina and’ Kai- P gu ta, ser and three or four smaller vessels. | | | while the Deutscherland and Gefer are pected. The Kaiserin Augusta is -a | splendid vessel, not quite so speedy as | the Baltimore or Olympia nor as pow- | erful as either of these or the Boston or | called some five hundred men from | the field, and the city of Cavite is pre- senting a more animated appearance than usual. A large number of the “marina,” or naval force, came in also. These men look more like Japs than anything else and make a generally better appearance than the land forces. The Filipinos generally are moving back into the cities from which the bombardment and the fear of the Span- iards 'had driven them. The Ameri- can soldiers are behaving much better than might be expected. Some are | drinking the native gin, which is rank poison, and some few have misbe- haved, but this is rare. The Ameri- cans look with wonder upon the little natives and the natives look upon our soldiers with like curiosity. An Ameri- can troop of cavalry with American horses would be the wonder of the age. The only horse here is a sturdy little animal about the size of an ordinary Shetland pony, but thinner and stronger. One of them will pull a cal- esha, as they call the native carriage, with a load of four men and a driver, the combined weight exceeding his four times. The long wail of taps has sound- ed long ago, and 1 am tired and sleepy, and in these latitudes it is necessary to observe strictly the hours of rest. SOL N. SHERIDAN. SICK REPORTS SHOW MARKED IMPROVEMENT Six Men Discharged at the Cavite Hospital Where Four Are Received. | FORT BAINT FRANCIS, C’AVITE," July 8.—The sick reports of the brigade | to-day show. a marked improvement. | ‘Where six men are discharged four are | taken in. This is gratifying to the| overworked physicians, who have been | unremitting in their efforts with the men. It may also be due to the fact that there is not near so mu-h fatigue duty being done and that the trans- ports are all unloaded. All loading or unloading is done by lighters, or “cas- cols.” The transports are still here waiting ballast. Lieutenant McCaine, U. 8. A, yesterday in company with some newspaper men and ten privates of the Fourteenth, made a recon- naissance, in the direction of Manila, to the insurgent outposts. From what 1 can learn the statements of Mr. Alli- son are borne out completely. Agui- naldo has the Spanish cooped up in the city, but owing to different reasons, he will never be able, without assitance, to take the town. It is given out by some of his staff that he will attempt a general attack on the town Sunday, but this is pooh-poohed by our naval men. The monotony of. garrison days is va- ried by the occasional booming of guns in the bay as foreign warships arrive and depart, and the night alarm when an occasional prowler is fired upon. There is great activity in the shops of the insurgents, cartridges are being repolished, ammunition for cannon is| being fixed. Cannon that the Spaniards had spiked on their departure are being repaired and the machinery is hum- ming. The Filipino is clever at almost any trade and does not appear to be as lazy as most South Sea people. The women do nearly all of the heavier ordinary daily labor, such as agricul- ture work or the carrying of heavy par- cels. They are also the financial mana- gers. They present a quaint and pic- P P O U S U R S U S S S Seaaaman o asha oo + CEVERA LIONIZED BY THE BOSTONESE. BOSTON, Aug. 13. — Admiral Cervera of the Spanish navy and his suite of officers passed through Boston to-day en route to Portsmouth, N. H., to visit the prisoners who formerly manned the admiral’s ships. The officers accompanying Admiral Cervera were Paymaster Edu- ardo Uriapilleta, Lieutenant Cer- vera, the admiral’s son, and Ju- nior Lieutenant Marcia Diaz. Almost every step of the Span- ish admiral was attended by a throng who cheered, applauded and even patted the old gentle- man on the back. At the Union station several thousand persons gathered and when Admiral Cervera came out of the dining-room hundreds rushed at him like football play- ers. They seized his hand and shouted and cheered until the rotunda echoed. All through the ordeal he smiled pleasantly and bowed, tipping his hat to the throng. With great difficulty he reached his train. 3 R R R R R e R s WHITELAW REID MAY SUCCEED SECRETARY DAY Indications Point to His Selection as the Head of the State Depart- ment. NEW YORK, Aug. 13—The Wash- ington correspondent of the Herald telegraphs: When Secretary of State Day is appointed a member of the com- mission which will determine the final disposition of the Philippines and ne- gotiate the treaty of peace with Spain, he will, as has been stated in the Her- ald, definitely retire from the Cabinet. In view of the certainty that there will be an early vacancy at the head of the State Department, President Mc- Kinley is giving attention to the ques- tion of Secretary Day's successor at the same time that he is considering whom he shall appoint as other members of the peace commission. Embassador Hay, I understand. is being seriously considered for the plgce, but indications to-night point strongly to the selection of Mr. Whitelaw Reid. Mr. Reid’s fa- miliaritv with public affairs and his wide experience would qualify him for the place, and he has also the advan- tage of sufficient wealth to enable him to entertain on a scale commensurate with the dignity of the head of a de- partment charged with the conduct of the foreign relations of the Govern- D R R R R e e s ment. NEW YORK, Aug. 13.—A dispatch to the Herald from (‘,hatmnnnfa, Tenn., says: Secretary of State Day will be appointed United States Judge for the Sixth Cir- cult as soon as he resigns from the Cab- inet at the close of the war. This was learned on the most trustworthy author- ity here to-day. The Spanish steamship Leonora, which successfuly hid from the American guns throughout the war, has been chartered to transport part of the Spanish troops from Santiago to Spain. The Leonora remained in hiding in Kingston while the American vessels were patrolling West Indian waters. She has already proceeded to Santigo, and will leave for Spain on Saturday morning. The Red Cross steamship Wanderer arrived here from Santiago to-day. Persons on board report that the con- quered city is quiet, healthy and clean. - = WHAT THE WAR HAS COST US. Expenditures Amount to One Hun- dred and Fifty Million Dol- lars Up to Date. WASHINGTON, Au~ 13.—Although the war with Spain lasted only 114 days it is estimated that it has cost the Gov- ernment so far $150,000,000, of which $98,000,000 has been actually paid out of the treasury. Beginning with March 1, when the first increases in the expen- ditures in anticipati.n of war became apparent in the daily cost to the treas- sury, the actual disbursements of this account have been, approximately, as follows: March—Army $€00,000; navy, $2,400,000; total $3,000,000. April—Army, $1,200,000; navy, $9,800,000; total, $11,000,000. May—Army. $12,000,000; total, $19,000,000. $16,500,000; navy, $7,000,000; $6,500,000; total, $35,000,000. To August 13—Army, $5,500,000; navy, $1,- 500,000; total, $7,000,000. Total charged to War Department, 365,~ 1300,000; total charged to Navy Department, $32,700,000; grand total, $98,000,000. The appropriations made by Con- gress on account of the w. aggregated about $360,000,000 and cover the time to January 1, 1898. BRIXHAM BRINGS NO GOLD. No Foundation for Reports of Star- vation at St. Michael. SEATTLE, Aug. 13.—The steamer Brix- ham arrived to-day from St. Michael. She had but a few passengers and no gold. Officers of the Brixham report an im- provement in the conditions at St. Michael. Reports of starvation at St. Michael are said to be without founda- navy, na ion. The Dusty Diamond Company of Chi- cago had about completed its river Loat and_was ready to start up the Yukon. On July 14 the river steamer Mabel Lane, which was being towed from Dutch Harbor to St. Michael by the steamer South Portland, was lost. There were 13 people aboard her. They were rescned by the South Portland. The Mabel Lane was owned by Lane R. Clark of Chicago. The steamer Grace Dollar, from Kot- zebue Sound to Seattle, left St. Michael two days before the Brixham. She has not arrived here. The Brixham, while at St. Michael, was obliged to purchase a stock of provisions from the North American Trading Com- pany, glving in payment a bottomry bond for $1000. Upon her arrival to-day she was libeled for the amount. SEVENTEEN LIVES LOST. Houses Swept Away by a Cloudburst in Tennessee. NASHVILLE, Tenn., Aug. 13.—A spe- cial to the Banner from Knoxville, Tenn., | says: News has just reached here that a | cloudburst has occurred at Beech Creek, |a remote locality in Hawkins County, i ARPETS CHEAPER THAN EVER! American LINOLEUMS A Specialty. WINDOW SHADES MADE TO ORDER, CURTAINS LACE, 3 yds long. ... ...50c pair A pretty bedroom curtain. Ruffle Edge, muslin. . . . $1.28 pair CHENILLE and TAPESTRY CURTAINS. Schineter & Volherg, 709 MARKET STREET, Next to Call Building. Crepe Paper SPECIAL for this week. 10-ft. rolls, e IOC all colors BISQUE VASES, Decorated. 8-in, 75c; 10-in., $1.25 BOHEMIAN GLASS VASES........... S ssads .from 10¢ up WILL & FINCK CO., 820 Market Street. STATEMENT —OF THE— CONDITION AND AFFAIRS —OF THE— MAGDEBURG FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY ON THE F MAGDEBURG, GERMAN the Filipinos have advanced and so Ller- rified the Spaniards that little can be _dome them. | he California boys keep in bet- ter health than the Oregon regi- ment. There is little sickness, .and none of it serious. For . the most part it is a diarrhea caused by bad water and fresh fruit. But the Califor- nia boys have been given less liberty ‘than the Oregonians. Their officers do not permit the men to frequent the town very much, and men who stay out of the town do not get into serlous trouble. here will be no serious fight- ing until the next expedition arrives. and even then, as I said before, there will be no fight put up by the Spanish. It is the pacification of the insurgents that will give the boys trouble here. .The Filipinos, however you may despise him for his small stature . and bad blood, will fight, and fight hard. Also he will live and thrive where pestilence will kill the heavier American, whom he looks up to with awe and calls “Un grande soldado.” By the way, I forgot to say that a lot HOITT'S SCHOOL FOR BOYS—LIMITED). Large corps of teachers. Superior home ac- commodations, Next term opens August 9, s IRA G. HOITT, Ph. D, Principal. MISS WEST'S SCHOOL FOR GIRLS, 2014 Van Ness ave.; cpens August 15. Certi- ficate admits to sar, Wellesley and Smith colleges. Accredited to the University of Cali- fornia. Kindergarten in connection with the | school . Number of house pupils limited. " THE HAMLIN SCHOOL (Van Ness Seminary), 1849 Jackson st., 8. F. Term opens August 4. Departments ° school work_trom’ Kindergarten to College Prepara ON. tory Course. Address MISS SARA LIN, MRS. EDNA SNELL POULS( | IRVING INSTITUTE. | EBelect boarding and day school for yom;l ‘Jadies. 2126 California st., San Francisco. Wijl | Teopen August 1. Accredited to universities. | Seminary and full conservatory musie. Pri- mary department for children. Ci will call. REV. EDWARD B. CHURCH. A. M. A—THE LYCEUM PREPARATORY SCHOOL '—This school prepares students for the uni- Tersity, law and medical colleges; its grad- uates are admitted without examination to Stanford University and Cooper College on recommendation of the principal; references, gala'm Jordan or any Stanford professor. elan building, P | charge of the party making the arrest | call the native boat. | ful to a degree, | amount of romance in their make-up in the sixties. Aguinald> has ous staff, some of whom can speak English, and who strut around as if they were upon the staff of a real gen- eral and a real army. General Agui- naldo, by the grace of Uncle Sam. is an ostentatious individual and full of im- | portance, who signs himself *“Gobier- nador Dictatorial,” and his name ‘‘the August Dictator”! So reaa passes through his lines, and this mimic fanfaronade of war continues day * in and out, | keeps from seven thousand to ten thousand Spaniards cooped up in ia- nila, and it will continue until the sec- | ond expedition reaches here from the States, and then the farce will end. Then General Merritt will have to ‘urn in and teach these islanders that the | capture and detention of non-combar- | ants and the loot of cities and villages is not modern warfare. Nor is if hu- mane or right to take delicately nur- tured women and children and walk them for miles through mud and mire in slinnered feet and calico gowns. Thig |8 what I saw yesterday when a haciendero named Arrivas was brought in as a prisoner with his two sons and wife and four daughters. The mother of the family was a fine abpear- ing woman of hetween 40 and 45 years. The daughters ranged from 15 to 22 years of age. I found them near the Oregonfan quarters in a pelting rain, awaiting the pleasure of the mestizo Filipinos guard to move on. Colonel Summers of the Oregonians. than whom no more courteous gentleman lves, ascertained their condition and | breakfast was prepared in the officers’ mess and the family invited in. I had the pleasure of conversing with the olq | gentleman and found that he was a| planter, inoffensive, holding no com- munication with either side. He ex- plained that the insurgent officer in took him, as he said, because he had room on one of his “cascos,” as they One of the young | ladies showed me the marks on her arms wheré she had fallen on a shinely road, shoved by the guard when she stopped to tle a refractory slipper. Colonel Summers tried hard to do something to alleviate the misfortune | of these innocents, but the lieutenant in charge was obhdurate and the poor | woman had to trudge along in the rear | of the long column of prisoners. Tt was | a heart-breaking sight. There are not many flliterates in this community; nearly all the natives can | read. They are shrewd and cunning | and have enough of the Spanish in | them to be unreliable. They are boast- | and have a certain that makes them moat interesting. They are looters from the-start to fin- | ish. It seems to be a trade. They cleaned cut Cavite as if every party | had been granted the right to remove property to which they had no right | whatever. 'Six or eight miles from the | is massing some ten thousand men to- | chant ships whenever the opportunity the American Government should have P R R R R R R T T T T T T 1 TP CU U dignified - this individual Aguinaldo with more powers than a Cheyenne chief i ‘nderstanding. “’ilhi and his make-up of | pt trousers and bare feet. his nd green helmet and straw hats, nsurgent soldier is an appalling | spectacle. The only thing that I can compare the insurgent army uniform to is the novel brown canvas uniform of our own soldiers. At nearly a mile distance apart.gieng the roads there| are small outposts of the insurgents. At each of these is a sergeant or other non-commissioned officer in charge of en or.eight men. As a result of my ursions T should say that Aguinaldo black the e ward Manila, and that the country is not difficult to travel over as had been reported by natives and journalists who had been. over the ground; that the climate is not near so difficult to| live in as people suppose; that a| white may live here and never need a | rhysician if he exercise ordinary clean- | liness, takes his siesta regularly ar@ | abjures strong drink. The lesson of taking a siesta and leaving stimulants | alone is one that will never be learned | by the Anglo-Saxon or American un- til there have been a number of deaths. The Zafiro dispatch-boat came in this afternoon and we have news of a bat- tle at Santiago de Cuba, in which 600 to 1000 men were killed on the American | side, and stated officially to be a drawn | battle. This has cast a géneral gloom over the camp, and the additional news that 4000 Spaniards were killed is no comfort. It is a nasty, drizzly even- ing, and there is no air stirring, and although it is not very warm the air is oppresgive. The searchlights are flashing very uneasily, and the Olym- pia keeps one light persistently pointed award. Tt is one of those nights when the saueak of a shoe or the hoot of the midnight cuckoo is startiing. The friendship of the English has been manifested by cheering from mer- | | presented itself, and the English ell me that on the departure cf the Amoricen vessels from Hongkong the cheers from the English wai vessals were deafening. The Hongkoug Mail breaks out as follows with doggerel five verses long: THF ENGLISH-AMERICAN HYMN, God bless the whole wide earth, The land that gave us birth, vhere we dwell, ith- our. heart's content, May life in peace hé spent; God save our, President: Lét anthems swell! And the comieal genius again gets in | his work as follows: The bos'n was a-sittin’ by the raflin’ near the bow. A talkin’ to his shipmates an’ a savin’ to ‘em ‘ow. “We needed just a Farragut In this ‘ere bloomin’ row.’” An' ‘the gunner's mate said, what- cher think?" . This morning . the “Dewey, insurgents -re- | The men who say it cured them of general debility, of wasting weak- ness; the men who have become strong and vigorous by following Dr. Sanden’s advice, are the best evidence of the worth of his system. There are thousands of them, and they speak aloud in praise of Dr. His work is noble—it is grand—because it lifts men from s ) Sanden and his noble work. despondency, it gives them hope, ambition, strength of mind and body—makes them love life for the pleasure of living. There must be something in a system of treatment that can show such cures as these: AN ENGINEER CURED. CURED OF PARALYSIS. San Francisco, August 10, 1898. San Francisco, Au, 10, 1898. DR. SANDEN—Dear Sir: I am wiiling to testify to the DR. SANDEN—Dear Sir: I am more than pleased to benefit I have received from following vour advice and | be able to report satisfactory results from the use of your from the use of your “Dr. Sanden's Electric Belt.” I am | “Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt,” which I purchased from you an engineér on the Southern Pacific Rallroad, and have | some two months ago. I had been suffering greatly with suffered for several years with lumbago, dizziness, faint | Paralysis of the right side, which made it almost impossi- 4 and blind spells and & general broken-down feeling, which | ble for me to do any kind of work, my right arm being al- made it almost impossible for me to make my run, which | most useless. I commenced wearing vour Belt as you ad- i one of the longest on the road. I was advised to try one | vised, following vour directions carefully, and after wear- 4+ of vour Belts, and did so, purchasing the one you recom- | Ing it a short fime began to notice a change in my side. I mended for my troubles. In two months' time the Belt | continued to improve dally, and can now truthfully say 4 completely cured me of all my troubles, and I can now | that the ramly:ls has entirely disappeared from my side 4 make my run with the greatest ease and comfort; in fact | and have full use of my arm. 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SANDEN’S ELECTRIC BELT + + e + + 9 + + + + + + + & + - + - > + + ‘s + + + + + + + + + o 3 > Is a grand remedy for all weakness in men. It assists Nature by a general reinforcement of vital energy by infusing a mild, warming, invigorating current of electrieity into the nerves, and by supplying the system with the very essence of nerve vigor and nerve strength. ARE YOU THE MAN YOU SHOULD BE ? Study yourself. Weakness in the vital organs is unnatural in all men. It is due to improper care of the functions endowed by nature with perfect vigor, and since nature gives this strength, if it has been wasted, she must be called upon to renew it. Natural remedies must be used. Nothing bears a closer relation to the elements of vital and nerve force than electicity. It is natural. It is nature embodied in a portable, con- venient and effective appliance when Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt is used. It Is as good for women as for mén DR. 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AR 0 o 2 8 20 20 S o S S S S S S S o S S S R S S SR SR TR SR TR SR SR S SR SR S S S SN S S S UI U + you stop at a house, and every-|a good deal a Chinese and more of a | Charle ar = X S < @ a on to gu or armament. v —_—— v they have is at your disposition. | Jap, with more or less Spanish mez The ish are the cruisers I | turesque appearance as they come to = 31st day of December, A. D. and for : 81 TauE . : 5 S ss S : ritish are the c s Immor- | {5 = 5 nearly twenty miles from Rogersville. | the year ending on that day, as made to the bl lpf‘““{’"” ness thrown in. After seeing the m talite and -the Bonaventure, with the | 1OWD Of the “1':’}"‘}‘ i.g’f’;s‘;‘ ’;‘\";;‘: ‘jy";‘;. FROM ARTFUL DODGER Seventeen persons lost thelr lives, Thir- | Insusance Commissloner of the State of Call- constructed, of matted bamboo, about | really beautiful Hawalian men Barfleur -and Iphigenia coming. The | & Pannier on efther side an moensel TO TRANSPORT |'teen bodies have been recovered. The | fornla, pursuant to the provisions of sections eight feet high, four feet wide at the | women and being suddenly thrown into | French cruisers are the Bruix, the Pas.| Wicker hat. The horse is almost lost SHIP | dead were members of poor families. The | 610 ana 611 of the Political Code, condensed as top -and ht feet at the base, and filled | contact with the Filipinos, the com- i i there wo Ja. to sight. To-day is bright and sunny, | = | cabins in a narrow valley were swept | Per blank furnished by the commissioner. Cwith On the interior side about | parison is odious. The me: cal and Bayard, and there are two Jab- | yih°a eool wind blowing. An ideal|Spanish Steamer Which Eluded | away in the flood following the cloud-| \mount of capital stock, paid up in four fect from the top is a narrow fir- | small, lithe and muscular; he is val men that British have the strongest | 42¥- SOL N. SHERIDAN. Sampson’s Guns Will Carry St B cash .. Ry ~ee §750,000 00 -{f“A\ platform. Th K_h‘%;\v *l:fld :‘ilg;: faced and bullet-headed. None of the fleet , not excepting the Americans. | ,a . .. made on furniture and planos, with Troops to Spain. Kee Y ork Deniooontic Comwention ASSETS. 2d Axlm . ar advance l’a'd‘ 1y | women are even good looking. They This enfarced idleness is giving the | “Gihoue removal. J. Noonan, 1017-1023 Mission. | Epecial Cable to The Call and the New York | SARATOGA, N. Y., Aug. 13.—The D Real estate owned by company. $415,353 75 t.d.l )\\l ‘M'l .num.»s‘?r;‘m‘x ‘\v:l- have very expressive eyes, and the | correspondent f whom there are| Herald. Copyrighted, 1898, by James Gor- | ooratic State Committee has decid d”:" Loans on bonds and mortgage: - 1,155,675 31 an bk e ording to the | younger ones have good white teeth. | many, a chance to-study the country. I :The first envelope evér made isin the don Bennett. St e e e e B e e L e S o b % ST have and that’s all. There are no fat peovle | have been in two directions for about | possession of the British Museum. PORT ANTONTO, Jamaica, Aug. 13.— | Wednesday, September 2% < Amount of loans secured by piedge . . . . Fthe S R s Bt iy Dere. It s amusing to fee the Fillpl- |six milel tdward Masitle énd away from| of bonds, stocks and other market- th S A nos when they are at rest, squatted on | cavite, and found it a low flat country | = — = TR Cable‘ securtiiess as (;:ll:remx. - 1;\)./\(:3_ % r Mansiie HeA v aa ;‘a‘nf"f[ ‘e:‘:ir’:l‘f”‘;“fil"‘:‘hflf"gfw‘e“ u‘y"‘;_ and bamboo Tlht- Immb;)o hns St e - Tnterest due and “acorued on all | " o ik ! v, y ha £1¥ | almost impenetrable in places a el stocks and loans.. ... 10,2607 been some sign of life | black teeth as a result. e ',‘l‘u,“{"lgh_;( SANA e | L 444444444334+ 4P P L P4+ P4+ 4444444444444+ 44444 | Promiums in due course’ of collec- niards behind an in-| The towns of Cavite, Carrido, old | yosphere is muggy and damp and the 42| tons s vevne.ot 316,377 60 ., and that the w “avi i OSpRere I8 IIUREY L P Due from other companies for re- ; e whole | Cavite and San Roque are in on e odor of insurance . line has opened fire. | proximity to Cavite itself. They are quite op- [ been an insurgent | Jajd out in blocks, same as cur Ameri- < s bloom Total assets. . maynoL. But you can | can cities, with bat narrow alleys as|that measure inches LIABILITIE: that if a Spaniard has ects. They are ill smelllng and ex- | go There are many beautiful yel- Losses adjusted and unpaid....... A rafi:?;e:’{x ‘?x:grfixl:l:: ceedingly 1rying to any cne who oms whose names I do not : ' l,o;:ue:u;?:;\::ce.s! of adjustment or SRS A T Parain[beeniizught ihst cleanliness SIsgnext iumiywos (NGl re THxkShutleclien My Losses resisted, P ; 2 his machete. The adyance|to godliness. Whenever any one has | have feathery wings that glve them the penses . % le as the advance |slops he knows not what to do with, the | gneq e of birds. This i ensely Gross premiums on fire risks run- Ons Il e tip ) at to do appearance of birds. This is a densely G pramiGiug o S EEREa " quickly from e i bpleall e e on . ne DRODEES populated district and people are found Two Happy Men, Well-Known Resi- DIk snd e o oo N o i SR el 2 48 not 58 i e mi »f bamboo thickets when o ms on’ isks run- iont he. mhole: vollcyomill e motred)l e BR0 10 mAny hous et emmanied. The. poplation in and dents of San Francisco, Tes- e e ea’ poae vt hen the whole volle . e oured conveniences whatever. In the o = = S 5 surance pro rata.... 250,808 54 : upe e drops, the sh oi e : around Manila must fcot up some 350,- | tif h and X ! e : upon,_him as he drops, the shots going | T aaEre ihe AREd e R T el ot M 'y to the Gr Results Cash_dividends remaining unpai 1125 00 over his heac As the shots whistle | quartered there is an aae = | All other demands against the past the Filipinos will all rise, Tushing | firely cbsolete system of | la_there are some 60,000 people. i Received From pany ... = 219,531 sl e 3 % 2 ks B 2 1% riding through to some o Zui- forward and xfih‘:]‘xl::i 8= they iy | squth gut of repair; still hette [ aay S e by | = Total labilities . $2,559,948 € ac e Spa a S S 2 | none at all. h - S5 ‘ § 3 O: xeah ety ey e, Ly 1] DR. SANDEN'S ELECTRIC BELT s laughter by the lon machetes. How | “The troops (7) of Aguinaldo hold the theacon S B “.Rs} o Net cash actually received for fire OFTot miehes Batdel Tr i faaid ihetpore eropsrol Thipiave droll an American I have been allowed to %o | S e e i thoanisnds wers kiled. And Jhiitp: [o mens O Sullienys (T pip on. [ Dr. Sanden’s method of makin MOTtEAgES ..o . o s )s. 1f the rush does not reach the user, Remington and Spanish | The Filipino reminds me more of our . b g Received for interest 1 panish lines there is another volley The R?m‘:fitonfimd Mauscr American Indian than anything else, | use of the life-giving power of on’ bonds, " stocks, loans and from 5 and another drop. ; 3 while the Spanish and with this eption, that ‘‘poor s 3 SNl . all o 5 iRt 88 and another drop. I¢ Is by these tactics | wau made in Seville Azspnal i ety electricity has proven its merit. 3| Recnived for i 7 Total income # EXPENDITURES. Net amount paid for fire losses (in- cluding $516,851 57, losses of pre- vious years) Dividends to stockholders Pald or allowed for commis 44 charges for officers, ¢ Pald for State, national taxes . 7 All othe tures . 13 Total expenditures Losses incurred during the year..... F. MIETHKE, Vice-President, EMIL RUDOLF BERNDT, Secretary. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 24th h, 1868, day of Mareh, [IENRY N. DEIDERICH, United States Consul at Magdeburs. GUTTE & FRANK, Managers Pacific Coast Departmeat, 303 CALIFORNIA STREET, M “DeRFECT P 4 fiTTING SPECTACLESAEYE GASSES PHICAPPARAT s OPTICIANS FpygrggRA'S e o 642 MARKET ST. INsTRUMENTS uNDER cHROMCLE BuoNG. GATALOGUE FREE W. T. HESS, NOTARY PUBLIC AND ATTORNEY-AT LAW, AKERS OF Tenth Floor, Room 1015, Claus S Bldg. Telephone Brown 931 Residence, 21 California st. below Powell, San Francisco. NEW WESTERN HOTEL, EARNY AND WASHINGTON —RE- g modeled and renovated. KING, % & plan. Rooms S0e to 31 50 day. :inzne:‘w::f.u to $30 month. Free gm% § Crrai every roome; Sré geeies In avecs [ASH 5. BITTER SBETTER-THANP ILLE Wenly Cal 150 o Y

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