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THE N FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1899 " RUDYARD KIPLING NEAR TO DEATH No Improvement in Condition. RALLIES OCCASIONALLY, NOT FOR LONG. BUT WILL BE THE BRIDE GOMEL T0 VISIT THE PRESIDENT | His | Aged Chief Is Coming to Washington. THINKS McKINLEY FAVORS CU- | BAN INDEPENDENCE. | nd the New York by James Gordon I 5.—Maximo Gomez | Washington and erview with Presi- :d by the great and the ablest Amer- ce the civil war. ates of Gomez who held these sentiments F There that he are than a but be that as it may, jomez is open in his regard for Mc-f ley and beli he is earnestly in of dependence for pted to obtain an interview Cuban chieftain on the sub- but found him too much talk. ; authority, how- . being a warm to whom he day. h until the i settles, but he , according to r that April 20.| sident General ill be able to reach nding regarding the fea- ill be of great advantage nown he agreed to ac- pay the troops with that under certain United States would guarantee Cuban bonds for a OF “BOB” BURDETIE P e e e e e *PeD- b4 e TSN O R R = 0 o . ve? "800 lharkel St Cor Granltve d OFarrdS NINTH WEEKLY SPECIAL. FOR... 95c A $1.50 Kid Glove. Ladies’ 2-clasp, all colors. New design embroldery. EVERY PAIR FITTED. | SALE EXTENDED T0 SATURDAY, MARCH 4th, - MAIL ORDERS FILLED. . L 4 . ¢ . + * L4 ® ® * . © s ® - L 4 . ® - B @ . ® * & . | tana, and Smith of { against it by Gorman of Maryland and | 1 | Was due to the food given to the soidiers.” Pa ;s | adverted to some in the nav: OPPOSITION COMPROMISE ARMY BILL IN SENATE ‘Permanent Increase of Regular - Troops Declared by Gorman to Be a Menace to the Country WASHINGTON, Feb. —After two hours devoted to the consideration of bills on the calendar to-day, the Sen- ate at 1 o'clock began the consideration | of the compromise army reorganization | bill. Untit a short time before the mea- sure was taken up it was supposed it would be passed to-day without serious | difficulty, but when it was learned by | some Senators that the bill provided | for a permanent increase in the stand- | ing army objections were heard, and it became evident that the measure would have to run the gauntlet of sharp| criticism. | Gorman (D.) of Maryland declared | that no authorization of a permanent increase should be given, and prepared | an amendment as follows: “That each and every provision of this act shall continue in force until | July 1, 1901, and on and after this date the officers and men, including general | officers and staff officers, shall be re-| stored to rank and numbers as provided | for by law prior to April 1, 1898, except | the cadets appointed prior to July 1, 1901, and except as provided for in the act to authorize two additional regi- | ments of artillery, approved March 8, | 1898.” | Speeches in support of the bill were | delivered by Hawley of Connecticut, | Cockrell of Mi: uri, Carter of Mon- | New Jersey, and Allen of Nebraska. Cockrell, who has consistently op- | posed a large standing army, gave the | pending measure his unequivocal and | urnqualified support, declaring it was | the best army measure ever submitted | to Congress. ~No agreement to vote on | the bill had been reached when the Senate adjourned. | Hawley, chairman of the Military Af-| fairs Committee, called up the compro- mise army reorganization bill. At the conclusion of the reading of the| bill, Gorman of Maryland suggested Hawley the desirability of permitting lhe‘ dal bill to go over to Monday. A on ed that a time| for a_vote rly on hould be agreed upon at this time. “Some effort was made to fix an hour Monday for a , but_without succe Missouri, a member of the airs Com tee, t length the features of the measure. 1 measure,” sald he, *l been examin very carefully. I indorse it because it is | ight, just, proper and nec v set- | for years to come the standing army roversy.” Further along in his analy 4 Cockrell said the increase in the army provided for by the bill was “perfectly Justifiable and absolutely essential. ponse to a question by Vest, he t the army after 1%01 would be re- o 38,400, and that number would be ) take care of the coast fortifi- cations. E In conciusion, Cockrell said: “If we have a bill 1l adjust the army controversy ars to come we ought to accept it not prodigal of the people’s money. 1 have been on sev- eral commissions and committees for the Teorganization of the army. and I believe honestly and conscientiously that this is the very best measure pre: ented to Con-| Eress for settling the army question since | § entered this chamber in 1875. If the bill fails my judgment is that which will] come hereafter will not.be so good for| fhe country. I believe the bill is right in | the sight of God . and I'm willing to take all responsibility for it. 3 . offered an amendment provid- s of the bill, age of hall be appointed as a | field offic: d force (the volunteer force). officers of the regular army ex- cepted.” ¥ % }\ll-\‘n of Nebraska addressed the Senate | in opposition to the general features of | ltrl“.\‘ Slrl‘l He was surprised that Cockrell could give his sanction to such a meas- ure. “if there was a hideous skeleton, a monstrosity, a deformity in legislation, this bill one,” he declared. *It 1is warped, disjointed, dislocated. It lacks ence, it lacks coherence, it lacks good sen I am not concerned in this de- lightful fight now going on between the Secretary of War and the general manding the army. I honor General Mile in that fight. intelligent man in the country belleyes that our army was fed on trash and that a large percentage of the sickness and mortality in the army > o, bles. Allen sing from the army tro He re- | The measure will give him greater power | He predicted a deficiency | He is n who has passed the | @ | garded it as a glorious thing that Admiral + | Pewey had the presence of mind to cut | the cable between himself and Washing- % | ton, and that it was fortunate for Dewey MRS CLARA & couplewi reside k to c | abouts. P e eaeoe@ of the engagement of Robert J. M| sacher, and Mrs. Clara B. @ both are much pleased In t, and is due here % place. He has & | oyterian Church of this ¥ | at his coming has a double Interest to 3 @ circle of friends * inments and sive travel. She 1 at her elegant that attracts a gracious instincts. She Angeles. The coloring, it h Mrs. ving begun when © er has a son in school % udent in 2 Pennsylvania s be here and at Bryn Mawr, Pa., where *| He has found time in the intervals of $ pile a book of his poems soon to be * much larger amount. It is to discuss | these conditions that Gomez desires to | visit the White House. He objects, it is well understood, to continued mili- tary occupation of the island, thoughi | | he ‘might agree to grant a naval sta- | tion in Havana harbor and American occupation of one of two of the prinei- | ’pal land defenses about the city. | ABDUCTED HIS NIECE. ! i ! Aged Washington Man Wrongs a Thirteen-Year-0ld Girl. i CENTRALIA, Wash,, Feb. %.—A man | | named Harris, from near Montesano, was brought here in a wagon to-day and ;:urn‘d over to the Sheriff of Chehalis County, charged with the abduction of his | 13-year-old niece. Harris is over 50 years old and unmarried. The abduction took | place almost a year ago. The arrest was | made in Big Bottom, where Harris has | { been living since October wit who was disguised as a boy. e ey The girl presented a pitiable appear- | ance here, Her hair was cut short and she was dressed in worn-out overalls and heavy shoes. She is well advanced toward | maternity. The parents of the girl were until recently ignorant of her where- Harris appeared Indifferent as to is surroundings. e Death of Colonel Conger. DES MOINES, Iowa, Feb. %.—A. L. | Conger died at 11 o'clock to-night from a stroke of paralysis. He came here about | a year ago from Akron, Ohio, and estab- | lished a college of osteopathy. He was for | eight years a member of the Republican National Committee from Ohio, and served several terms as a member of Con- gress. He was about 70 years old. | detracting anything from the service of | should again be reduced to a peace foot- he was in a position to sever connection with Washington. “Then, too,” said Allen, “we have the controversy over the two rear admirals in the navy. Whether the man who fought the battle resulting in the destruc- tion of Cervera’s fleet and won it shall have the laurels of victory or whether they shall 2o to a man who was ten miles aw :ms a subject of controversy by the Navy Department. “The American people, seventy million of honest hearts and souls, will alway believe that Schley was the hero of t battle, and won that battle, and I am ‘Admiral Sampson, who, if he had been . would have acquitted himself no- This seems to be a game of battle- and shuttlecock, and over in the Navy Department they are shedding more ink than blood.” “It shall not be said of me," said Gor- man, “that I would hamper the adminis- tration In any respect. It shall have all the men and all the money to dispose of he conditions at hand that it may need,” Gorman said that if one proviso were contained in the bill to the effect that at the expiration of two years the army ing of 21,000 men he would agree to it. TO “But whatever the conditions may be,” | he continued, “‘with the acceptance of the proviso I suggest you will have an army of 100,000 men until four months after the | term of President McKinley shall expire. | than a President ever had. It is a tender | of greater power than was ever made inl similar circumstances. Hawley had asked who wes afraid of | the large standing army. In reply Gor-| man said that every State in the Unlon | was afraid of it. He (Gorman) was afraid | of it himself. Such an institution was | contrary to the spirit of our affairs. He | recalled the time when, in 1876, troops | were summoned to Washington at the| time of the Hayes-Tilden controversy. | “I remember the quiet intimidation of | the presence of the troops,” said Gorman. He had great personal respect for Mr. | McKinley and _had no- criticism except | that in his good nature he had permitted | weakness and inefficiency in the depart- ments. “Weakness, 1 say,” repeated the Senator. Time alone could reveal whether | there had been anything else. He was | asked to have confidence in the Chief Ex- | ecutive, but he could not forget that hu- man nature was weak. He computed that for next year the expenditure on account | of the army and navy would aggregate | $369,000,000, greater than the total expendi- | tures of the Government for 1871 to 1876. | of $180,000,00 Then there must be an increase of the d rect taxation or more bonds or certifi- | cates. “Even now I hear that the Secre- | tary of the Treasury is contemplating the issue of more Government obligations.” | Tillman asked if the Philippine rebellion could not be put down by volunteers, and 1(1 Gorman sa!d he saw no reason why should not be. But this was not the d sire. The wish was to have more shoul- | der straps and more men to wear them. | nsignificant as were the achievements of | the army comparatively 4n the Spanish war, there had been appointed as officers in the army more men than had recei such advancement during the first year of the Rebellion, with all the South in| arms. Never were brigadier generals so thick In Washington. There were a suffi- | clent number of them alone to suppress | an ordinary rebellion. Gorman declared | that under the present head of the army | a proper organization of the service could | not be effected. Tillman, interrupting Gorman—Then | there is nothing in the bill to prevent the | eef scan- | recurrence of the embalmed Gorman passed off the question lightly, saying he knew little about it. Tillman—None of us know anything about it, perhaps, but there is so much of it in the air we can smell it. “I do know thi: replied Gorman. “The Secretary of War is a much-abused man. | not responsible for the department in which that scandal originated, a de. partment in which the officers are ap- pointed for life.” { Gorman, in conclusion, made an appeal to the Senate to fix the number of men and the amount of money necessary to meet present exigencies, and both would be given them if only a time limit were placed on the call. If this ggestion of his was refu and the bill forced through Congr: then let the sibility be taken by those who Carter, a member of the Military A fairs Committee, replied to Gorman. He said that e auditor of Gorman, a felicitous and eloguent orator, must have been impressed with the pathetic solicitude of the Maryland Senator for the present Republican national administra- tion. After discussing _the ‘“cry of mili- tarism” .Carter declared: “Militarism comes to us as a necessity, not as a de- | sire. The present conditions were evolved from the war with Spain. That-war was evolved from the sense of outraged hu- | manity for an oppressed and stricken people who desired only freedom and a | chance to breathe in God’s sunlight. That war was not brought into existence a grand crusade of arms.” After discussing at length the result of | the war with Spain, showing how the! Philippines fell into our hands, he asked | if it was desirable to leave theése islands | to float about the Pacific as political dere- | liets. To do that, he declared, would b the national crime of the century. Hav. ing accepted those islands we had under taken also the responsibility for law and | order there. ‘e will first perform,” said he, “the| duty of the hour, and there is not a man W®ho breathes tn’ this chamber to-night | Wwho would be willing to surrender our flag and position to Aguinaldo and his fol- e course of time, Carter believed, on each of these liberated islands the j ple would meet on their national hol 1o celebrate the landing of American troops which brought them freedom. Car- ter estimated the number of men requlredl as 000 for the Philippines, 12,000 for | 15,000 for coast defenses and S.mi for duty at _the various Indlan posts In| the West. This would account for 82000 | men provided for in the bill. and Carter pointed out lha(,{l%e nne-l(\iflh 0!( thlenlt‘o— 2 r of 100,000, according to statls- L tated for duty. Cuba, ~s, would be incapa e rrer. in conclusion, said that the duty | of the hour would be performed in such o manner by the American Government as to call down upon it the benedictions of history. | ‘Smith (D.) of New Jersey in stating his | ons for supporting the bill said ‘that | e Eencral and broad principle he was opposed to a large standing army in or- dinary filrx;]umstan{ceas.‘? 7 e hands o : o P ddent McKinley,” he sald, “a latge standing army may be used o re- press freedom of speech and of the pre Pt mnight be used to sustain large cor- porations in-unlawful combinations. It Pl cause an_ immense expenditure of iblic money. There is no necessity for a | arge standing army viewed from the les- s of the past glorious battles of the S nfeers. 1 will not see the flag dis- placed or the country humiliated through Phy action of mine. Iam a Democrat and Rl always remain so, but I am an ican citizen.” Afign{;gl"l‘cved in giving the President, | while the war continued, all the forces N cessary for its successful prosecution. “Fhe army bill was then laid aside for halGay TAfter passing forty-seven pen- Lion bilis the Senate at 6:35 p. m. ad- Jjourned. scrupulous man POISON IN THE REFRESHMENTS Church Social Patrons Near to Death. Special Dispatch to The Call. SANTA ROSA, Feb. 2.—Sebastopol, | seven miles west of here, was the scene of a wholesale poisoning last night. More than forty persons are seriously affected, and several are even yet in a precarious condition. The poisoning occurred at a church social given by the Epworth League of Pleasant Hill church, at which there was a large attendance. The affair broke up at about 11 o'clock. Two hours later Dr. Benepe was hurriedly summoned to the bedside of a patient who was in convulsions. On the way to the patient’s home he met two other messengers searching for him, and in a few moments Drs. Miller and Hardin, other physicians of the place, were hurrying out in response to urgent calls. Until after daylight this morn- ing the.three doctors worked at high pressure, and they finally brought most | of the patients out of danger. | It is supposed that the refreshments contained poison in some unwholesome | substance, but as vet the authorities have been unable to discover in which dish it was' contained. Icecream, cof- fee and cake were served, and a strange thing about the affair is the fact that guests who ate either of the three suf- fered from the effects. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Fennell are still in a very serious condition, and late re. ports to-night indicate that Mrs. Fen- nell may not recover. Among others who were seriously af- fected are: Mrs. Eliza Veeder Dow, a teacher of the public school; Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Ayers, Samuel Thorsen, El-| mer Thorsen, Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Viola Mills, Mrs. A. Janssen, proprietress of the hotel; Mrs. Robert Hardin, Miss Mary Thompson several memebrs of the Barnett :amfly. the entire family of George Cable, every member of the Elphick household, Roscoe Howard and some twenty others. —_— Sale of Immature Veal. LARKSPUR, Feb. 2%.—For some time certain ranchers living mear here have been killing calves only three or four days old and shipping them to San Franciseo. They are nlY consigned to Wong Sang, 103 Dupont street. The shippers very shrewd- 1y select the 5:05 train from Rafael | on which to send the calves to the wily Chinese, because Market Inspector Ben Davis has _always ' left the by the time they arrive in San Francisco. EOT TEN A WEEK | ““SOLDIERS’ FOR LODKING WISE Testimony of a McCune Henchman. UTAH’S BRIBERY SCANDAL TESTIMONY HEARD BY INVES- TIGATING COMMITTEE. WASHINGTON, Feb. 25.—The House continued work on the army appropri- ation bill to-day, but failed to complete it. Considerable animosity was devel- oped during the debate, and there were sharp passages between Grosyenor and The Accused Senatorial Candidate De- | BLOOD IN PHILIPPINES ON PRESIDENT’S HEAD” Jerry Simpson of Kansas Among Representatives Who Lay the Blame on McKinley. | treason now, he said, to stop and hesi. | tate: as to whether our soldiers should | be defended. He denied that there had been any alliance with Aguinaldo and | said that at the proper time he would produce the record. The first order of | the President after the fall of Manila |8 you claim for it. nies That He Offered Money to Representative Law. had forbidden any and all alliances of | any character with any one. He re- | ferred to Aguinaldo &s a ' alawag “I can say what I desire to in two sentences,” said Cannon (R.) of Illinois, who then got the floor. “If the speeches made here yesterday by Simpson and others had been made yesterday in Ma- nila. they would be arrested, tried by drumhead court-martial and shot. (Re- | Cannon on one hand and Simpson of Kansas and Cochran of Missouri on the other. In the course of the debate Cochran (D.) of Missouri attempted to secure time to answer the statement made on the other side yesterday, that | there was nothing in the nature of an alliance between Aguinaldo and the American forces before the capture of Special Dispatch to The Call. SALT LAKE, Utah, Feb. 25.—The legislative investigating committee ex- LT e al and shiot. (Re- amined ritness -day, | Manila. public: applause : emoc o a numberiof witnemes WsOtvel Fran on | jeers.) The United: States has and among whom were S. X. Christensen, | ull objected. | Will continue to exercise sovereignty in Moses Thatcher, Senator Chambers and| “This is not the first time,” said|the Philippines. If they are obstructed A. W. McCune. | Cochran, ‘“that the majority in the|the power of the whole people as rep- resented by the army and navy will ee to it that our authority is main- tained, and the rocks and mountains will fall upen any individual or any party which seeks to obstruct us.” (Great Republican applause.) 1 Simpson rose to a question of per- sonal privilege to answer the statement of Cannon that if he (Simpson) had made his speech in Manila he would have been court-martialed and shot. closing hours of debate have made challenges and then objected to replies. Their objections are made to cover their retreat.” Hull thereupon withdrew his obje tion, and Cochran proceeded to give what he said was the most important chapter of the war. Upon the testi- mony of thréee American generals he contended that, first, we solicited an alliance; second, that it was solemnly | “ formed. third, that the Filipinos kept | Perhaps this might be so, said Simpson. thelr faith, and, fourth, that we shame- | Qerl‘f}lvel}' *“"1:1"181 h"B“ll e b“l »“‘t">‘§ 3¢ ; fully violated our compact. He referred | Manila is better than to be shot here the deadlock, and that it ought to be| ¢ léhe reports of G’:neral A,fdersm | by an old muzzle-loading brass can- broken. | General Greene and General Merritt to [ non.” . Senator Chambers testified to a con- | prove his assertions of the valuable aid | There was great laughter at Simp- versation with Jacksonm, in which the | rendered by Aguinaldo and the insur- | sor’s pun. He was thankful, he said, latter said he would vote for McCune | 8ents. | that ‘the time had not come when men atter he had canceled his obligations | Cochran also insisted that the money | were shot fof eXpiews 08 ety dhwe e s dloin Dot ne: conly | el foshidxe becti emhesslad by ARUIL He had not, he declared, criticized the ates, ed he aldo (3400,000) had been used in . the | soldiers, for he gloried in their heroism. become convinced that McCune's cam- } purchase of arms and in fighting the | But the blood of those brave soldiers paign was honest. | Spanish. This, he sald, was proven by | from Kansas and elsewhere who had McCune was then called to the wit- | ‘ | Christensen testified that he had been working in the interest of Me- | Cune; that he had received for ser- vices about $10 a week and did not ex-| pect anything further. He said his| duty was principally to see that all the | McCune members were present at the| Joint Assembly, and to look wise. | Thatcher’s testimony related chiefly | to a meeting at his residence between | Rideout, Stewart and McCune. He| thought the talk was generally about | testi y C V' 3 tallen in Mapila was on the head of the hess stand. He Eaid he had nopartic the testimony of Consul Wildman. allen P c : | he h; Lacey (R.) of lowa denounced President as commander in chief of the et L it J[-el?reiemfi“ | other side generally for firing info the | army. 2 : Law until Tuesday of last week. Later | rear of Otis by sounding the praises of | The committee rose at 2 o clock with- he met Law in a restaurant, invited | Aguinaldo and Agoneillo upon the floor |out having completed the army bill and eination abgat & ekter wrine: é")mz; | of the House. took up the special order of eulogies to matfon about; stleiter written {012 [ Groavents ot Ohio puraued ne [ihellals Senston Walthall of Mis- 1A this 1etter wonld };rove e T | subject along the same lines. It was ' sissippi. was elected through church influence | and if they could prove this to him he | would leave Cannon and vote for Me- the . - Works, broke loose from its moorings ves- by my men, but he said: ‘T don’t think| terday. and drifting upon the rocks near it's enough.’ I asked him what he| Cune. Shortly after this he left and Li Point, Wi dashed t iecef saw Law no more until the next Fri-|meant and he answered that he was a | sl‘,{:\fmmg e Notty. dseisted by day. Law wanted to speak to him over | poor man, and he said: 7T will vote for | members of the lifesaving crew at Lime v | you if you will give me $5000." I simply | Point, removed the boilers of the launch the telephone. phone and Law him. McCune said he z could come over to headquarters and Law said: “No, I am watched; they are suspi- cious of me. Can’t you meet me at the W tch drugstore? I think I can vote for you according to my conver- not in- said to him: ‘T won't do anything o val- the kind. I have enough Democratic | votes to win anyway.’ 1 . “When I left the store Law was a | short distance away, talking to the man that has testified here as Bob Fryer. I started across the street and Law overtook me and said: °T think I can| ASHINGTON, Feb. 2.—The Presi- sation with e men, but I want to Eifieflgflz{%?ea;}{h:‘l‘g l_lolt{”(il?m} ge:‘; | dent to-day submitted to the Senate for see you personally.” | E el e call. x - 3 S Moses Thatcher, who was at head- | to headquarters and saw a number of | go“flft'nafi‘"ll é‘(’;e‘ipwl’f;“lfi‘;frfiu;{l E;ye:s quarters, said to me, inasmuch as Law people there. I saw Mr. Dunbar. Hng Jegre Bl’![ Othe "nited‘ S(ates‘ e Bad voted for a Demecrat he might |asked, Is Law going to vote for you? RUaES f° the Sixth Judictal Distri vote for me and I had better see him,” | I said, ‘No, he’s a dirty scrub,’ or some- | Court 0:‘ ‘e ;: . udicial T ric 5 continued McCune. “I went to the | thing of that kind.” ‘T>he nomination is nof ‘a1 SuDrfir‘,lE.fashl drugstore and found Law and asked The committee ad;uumed_ to Monday | \\‘as_undersmod when ) r,. ay left the Shot he wanted.. He said he would | morning, when McCune will be cross- | (vag;r;etm:)[ :eeco“n:;ls ie“}ifm-‘u‘x’fifi“‘g‘f; siol ed fo rather go to some private place, and | examined | s t | after his Paris labors were ended, as ued at $1000. the mooring line was cut or insecurely tied. it e e DAY GETS A PLACE. ske ‘Can’t you to my room? I = = . :a:((fd No, T am-too-busy.” He said: ‘I | Electric Launch Wrecked. | has now been done. The Sixth Judicial think I can vote for you to-day.’” He TIBURON, Feb. 25.—A handsome lh(le‘ District in Ohio is a new one and was launch belonging to Frederick | created only a short time since, with hesitated and stammered and said he | electric 2 Beating | his appointment in view. was ready to vote on the terms named | Spaulding of the Pioneer Carpet i BUFFALO, Ind. DOCTORS OF THE HUDYAN REMEDY CO., . 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