The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 10, 1899, Page 1

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VOLUME LX FRANCISCO, FRIDAY. MARCH 10, 1899. PRICE FIVE CENTS. SMITH IN POSSESSION OF HIS GOVERNMENT ACOLOD, Negros Island, March | @-e-¢-—e-@eo v > v ¥ ¥ U DD e D OeOe e s e +S 4, via Manila, March 9.—After a | { > vage the rving the deputa- »s Island, Colonel ican Gov- | Battal- ment at ved el enter found the ar- Miller’s »coanut Amer- vt nd Gene o th of the t the Miller, officers on General D e e O S e DR Sy 0. from the front only false a already nt. All Al Corpe half an COLCNEL JAMES F. SMITH. ; ar- troop: D D S S S e o S o e ] to send | L ncral OUS as the rep- | parently prosperous country behind it, re are about 200 armed na- ¢ rnment of the | most the landseane iy e. The Remington rifie is their E 21 tuxuriant weapon. ude of the natives outside < not definitely known, but feved to be friendly. on their arrival at the Govern- t house ith and Pr greetings. ing | vege It ANICITO LACSON. afterncon Colonel Smith received with full ; the native and Am- tive band plaving | toward t ach. Colonel Smith | battalion cor ordially and enth tic- John F. = i W \d as he has full power DY BalliAgarC ¢ at a bril- he native administration £ ing message was received rican control it will be in- 2o, an important coast town of 1is experiment to | Ramm; Company the native ra R. Robertso: the e asain in these | H. Jordan Howare e Company H, Licutenants Edwin Davis ng all ywel- extremely difficult, | and Philip T. O'Brien, Surgeon Major © same time the natives )"”"' d r"“l“nvl Smith | William D. McCarthy. Lieutenant John e ashore from his launch in a bamboo | West, adjutant and quartermaster. o e : CHAIE amtist senewed and ‘continuen| e BiAtie. <oTtA et atiiin Geats DR O cheers of the populace. Miller, was first ashore, sw "addressed to President 3acolod is a small town with an ap- laumch through the | from the | P e R s R e SAT DEWEY'S CONDITION IS FIRST CLASS Denial of the Stories That? the Admiral's Health | Is Broken. Can Come Home at Time That He Asks for Relief. He Any & BT SLOTD OO0 SO Spectal Dispatch to The Call NEW YORK, March 9.—The Wash- fngton correspondent of the Herald teiegraph Instead of being seriously | 2 i Admiral Dewey, according to re- ports brought to the Navy Department by rs just returned from the Asiatic station, is in excellent health an. desires to continue in his present LSO & B OGO O song told me to-day he has sived from Admiral Dewey never any intimation which would lead him T to b that officer is ill or de- sirou of returning to the United Stat “In fact,” he said, “all the informa- | tion we have is just the other way. The admiral knows that if he desires to re- turn he can do so at any time, and that the department will willingly ssue or- | ders to this end.” Mrs. Leé, who recently returned from Ma where she met the admiral on poard the Olympia, informed Secretary Long several weeks ago that the only hange she found in the admiral's ap- pearance from that when she saw him In Washington was that his hair had become white. Physically, she said, he seemed in excellent dition. 506050 #0909 00S06090d 0®040©0®06H o BW00609000606060 & Spectacle Calculated to Impress the Old World With the Fact That an Excel- lent Understanding Exists Between England and This Country. Wo0904090406040 & 0$0H0H0O $0H0$0H0®0$0&0 & o®0®0s0e0sl A 0404040409 0®04049040% DO LYo & since he has n at Manila. bl SOEGETITIDIO S FEOEOIT S DEGHUIS DB I G S OUR TROOPS LAND AT M LAVTON WILL [PON MALOLOS | Bxpected That the Forward Movement Will Begin | at Once. NEW GUNS FOR 0TIS No -Cessation of the War Until the Filipinos Are Completely Subdued. | Special Dispatch to R e e + + & MANILA, March The + 4+ United States transpo e 4+ which iled from N York + + having on board + 4+ Major al Lawton, the 4 + Fourth Infantry and a battalion ¢ 4 of the Seventeenth Infantry, ar- + 4 rived this morning. + 2e > R AR R A o o o o S o R SR SRS | Call Headquarters, Wellington Hotel, | Washington, March 9. | General Lawton is expected to arrive nila to-morrew with 1500 men, ve had a chance n fighter, this sort of v ord as an diz Ir man for a good tended er or weakne ing it so | in and drove the F But in their ady prob- | ably advanced much further than Gen- eral Otis desired, the) have been | exposed to the at en sharp- { shcuters and were accordingly recalled to their former posts. 4 The War Depatiment is considering the advisability of sending a fr ply of howitzers and some guns to Manila. At present Otis has all that he has asked for, but of the probable change in the of warfare from defensive to ensive and_the certainty that much { ordnance material will be used up or | destroyed it is thought advisable to send fresh supplies. General Oti well provided with field guns and mountain so far | there has been little opportunity to use | them. Hereafter there will probably be some mountain elimb the mcunt play. They | will come into weighing not are over 200 pounds, and can be packed on Continued on Third Page. ALETTA, Island of Malta, March 9.—The United States transport Sheridan, from New York or LEAD ADVANCE CLAIM CREDIT BEDEGD GO0 DEOIOIOIRE ANARCHSTS — IRELAND IS TO BE MADE A CARDINAL Celebrated Churchman De- fines the Real Meaning of “Americanism.” i | FOR OUTRAGE London Leaders Openly Say They Caused the Tou- lon Explosion. BLACKMAIL OF FAURE, The French Authorities Seeking to Make Light of the LONDON, March 10.—The Rome correspondent of the Post says; Whole Affair Since the recovery of the Pope the question of “Americanism” is be- ol ing eagerly discussed. The Pope’s letter to Cardinal Gibbons was prepared by Cardinal Satolli and Cardinal Camillo Mazzella, Prefect Rt = of the Congregation of Sacred Rights, both of whom are strong ene- s o Can. mies of Cardinal Gibbons and Archbishop Ireland, and the letter was an absolute condemnation, in the original, of all American tendencies. The Pope and Cardinal Rampolla, Papal Secretary of State, cut, ex- purgated and added to the draft until it was unrecognizable by the authors. Neither side is completely satisfied, but the real victory re- mains with the Americans, and it is said that the red hat will be be- stowed upon Archbishop Ireland as a mark of the Pope’s approval. oachments by the “regular” clergy, rt that the explosion in Toulon ar belongs to them. A French police who, under preten: being hist, ob d their confidence, n elaborate plan of the Toulon sponsibility for hal on Sun AR R SRR S ONDON, March 10.—The.Rome cor- enc found t R R h R o o R arseral at SGaine ot an BaarchiE pondent of the Daily Chronicle those identified with religlous orders or “lub in Dean anaaisonitanieal aphs the substance of an in- bound by monastic vows, upon the L theamaniie cartridsdt weeal o) low he has had with Arch- ‘secular’ clergy, those not identified or Rlow tip {2 mapazine ! were: abtal shop Ireland, in which the bound. The episcopacy and its sub- om a quarry at near the Italian ains his titude toward hierarchy were, h»_smd, the real foun- frontier. : and his course during the Span- dation of ecclesiastical work. : : h-American war. He describes Arch- Referring to the attempts the Jesuits The same invest at ! bishop Ireland as having the had made in the United States to pre- has obtained evidence of a successful e t “heme of bl ‘,1‘~ A‘,] W h‘.(;, Nr“ been ent face of an apostl ent the establishment of the Catho- e R e R “terribly in earnest.” remar o University at Washington, he said: 2 : “the following colloquy may be taken mpov wanted it themselves, but the tt past tw s friends and a reply Pope pointedly warned me not to allow ) ses by means |45 3 M : nCss M v d ey 7 ntl 1t Sundrel who hagi| to the m erpretaticns which, though the American Bishops to be caught in sufficiont’ standing to obtain an inter- | unintentional, he cops their tolls. My views on this sublect are view. The caller submits : to & great cause.” The correspondent identitcal with the late rdinal Man- fea callens subImits. & HLONMA TtrTe ning’s. To insinuate that Americanism ritten on thin pa3 ranteeing to 5 means the transformance of the religious proached Tmmunity from orders to the ting pot is a calumny. anarchist atlacks upon the payment ' he observed, They have produced countless saints and cified sum, at t ame time O e wald he ac_ havey theix fowm ;exalted .misslonyy but rEpEa y 15 . American Catholicism requires a priest- blandly It is us to ar- | ¢ ity to w , N ik ) and If you make a hostile move in 5 nutshell the max- hood deeply ‘fmbued with patiral an swallow the Daper and you can i to the human civic virtues. othing. Besides it will cost you With reference to the war Archbishop The Archbishop then proceeded in this Ireland said: out I was pro-Spanish; he wen o Before it brok m that they h: new but when hostilities commen ed 1 forgot 1 eight times out er Father xcept that I was an Ameri- ident Faure pa and, like t minds, he hointed to love and to serve r immunity and othe peculiar elf. One of my c roportion to prominen the direct inspiration of theé e could say nothing regarding the hus collacted hay Holy Ghost ppar ,“}:‘\:‘“ “L;’rf'm\, 'i"“‘;x; disarmament congress. He might be 3 and, and, it frine meant MiLS fiose displaying initla- One of two' representatives, or there might be another and higher solution. as him he SuIn. tive. I frequently told s T It has become nec ) re: biguous and would be misunderstood and “I am at the double service,” he re- | active anarchist ca advertis- | this has happened. marked, ‘of piritual ofié: and ing purposes, and it ted that ~hbishop Ireland proceeded to ex- temporal citizen: hip.” Paris will be the scene of the next dem- oD I D ien to tife 1t wolll be fipossible o T=praduce on: Lo Sl diierns fod ® the flowing, sparkling French of the il- I 9.—Gaulois pub rtues gud said: _ lustrious churchman whose elevation to a its correspondent g tain espe regarding the the dinalate has only been adjourn- Toulo jon of in- emperance and’ truthfulness, eq the Fope’s illness. quir ave. s that they ——— Sk G i KIPLING MUCH BETTER. it v. An intemperate . priest St aens mission. A priest who apg His Child Elsie Also Continues <onal casujstry to prevarie atal reserve only justifies the church in aifirmations alse, are heard and to Improve. NEW YORK, March 9.—At 10 o’clock to- sht it was announced that Mr. Kipling sleeping soundly and had been for several hours. He was reported as being much better. During the afternocon Mr. rred from his old sick- I jok ound_near | P | teen cartridges | zine contained which the maga- powd Archbishop then warmly ~pro- The > bodies have f the ' tested against what he described as the yipling was trans a arly that he is inimical to rogom to parlor and seemed much morning brain s. He said he be- pleased at th he injured died to-day. bler ideal con- , The child s so much improved M Marine, de- DomopAel o - (o-day that the physicians allowed the is to ascer- | ceivable than the monastic VoW but jjttle brother into the room to play with \GREE WITH POPE LEO'S TEACHINGS Are in Spirit With the Letter. of the ted to parochial or educational n the cause | he obj { e e LR s KRR KR = 3 o @ o f‘éq&a FO OGO In a Communication to Rome They Declare That They Entirely Acquiesce in His Views. Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, March 9.—The follow- ing official statement as to the action | of the Paulist fathers upon the publi- cation of the recent letter of the Pope on Americanism, which touched upon the teachings of the late Father Heck- er, the founder of the congregation of missionary priests of St. Paul the Apos- | tle, as interpreted in Abbe Klein's French translation of his life, was is- sued to-day: “As soon as the Pope's letter to Car- dinal Gibbons had been published in the daily papers the Paulist fathers | sent a telegram to Cardinal Rampolla assuring him that they entirely ac- quiesced In the teachings of the holy father and that they would shortly send * | a letter expressing this more fully. This wag immediately prepared and sent. It makes a detailed statement of the abso- ute obedience of the Paulist fathers to he letter and spirit of the Pope’s teach- ngs, quoting their rule as to the horough spirit of obedience and loyvalty | to Rome prescribed for the fathers. “When a new edition of the ‘Life of | Father Hecker’ is prepared it will em- & | phasige the Pope’s teaching and con- @ | form to his judgment in every respect.” @ | None of the members of the Paulist | community would give any further de- BOLHO & GBI =3 I * i ti OSSOV OLIOL =3 1 February 19 for Manila, arrived here yesterday morning. By C‘ommander >, Wood, recently re- xtl\l'}:xr‘,m"l'r.l:;;,]q:;;(}.?r‘f;g %e]cll%:r:’x! § permission of the (}Q\'ernor 'of Malta, General Sir A\‘rth}n' James Lyon Freemantle, the American troops, consisting of 2000 men, landed toAflzl_' and lee Gov- talls concerning the letter sent to the the department, that Admiral Dewey’s & ernor, attended by his staff, inspected them on the Florian parade grounds. Subsequently the Americans marched past and created a splendid impréssion. &1 figg’f‘bg'fig&gg‘gfilé"fl‘5‘},’;‘;&“'{,‘;",,‘::;’; :’:j"'fl"‘n‘;;_;;":”f“‘;;" ;?;Ju{‘e‘;;::wg‘fm“‘ R »Adm»iral Sir John O. Hopkins, commander-in-chief of the Mediterranean station, and Major General Lord Congleton, commanding the infantry brigade, g | f;gfléafig;im I:;}([g;:gifoigbg‘;flg_&;“gfi mander C. P. Rees, who rmo;‘)f:.!ly re- § with their staffs, were present. There was alsoa large attendaqce of naval men and members of the civil government, and an immense concourse of spectators. & ‘ was sent to Cardinal Rampolla im- Baed Bome ) N somiris op iol The troops on board the United States transport Sheridan consist of the Twelfth Infantry and a battalion of the Seventeenth. ~ The detachment is com- & \;‘gfl;fi;}egc‘;g,"igal"‘gy'“‘,’EQ“;E{TT‘ Séof,:g ta on the sick list or inder treatment | Gyorressero KIOTIORION® MOS0 KOSKo HOTIKISCIOTI S TAOIONOTI O BOTIONO DOIOOTOTON s OKENOT SRR NODS IR MeOTIATL O 11 10 OIS QORI ROl | Dateh & lelter of dboroncel oW em-

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