The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 17, 1899, Page 1

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T I rg@ | E FILIPINOS FlEE BEFORE AMERICANS [4++444 444444044043 ¥ WILL SIGN THE + OTIS WILL MOVE : TREATY OF PEACE | THREE SIDES NOW : Agduinaldo to Be Taken in His : : Own Capital and the Forces of Rebellion Crushed. w strip sepa- ~-n WILL SET A TRAP TO CATCH AGUINALDO REPORTS RECEIVED FROM GENERAL OTIS cccupied by equal parts. Otis reported the be trans- the 3 General casualtie: MANILA, Mareh 1 Washing [ following —Adjutant General, tles March 13, ne \UT/ ABLE 10 CONTROL THE SAMOANS K RN DENMARE REPORTED | WANTS PORT BETTER | I CHINA FRANCISCO, FRIDAY MARCH 17 PRICE FIVE CENTS. 1599, SIRONG HAND 10 BE FELT BY CUBANS The United States Will Per- mit No Trifligg by the Assembly. GOMEZ IS THE HEAD Any Organized Body Trying to Make Trauble Will Be Dis- persed as a Mob. NEW YORK, March 16.—The Wash- nt through its officers Cuba will be made only to the inh: of the island and not to any or- pretending to ent olutely can be pursu Cuba im zed at the War Depar As a res statement ult of of representa: people Cuba. It is stated that General Broo 7ill take no formal action relativ y for the reason that s uld be a recognition of that It will stm; organizat: 2 mob. The authorities are paying no atten- jon to reports that the Assembly will up the Cuban ar to hostilities against the Un d State: The influ- expected to prevent e Cuban pecple eral 2z, who will be the representative of the idu Go ban: THE CUBAN LEADERS MAY MAKE TROUBLE +| HAVANA, March 16.—General Pedroy Betancourt has arrived from Matanzas and conferred with General Pedro Diaz, Jesus Monteagudo, Luis Sobau, Alberto Nodarse and Francisco Pera- za, who last night decided to act in ion with him In condemning filitary Assem : interest attaches to the ey will adopt With respect to neral Gomez, beca they command 060 Cuban soldiers. If they adhere to Gomez it is asserted th ir action will probably be the As- bly’s deathblow. The general feel- ing is that they will support-him, but tion of General M: manding general Pinar del Rio, Matanzas, Santa Clara. This may prove difficult, as he has already publicly expressed his adherence to the Assembly. Should Rodriguez continue to defend the Assembly’s course, and should these generals declare in favor of Gom trouble might follow. They are cor commanders under him, but their united influence is considered strons than his. The meeting they ranged for this afternoon was pos poned. The talk of General Gomez for Presi- dent of the Cuban Republic is increas- ing as a very natural reaction against & d upon him by the Military Assembly He Is Now Probably Making He Will Be Brought Home Evidently Intends io Follow Jewsboys, members of a Most Thorough In- on the Fast Cruiser in the Footsteps of p mee ot B Diario de Ma. . . & ina tc C rmed vestigation. Chicago. S Pon s Thamacer. ihrough & committee, that Dispat Spectal to Call. | | LONDON, ha; March 17.—The Copen- n correspondent of the Daily Mail say t is asserted here that M. Heide, director of the Danish East Africany Steamship Company, about to go to! hina in the company’s interest. It o said he has a Government mis- ent harbor in The Japanese Government, says the Shanghai correspondent of the Times, sted China to sanction the appointment of a Japanese customs 0 issioner at Fuchau, capital of the i on the Min River. orrespondent of the ys: “The preposterous the Chinese have brouzht the negotiations for the extension of olitanh settlement to a dead- h and American as- | which met jointly yesterday to advocate united action the two governments, adopted reso- ns of the most vigorous character. | will be transmitted to London TRIES TO COMMIT SUICIDE. SAN JOSE. March 16.—Georgle Wood: the woman whom James Treadwell, the young capitalist, nearly beat to death, | tried to end her life late last night by | morphine. Her shoulder blade is broken and her spine injured, and physicians say her injuries will be permanent. This has woman very despondent and made the he has to be constantiy watched to pre- ent her suicide. She nearly accomplished urpese last night and was in a erit- ondition when found. This is-her second attempt in a week. Treadwell's jeal friends are now making every effort to have the charge of attempt to murder against him dismissed. ———— at Hampton There he can | the Potomac her p - alleged | Roads in about a and | be taken aboard e lines of ington without much that con- Spinal Meningitis. Roca Wants the Railway. March BUENOS AYRES, March 16.—President WOODLAND, spinal meningitis are reported amonz Roca has resolved to propose to Messrs. A e a0 as | the children of this county. There is 5| Krupp. the gunmakers, to remit to Ar- L sub-chiefs, and | gifference of opinion, but the prevalling | gentina 30 kilometers of rallway on the that en M: he candidate for ntiment among physicians is that the | Deceauville system instead of the rest of i ned it disease is contaglous. the armament which they have to deliver. kingship, bag not jc 1d not sell the paper. He asked ,”” said the spokesman of the association, “of the editorial this mor ing favoring a long American cccupa- tion.” He added, however, that they sell to-morrow’s issue if no more * pleasi editorials appeared. The newsboys, encouraged by the success that attended similar efforts against another paper two days ago, determined this morning in solemn s sion to oppose all papers not openly f: vorable to General Gomez and the cause of free Cuba. Among the pap sion to oppose all papers not openly fa. PLOT TO DESTROY THE MAGAZINES Russia Was to Have Suffered on the Day of the Toulon Explosion. / YORK, March I7.—A special cabis the Sun from London says: The nna correspondent of the Dai Chronicle says he has learned “from an absolutely trustworthy source in St Petersburg’” that the recent disaster at La Goubran, near Toulon, where the magazine was blown up causeing the loss of sixty lives was part of a diabolical scheme which originally included the destruction of the magazine at St. Peters- | burg. Early in_the morning of the day on which the La Goubran explosion occurred General Rouropatkin, Russian Minister of War, received a cipher telegram in- forming him that both magazines would | be blown up within twenty-four hours. General Kouropatkin immediately drove to the magazine, roused the guards and had the workmen®make a close examina- tion of the magazine and its surround- ings. It was reported to him that the in- spection was extremely satisfactory. He thersupon gave all the guards and workmen three days’ furiough, and then telephoned for new guards and panies of sappers. The latter dug a trench around the magazine to a depth sufficient to insure the cutting of any wires that might have been placed to cause an explosion. Cordons of troops were placed around the magazine and gendarmes were ted in all: directions. ~The inference g that General Kouro- pat . by taking these ' precai averted a disaster similar to that oceurred hours® “"&"c’n in France a few = . two com- | WILL CONQUER THE SOUTHERN ICY SEA | @00 000000000000000000000000000000009060000000305000000098 DEPARTURE OF THE SOUTHERN CROSS FOR THE ANTARCTIC. 3 I | | L S e S T B S A R R A B R R A o & @t s e s e et et e e WELLINGTO.\'. 7 March 16.—The Antarc- L A B R S TR T R T Ak b 2 4 tic exploration expedi- tion’s steamer Southern Cross has arrived a New ‘Zealand Bor Cape Adair, \'icty’-"a Land. Sh reports that all the explorers were in good health when landed. >uthern steam whaler S , having on board the expe- dition under command of Cap- tain Borchgrevink, whichis to make an exploration of the Ant- arctic continent, sailed from England in the latter part of Au- gust last for Cape Adair, South Victoria Land, in the Antarctic circle. At Cape Adair, according to the programme, Captain Borch- grevink and nine of his feilow explorers, were to be landed and the Southern Cross was then to go back to Hobarttown, return- 18g9 to ‘ho expected IR R SRS SEORE S S A 2 B T LT & S ADP NP PP DA S S S S S S A 4 . K of ing in the Yummer D pick up the part to return to England early in s e P 1900. | MOHRENHELN, NOT DREYELS. | IN DEADLY THE CCLPRIT COLLISION iAmericans and Canadians Reported to Have Battled FRS MET THE POPE'S CONDITION 1S SERIOLS His Wound Refuses to Heal Sold the Secrets of France Despite the Best of | and Russia to the | | | Treatment. | Germans. . on the Porcupine. | Special Dis The Call l Spectal Dispat to The Call { Special Dispatch to The NEW YORK, March 17.—A Van- | LONDON, March LONDON, March 16.—The Evening : v respondent of the Daily New publishes a sensational | couver,” B. C., special to the World “The worst symptoms of Dreyfus story. It declares that the |says: Far in the frozen north, a few miles off the desolate Dalton trail, Ca- nadian and American miners have met in deadly conflict. Four are reported an Embassador to France, , is the real cul- h Russian and French condition is extreme W is responmsible for the prit who sol¢ the wound. The b: removed to-day secrets to the Ge Government, | to have been killed outright and a ness o adding that the Russian Government | number of others are id to have been plete rest from the affairs of state and £ nvinced of his guiit. and that | seriously wounded. his doctors have been compelled to s onl 4 a public scandal | That the bitter feeling between the promise him that he may attend the | greater than the Dreyfus affair that | {wo mationalities has culminated in ceremony in the Sistine chapel on April | po is unpunished ‘her than being | actual bloodshed is regretted on all 11, in honor of St. Leo S am intimation that he is met to | Sides. The disputed boundary line be- | The Rome correspondent of the Dai e Tktaaias da in- e AN il tween Alaska and Canada is the prin cipal cause of it, although minor face within the Czar’s do- how his | impeachable source that - 5 - . | hope of effecting a real cim was formerly | putes assisted in bringing it about. Pope's wound refuses to sador at Paris. He was | When the alien ing law of British Columbia was enforced a few months ago, the American miners left Atlin, the new Canadian gold district, and struck north. They found a short dis- | tance off the Daiton trail on the Por- LONDON, March The B els cor- | SUpine River a distriet rich in piacen ondent of the Daily Mail says that gold. It was generally conceded that disarmament conference which will | the new placers were In American ter- t The Hague on May IS will be | ritory, and the miners vowed before > sections. dealing re- | taking po: n that any Canadian, Pruinent, ADIUANES | b Ko mtunted: policeman or pEiysie zates wi von Butse Tmpeeic; | citizen, shouid not S 2 claim. Some of the Canadian mounted po- licemen, héwever, did stake claims in Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs; | PBaron Marschall von Bleberstein. German 3 Frabassador at Comstantinople, and | American territory and justified their k. ving the Canadian flag from Prince Herbert Bismard | act by mo osition in December. eded by Prince | viously Russian | is every fear of blood pois: strength of his ness is entire maintained by cc and marsala. | “Dr. Lapponi continues to sleep at the Vatican. It is feared the Pope may die | in & fainting fit, especially a | bitually sleeps on his back. w pro- | duces a dangerous condition. at- tendants are cbliged to turn him over frequently. It will be a miracle if he surcives another three monfha” Conspiracy Against Franes. i PARIS. March 16—The Gaulios says Premier Dupuy has received information rom. the naticnal defense group proving lme existence of a national conspiracy | asainst the reoublic. i w The Disarmament Conflrence. fe i

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