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TH FRANC O CALL, SATURD Y AY 20, 1899 > PEACE DREAM OF NICHOLAS His Programme the Fed- cration of of the ONDON, May meeting three or five proposed fact, atory. every « It also i ns of reie be y accepted Il make to the rd to honor DISARMAMENT 1S SURELY COMING powers accepted his enough l n the situatic kness of public opin OVERTAXED AND TIRED-OUT NERY Many Disorders Are Di- rectly Due to Weak Nerves. TO OVERCOME A CONDITION THAT MAY HOW LEAD TO SERIOUS EVIL. > the study plication »f the of remedies to nervous relate directly to the us ¥ stion, Nervous Deb! Epliepsy, 8t e have w the Heart, the Liver, the Kid- T are due to a weakened p es that govern the will cure all such disord on earth that will relleve Dyspepsia so quickly as nost instances those dis- solely due will correct the a peculiar remedial ef- | nerve tisspe that no down constitu- and_vigor into xhausted sy 1d nourd: cannot nerves. ou suffer with you need HUDYAN. It will re- these conditions and remove the cause Within a few hours. HUDYAN Is to the nerves, and yat it contains otfc drugs. The weakest stomach in this world will tolerate HUDYAN HUDYAN 8 for wale by druggists—i0c a package or six packages for $2 i, 1 your druggist does not keep HUDYAN, gend direct to the HUDYAN REMEDY CO., Cor. Stockton, Ellis and Market 8ts., BAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Yom Have the Privilege of Consulting tho Hudyan Doctors About Your Case ¥ree of Chargo. Call or Write, 19.—T forecast of the Czar's peace programme, which for- tlates an idea. practica of the federation of the world, with the disarmament conference as the starting point. The conference is to become a permanent tribunal, year ence ot The decisions of the nervous | ed conditions of | HUDYAN furnishes | All Nations World. he Westminster Gazette gives a small body to settle to the tribunal will not body will not expected that its conve- ersal of submitting ques- minor the uggested. roposed to arrest their in- 1 naval estimates to the of University, onference, one says he now ts defending war and de- not to be the aim of cul- a deceptive idea of The United States an example that. been plunged by ion of brainless and the incapacity of Tnited States have sinned nity and civilization hope that the Americans t recovered from their b X ion and wiil redeem the f their country. All this i n the difficulties c« nt- | nference, but it will not mat- ss is finally attained. The believe, will de the | peace prcblems the will be an age 1 en-| xndxmt(nn and peace.” THE CZAR REPLIES TO THE PRESIDENT PRI Va., May 19.—The 1 bearing the President an nley and their party K to-night, en route | on, which city will be Saturday evening. eived to Mr. McKin- the Czar of Russia upon the opening « nce at ] Hague. f Nicholas N 1d pe the century G resident Deeply and con- ICHOLAS, PERMANENT ARBITRATION COURT Me a \ FOR The at ip Daily The LONDON 1 Hague n Pauncefote, who, f the United States minor powers, will insist anent cour arbitratio gr the success of the ence STOCKTON AGITATED CONCERNING POLITICS Democrats After Patronage, While Republicans Read the Independ- ent Out of the Party. )CKTON, M 19.—Now m pal election is over the Derm re d v themselves v ap shall be divided t tion remove s kind of trouble among Repu ey are now trying hunt out mbers of the who went over enemy and defeat ®o the publican city committee i lopted resol g vein, virtually r In- 1t out party for its policy Whereases” read as fol- irnalistic support it between asininity fearless— s reference d their vigorous advocacy at which 1 neither cold nor warm, which places a paper in, har- g for the best interests r than any particular those facts shouid remembered by the nominees when dis- s of victory Thels: compliment the Daf Lu'v rd for its able fight and loyal sup- | por | SUPERINTENDENCY OF | ents to use a specific Sabbath observ- | Robert Ross at Troy, New York. on THE WH|TT|ER SCHOOL ance leaflet; sympathy expressed | March 6, 1896, by the notorious “Bat” | with three million Americans who, be- Sh‘o‘a.hfl lnu}ili (\Ilhm-lrr. who, it was 08 L S , celec. | CAUSE Of Sabbath desecration, are com. | said, had planned with certain , voli- | ‘ ”‘I’A"J,“r_«x?h:“!.‘ s, ?m,\”:’_ w’:» (\ha((’ :LTL‘ pelled to do secular work on the Sab- | ticians to kill Ross and his brother which have for some time existed at the | Paf - SE e breauAciol ThelE Actiity atithe Whittier Reform School Governor flemps | ETesident McKinley's attention is re- | Polls in their attempts to prevent the T iCaze 5 o meaist s of the petile spectfully called to the fact that em- | Operation of repeater «‘\_\hn had gone to ing problems of his administration. he | PIOYes of the Postoffice and many agher fo')‘frtvln New York. Albany and | { outcome of’the contest for the pBaitionsi| b o nte Of . the Covertment are | SYIICHES e Sudiclecy niortiose ENROL aCINE HINE. N rol e | compelled to work on Sunday. who em~-loved them. c s tir e foreshadowes The McGiffert case, contrary to ex- Bat” Shea was tried and found guil- The plum involved is the superintendency It | tv of the murder of Robert Ross. and of the 'd the ige at the institution, Of the two leading superintendency Dr. school st of the T which is very 1 patron- candidates for the Barber and Sherman | Smith continue to make a neck and neck race. Behind Sherman Smith is United | States District Attorney Frank P. 3 who has informed the Governor that this \ppointment s the“single favor he has to ask of the State administration. In Dr. Barber's Interest are arrayed nearly all the members of the medic | profession and others who take a phil thropic interest in the Walttier School | The doctor made an enviable record S | superintendent of the County Hospital | | and when he resigned leaders of the R. publican State machine promised that he Would be cared’ for. This phase of the situation has complicated the Whittier superintendency so that it is to-day tied in a very hard knot. When the Governor was here a few weeks ago Frank P. Flint | made an urgent plea for Sherman Smith. | "“Ask me something easy,” the Gove | nor is reported to have sald in reply to Flint’s request. Hervey Lindley is said | to be taking a hand in the situation lni 1 opposition to Dr. Barber. | Maus Coming Here. WASHINGTON, May 19.—Lieutenant | Colonel Marion P. Maus, inspector gen- | eral, has been relieved from further du | S this city and ordered to San Fran- cisco for assignment to duty as inspector of that department. Colonel Maus has been on the staff of Genera.l Miles for several years. _UBSEHVANE MARYSVILLE READY FOR THE SPRING RACE MEETING /ILLE, May 20.—Thurs- @4 64940456464 5—+6+0 day, Friday and Saturday, & $4 June 1, 2 and 3, will be red- o * letter days in Marysville, for & © those are the dates fixed upon o * by the Marysville Jockey Club for the & © spring race meeting. . + The business men of this city being 4 L4 strongly in favor of the meeting have | * contributed handsomely to ig® support. g L 4 The board of directors has assurance 4 . that every county in the district, which ® includes Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Tehama, S * Sacramento, Placer and Yuba, will be [ ® represented, both as to Xacing stock . | and the enthusiast in the. sport. The © track will be in splendid conditien on . this occasion. P ? Purses aggregating $1360 have been . hung up. The programme arranged @ for the meeting is as follows: D.P._ DONORO! . @+-4-0-46-0 PRESIDEN R o e e eb e * . QA CARPENT! 1 oF BOARD DIR . * * THE SABBATH : : Discussion Before the | .l Presbyterians. . i @ oo S—0-04-0 to The Call Dispatch MIN Sun which took the byterian Asser EAPOLIS, observanc major bly's time to-day. Minn., was May 19—|11 | | iRDER Most of the long afternoon session v voted to 1 earnest di; on . report of the special committee on ) Q¢ bath observance. In the end the com- LAY mittee’s eight resolutions were adopted 19 2N with slight amendments, and two more were added. 8 S In the discussion the Sunday street- car, the Sunday train and railroad ex- | : | cdrsion, the Sunday mewspaper, the|Startling Charge That Is Sunday working Presbyterian and cvery form of acuvits which 15 not 1n| Made by the New York harmony with the literal meaning of | T the fourth commandment was con- | I'Iel'a.ld. demned | Another special committee reported | et t it had not been able to kee and the President from g v VT Roman Catholic church permission | “ KK <) to erect a chapel on the West Point | b i Vi b b b Military Academy reservation. | In the debate on the Sabbath resolu- | tions almost every speaker gave evi- | et dence of being imbued with the feeling | expr >d in the words of the commit- | i tee: “The American Christian Sabbath ;He Knew of the Plot to Kill is in imminent peril; in fact, in many | i + g of our large cities and in other g | Superintendent of Elections of our land it is already near st. | o This means that the American libert McCullagh. re and American institutions n peril for of these the American Sabbath has - been both the foundation and the pro- tection. Special Dispat The Call. Rev. Frederick A. Doane of Califor- nia testified that he never rode in a V YORK, May 19.—The Herald street car on Sunday and that he|jnformed on most excellent authority stopped over Sunday on his way to fhe | tnat proof tending to establish the fol- D Wi Glaks of Baltinor deplored | lowing startling statement will soon be forthcoming: Sabbath violation by Presbyterians, N and remarked that President Cowen of That Police Captain John M. O'Keefe. the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, | who died on Noyember 3 last from in- :hivh vl\:~'; N’minu[l 5 L"‘fa)\"'r uf) 5“;:‘ Jjuries said to have been caused by fall- ay travel, Is a Presbyterfan. On the |; atat & AR | other hand, it was pointed out that the | 8 9OW “:,“]“ ,“ ‘; ‘\h ,\IH S many downtown churches would haye | M0St cowardly and brutal murder: to be closed If church members never | that the object of the murder was the rode to church. sealing of his lips because he had ob- As adopted the amendments depre- cate the secularizing of the Sabbath, urges members and young people of the tained information f a most infamous | plot which had for sassination of Superintendent of Elec- church to realize the importance of | s e et Sabbath observation: legislatures and | tions John McCullagh, former Chief of re urged to protect the | Police, on November 6 last—election in Sabbath: the Armerican Sab- | day; that when the details of the plot are made -ubl > they will involve sev- bath Union and the Women's National Sabbath Alliance are commended; |eral of the best known Democratic pol- every pastor is recommended to preach | iticians in New York. on Sabbath observance on some Sab- inte s S | bath of next October and take a col- Th“"“","f.“;v‘h“" W Soxisindled lection for the Sabbath - Union; the | the plot, according to the statements board of publication is requested to | made, was to cause an as ination | prevail on Sabbath-school superintend- | similar in many ways to_the killing of | pectations, was not reached to-day. is likely to come up through the read- ing of Dr. McGiffert's letter to-morrow morring. To-night the commissioners attended a great public Sabbath observation meeting in Westminster Church. The moderator of the General Assem. bly has issued the following appeal to all Presbyterian churches in the United States: Inasmuch on February 11, 1897, Sing Sing prison. The new facts which throw light upon the death of Captain O'Keefe, it is stated, have been brought to the at- was executed in mittee, and the case will be fully in- quired into soon after the committee resumes its ons on May 3 FOLLOWED THE DOG all as boards’ of our church losed th '_v(. rrwnlhnu( any h\dnhl- 0 € e b Assembly, in_session at ‘\Ilmn-.um» . Minn., do hereby appeal to all Pres terian churches throughout the United es to make offering for this cause on and report the same telegram Monday morning. Thic SAN RAFAEL, May 19.—A pathetic little story is going the rounds in con- nection with the death of Frank Grimm, the popular young member of the Olympic made that for the first time in [ Club Who recently met his death in the years our assembly may con- | waters of the bay mear Belvedere. It | clude jons free from the burden | seems that the Sunday pefore his un- of debt, which amounts to $40,000. timely end the young man brought a little ROBERT F. SAMPLE, Moderator. blind terrier across the bay with the in- tention of putting the animal out of its Death of G. B. Macombe. misery. HIs intention became known, and e el - the fireman volunteered to drown the AUBURN, May 1%-George B/ Ma-| errer, saying that would be the most combe, one of the oldest residents of [ pSErSh, SONIRE HIRL FOUE suffering. Placer County, died here to-day. “Yes,” slowly re] ”9(] Grimm, “drown- Gl ey : _ ing is an easy death; let the poor old dog e The terrier was encompassed in a sack and dropped into the bay at a point dis- tant only a few hundred vards from the spot where Grimm afterward sank. In a few days the sack and contents were | washed up on the shores of Angel Island. BAVARIAN CHINAWARE DAY. Some articles cut 60 per cent. Some articles cut 50 per cent. ODDE AND ENDS, HALF PRICE. GREAT AMERICAN IMFORTING TEA CO. Stores Everywhere. its object the as-‘ tention of members of the Mazet Com- | 4 | 1 j TTAT 4 1 FIRST DAY—First race: Farmers' trot- | ting race; mile heats, best two in three. T 3 Purse, $50. 1 02 Second race—: trotting race; mile '/ | 4 | heats: two in three. Purse, $100. E 1 s [ Third r: unning; five-eighths of a = 4 i 4 L $100. ! trotting _race; mile s two in three. Purse, $100. TR Sb 'OND DAY—First race: Farmer: pacing race; mile heats, two in three. [yrs sk iz 4 Byrsc? s ottt raee: mue| MidasMining Company Loses Objects to the Dispatch of . two in three. Purse, $100. 1 G i e Kunming: teeavarters ot | Valuable Tailings and | American Troops to a mile dash. Purse, $100. : Fourth race—: trotting; mile heats, s o ot two in three. Purse, $100, Slu ces. tLe North. THIRD DAY—First race: 2-year-old trot: mile heats. two in three, Purse, $10. Second race—Pacing, free-for-all; ~mile i | Tt heats, two in three, Purse, $1 | ¢ Dhird race—Running; milé dash. Purse. Special} Dispatéh to The Call; et Fourth race—Free-for-all - trot; mile| REDDIN May 19.—A report| NEW YORK, May 19.—The Herald's heats, two i 2e. >urse, $200. % : = s Z o v e S QR ey Shuee. 9200 | reached this city to-day of a loss of Washington Jondent sends the lrfi. ‘i“""}’“' }"‘f “jj"#;:s are already in|from $60,000 to $75,000 sustained by the following: W essing the United ining: at;the trgck. Midas Gold Mining Company at Har- States to agree to arbitration of the D R B +-&-+@ | Tison Gulch by the breaking of a reser- | Alaskan boundary controv the 4 | voir containing many thousand cubic British Government has entered objec- ? | feet of tailings and sluices. The ma- | tion to the dispatch of additional Amer- ® | o T s . | ican troops to that territory . wd% state of about the | Ty " ontroversy between the two P stency of £ governments has assumed a more seri- 4| When the wall of the reservior gave | ous aspect than is generally supposed. 1 | way the tailings and sluices poured into While the President is bound to the { | Harrison Guich Creek, thence into Bee | principle of arbitration and while, on o | Gum and finally into the north fork of |} - 11«“"_”_ H‘l": \m - 1”:;‘ ]I |{x‘nn1:‘m;o . C,“_"“““"“d' coloring the waters for a o) 4,5 triumph for this Government, ‘_\/)411.\(1“’11"» of twenty miles from the there remains a possibility that the ar- + | reservoir. bitration tribunal ht decide that the Y| The Midas Gold Mining Company is British Government is entitled to a port . | the largest mining concern operating |on the Pacific Coast—perhaps Skaguay, J |in Western Shasta. Its equipment con- *‘{(‘;“; }:'l‘(’:““’l“'l“ Britain desires to ob o | Sists of a modern twenty-stamp ‘nn_ll In view of the great commercial in- ! |and a chilorination plant, and to this is | (e SEiitha Pacific.. Codst ot i ¢ |now being added a smelter. The tail-| United States the administration do ?|ings ana sluices which were lost are mot feel justified in accepting arbitra- {| Wnatigoiover ithe platés ink ihe staimp { ton aud; the Brithh Government has | mill. Much precious metal is still re- | P€€n given to understand that this s 3 s SO . : the President’'s way of looking at the G tained and all of this material was h--_ proposition. So far as I have been able ! |ing stored ing the complation of | to however, England continues | the smelier, when it would have been | to strongly press arbitration. ? | roasted and then cyanided. The tail-| With respect to the dispatch of three { | ings reservoir covered more than half | companies of regulars to Alaska to pa % | an acre trol the boundary line, the purpose this & 2 ? B : , | Government had in view was to pre- 7| When the restraining wall gave way | corve peace and prevent conflict be- )¢ | nothing could be done to check the flow | tween Canadian and American miners ? | of the uncoined money until the reser- | which reports from Governor Brady ¢ ! voir had emptied itself of more than Show likely to occur at any moment. ‘; half its contents. The sluices and tail- | It 1S probable however, that in view lings eaC EVGE wil X of Gre rital s obje o0 '3 ops ings which reached the ereek will prove | [y "1t b cent to Pyramid Harbor | total loss. as originally intended, but will be lo- | Captain J. H. Roberts of a river cated at a point accessible to the dis- ' ortation line with headquarte puted territory, so as to be available in ramento, is the president and | case of emergency. | Stockholm. BN | The Call. Special Dispateh | An Expedition Will Leave | 1 mine or mi | principal stockholder of the Midas Gold In its representation to the American Mining Company. The company has | Lorc hment the British Gov sended several hundred thousand | troops to Alaska the United Harrison Gulch and is re- | pos to retain by force the s having one of the best prop- | which it claims, and that .cor the county. The mine yields | it feels in the inte L0090 to $30 000 a month. The lo: t‘hl '“}'\)fi:‘\’\lr:?]"vl1m two governments | Will not affect the operations of the | " Great Britain had indicated that she ing plant h no intention of sending troops to patrol her side of the boundary line, T and the officials here have no reason to ALAS fact Great Britain, like the United States, is extremely anxious to have KA FORTIFICATION the controve as amicably sy settled as promptly and ible, but she appre- to JuU \U. Alaska, May 12.—Captain W. |25 8mic I L of et | e ‘he Daily j1| W-_Robinson, assistant quartermaster, | ¢lates the imperative need of an outle HONDON N 3 ithe Dally Malll o s, syibinas e of the aome s | on the Pacific Coast for her great publishes the following dispatch from | yo ™ o0 o1 007 THATEE 98 T CORSITUC | o rthwest Territ 1 she is bend- | Stockholm: An expedition under Pro- | Magnolia Biufr, Seattle, and at Port every effort to this end. | fessor Nathorst will leave to-morrow | Townsend, has arrived here on an impor- It IS apparent that on the settlement (Saturds for the noriicast coast of | tant mission. It is understood he has or- | Of "1!‘," Sl el Dl B Greenland in search of I'rofessor An- mine intol tne sulbingy @nd | D NOECICT Teassemblingaot e Hian dree. After carefully examining the | foriconstidutanie jpurposes | O - COIMIMISHON TN ANSUSL. fHhe a0 | 007 A cren- ot Tt resery st b ministration would very much prefer region between the seventy-third and | Co° 0 A€ 3 Y the |if the boundary question were left to seventy-fifth degrees mnorth latitude. | oo,y eiween Chilkat Inlet and Lynn | (IS commission to be disposed of. It tE: expedition will proceed toward Cape | (s where the town of Mission nag |iS Pointed “out that the two govern- Bismarck on the east coast of Green- | started to grow. Up here it is considered | MENtS originally determined to submit | 1and, in the hope of meeting Cabtain .t admirable point of defense against the | L€ question to the commission and Otto Sverdrup’s expedition, which left ,,werful Chilkat Indians in case of fur- | L'CUgh the commission failed to reach Christiana last June on the Fram.|iner trouble, and also against the British | & decision a further discussion of the Every effort will be made to find the! .3 Canadians in case of sanguipary dif- | matter might lead to satisfactory set- explorers. < ferences over the coast boundarly hetoe | l]umum._ There are several other mat- COPENHAGEN, May 19.—Nothing is | " 2 ters which the commission is practi- own here as to the reported discov- | 4GSk N .+ .. |cally agreed upon and a treaty pro- ery of a letter written ty Professor “m'“r‘“,( 7 ‘\‘\_“;;_"l‘,“ll L l“ ’f’-;!““ t viding for their adjudication could be | Andree, the missing Arctic explorer, . e e wend make @ UID | drawn up at this time, but the British { said to have heen found in a bottie | {2 o thb e e “uwl-"-'.(‘.‘?v:;;x"h]:-rri Government is av to making any | early last month on the northeast coast py his brother, Commodore . S Robin | concessions unless Alas of Iceland by a farmer named Johann son, Alaska superintendent of the Pacific | ary dispute is settled. In other words, Magnussen Coast Steamship Company. At Wrangel, | unless a port in Alaska is ceded to her A letter in a bottle w found re- | on the way to Juneau, Captain Robinson | she would prefer the continuance of the cently containing reports of last vear's Purchased, at a reported cost of $7000, the | status quo 2 e e T e T light-draught sternwheel British _boat = WORK O Frotessor, Nacuo expedition | pychesnay for use by the Captain Glenn Electric Vehicle T i | engaged in tes Arctic currents..This | Government exploring party on the Shus- | Seerigyenic’e Hcorporations; | bore the add of Ernest Andree.| hitna River, a large stfeam emptying | IW YORK. May 19.—Sevemteen elec- i sther of the Arc >xplorer and man- | into Cook Inlet. Captai S of | tric vehicle compan of which to Flot the capedition: the Government parties looking for 1| operate in Callfornia articles of in- all-American route to the Yukon basin. | corporation with the ry of State | === == inson was stationed at the | of New Jersey to-day. They are all ISALE OF SAN JOSE - and has many friends In | part of the Whitney-Wider kins syn- | dicate ELECTRIC SYSTEM The First-street | s sold at pub- to the German Savin San Francisco for as a forced one unde ceedings. There was a ent when Commissioner began the sal | appeared. That secretary ofwthe Loan Society, which of first-mortgage bonds ‘was but one oid and it inutes to close the pur There is also a second bond $150,000, secured by second mortgage, but | there remains not a dollar for these bond- | holders. In fact, Loan Society. the first some $6000 interest. May 19. system w SAN JC | electric ratlway lic auction to-day one bidder Tourne: ings and the | 0,000. held ue | There | few m took but a the German Savings and will mortgagees, Out of the attorney fees for Jackson Hatch, $ C ommi yner Johnson, $9000 fo! three lary for Receivers Alvord and | g t 3125 of court and certificates, terest due the per month each, $190 co: ¥ for repairs on receiv There was some $18 German Savings and Loan system is about The First-street electric It runs the en- | seventeen miles in length. tire distance of First street out to the cemetery, with branches into the four quarters of the city. It was built by Ja- | | cob Rich about ten years ago at a cost Rich became involved 1d went into insolven time receivers were appointed for It has just been about cleafing < for the past three ycars. The immediately turned over | to Mr, Tourne: sorge L. Barker of | n Francisco was installed a " No change will be made at present, but improvements are contemplated. ~ Tourney ed that while the Ger- | man_ Savings Loan Society bought the road, they would not hold it, and he | and some associates would purchase it. There are a number of buyers after the \rnmx. Henry S. Burke of the Santa Clara and San Jose electric road wants it to combine with their line. Hugh Center of the Alum Rock motor lLine is another one desirous of getting it. If he buys it his line will connect with it and the power | changed to_electricity, with branches to Alviso and Campbell. 000. that the road. expens STRANGER ATTEMPTS SUICIDE. MARYSVILLE, 19.—A stranger who gives his name as Jasper Young and claims residence at lone attempted suf- cide to-day. As he was trudging along the. railroad track between this city and Live Oak he cut a gash in his throat with a pocket knife, and as he walked into the latter place the attention of the au- thorities was attracted to the wound, which was bleeding freely. He was taken to Yuba City bv a (.nrx!;l able and a com- Wi mission in lunac investigate the case, as Young e has been con- fined In one of the i ne asylums. His age is 40. A silver watch and $4 in coin comprise his effect: —_—— From San Diego to Hongkong. SAN DIEGO. May 19.—President A. H. Butler of the California and Oriental line announced to-night that his company has chartered the Norwegian steamer Thyra for three years to ply between San Diego and Hongkong. he Thyra is of 8300 tons and has the greatest carrying capacity of any steamer in the Pacific, She is new and has only r»centli arrived in_the Pacific. She is now at Vladivos- tok and will teave Hongkong on her in- itial trip to San Diego in about three weeks. FOR REAKTAY