The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 3, 1899, Page 1

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i to be taken from the Library.++++ This Paper not SAN F RANCISCO, MOND Y, JULY 3, 1899. PRICE FIVE CENTS. INSURGENT ITALIAN LEADERS ARE | QUARRELING Agtsina!dogs Cousin Has Been Killed or Impris- oned by Gen. Trias. Special Dispatch to The Call. arrested as PEP A P U NP WD »> 2 nnsylvania and U %3 i - ippines, ha > 4 it T T + ! spatch from g ~ . subj by th rar Department Lol - MANTLA NS Hanc and o i o v X nia 1 troops. for San Francisco + |9 + I ska car 812 enlisted men, + |¢ + icers and the Utah 9 ¢ + ® + The r eft in Manila one + | ¢ 5 4+ s npany H, and harged: I + |e , + sylvan Utah, twenty-nine discharged.” e B B 42 ‘ I e R e e g e sl T g e . . MANTT o | Merritt. Of the s lates 2 + . & turned as quickly 3 \ he fact that ¢ 5 the . A s and h! S ser n up sl - : ch difficulty to obtain re i 4 volunteers. Tt stimated that nen, not s obtaine enough 1 a i fossor W 3 I qualifi- | ¢ me to perform duty as American s ¢ I « L and | 9 ERES Ty ¢ walied Wit the SOUTHERN FILIPINGS it : ANXIOUS FOR PEACE|; wish to fight the southern isla of the archipelag Many of the towns there are th hands of smal ds of Tagalos, a people wdorse Americ e until t tain that Aguin- aldo will be nvinced of scuthern ks, can be Let them once be 1d the allegiance of Mr hurman secured by diplomacy ted States gunboat Benning- thi islands, CHAMBERS Bu- Press ICE ton took Mr. Schurman to Mindanao and the islands of the Sulu and Visayan reau has again been discredited by the publication this morning of a wan traveled through the Berlin dispatch stating that the of Negros with Colonel Smith Cologne ( tte has a special from and a party of natives. In several of | Apia dated June 26 to the effect that the principal towns he was tendered | Malletoa Tanu will soon' be trap banquets and had an hour’s conference €d to the Fiji Islands, and t with the young Sultan of Sulu, who | bers will soon follow Maxse - him in the royal audience | who are now on théir way nome ct , surro nded by a body-guard .tte has scored what is of ooking Oros. 3 5 M-\ Schiman Elaithe! Sultan inat)] CHLed 1 ICHS pApcr Taniance S the United States had acquired the .y Chambers’ Press Bureau, for the reignty of the Philippines from | Judge has not sent out either of these )ain, but had no wish tc subjugate the | facts. The Call has also “scocped” the population nor inte with their cus- | Judge, for it predicted both events in toms or religions. On the contrar s Samoan letter published on July 1. ! the ‘;:v-A t ‘l re ul’ xh; American Gov The correspondent of the Cologne Ga- AT ansport | stnment was to help the people of the | ,.tte now at Samoa is Dr. Genthe, b ”:,\,“ Sultan replied that he earnestly de- | cultured gentleman having the ti al aays peac and w nxious to con- of Ph.D. from a German university. L tinue the existing treati. nting an official crgan of uch credit nd th ating th age the president of ted the town of Bor- tish North Borneo, a1l -ved by the an Government to h tement be taken as straws ind further actfon of the comm TROOPS TO INCREASE GENERAL OTIS' COMMAND capit he r officials, who afforded him every facility in his study of the local | dently Tanu has refused tc vernment and the customs of the | part of the ¢ t and Having e ‘],3,‘ The population he found much | Mulinuu with his Tke thatof the gouthern Philippine Is American and ( man Commissione 1 nment at present is in o - etate, but a more | have insisted upcn this, but the zation is being devel- | lish Co oner not standing with n them cou to resist them has d it would seem as if the S Llorente, whe idered the | the order, a influential native in Cebu, said to | English Commis :r had been com- 3 Schurman [ like the- A ican | pojjed to reluctantly consent to his de- of th tion of church and portati . but I think it would be unwise to z t rtestanti: while condi- an instance of the unreliability of nsettled. e has since nt out from Apia, atten- an address to moa, purporting United States W. Osborn called to in issued by Luther verthrow of the Su- be n citi been Gene: nd taken his sreme Court, eat * DECISION ADMITS regular igned r to have Consul shertly after the tc crui 3 | Four thot ow bel EXISTENCE OF “WAR” | preme Court. This address was pat drilled at t ) 1 will gail | otic in tone, eulogized Judge Chambe fddle of T ez only ! | stated that in America any one who middie of onth, leayviug only 353 C —By the decls- | oriticized the Supreme Court would be more upplied to the reguiar f the Controller of the Treasury that | geverely punished, and closed with the Fegime ldiers now in service are entitled to | exclamation: mericaris, stand by 1t is confider predicted that by cent increase of the payment au-|the flag!’ The address was sent out ments 1o be or- e paid “in time | published throughout the United in this ry 500 men | °f mide offi- | States; but Mr. Osborn says that he did for the v r regi- | ¢ ippine | not sigm it, nor did he dictate a word nts at i dy to pro- o « dignity of | of it. The first knowledge he had of the ceed to Ot ¢ to .put | War. | existence of the address and its signa- i ective condition as Heretofore the authorities have care-|ture Wwas ceived from one of the ht military posts, | f admitting t we | newspapers in which the article con- ach re will be selected | are in a st and even now none | taining them was published. Thus were recruits sent as fol- | of the officers outside of | Osborn’s name and influence used New York; | those whose is t0 pass on ques- | to support the dignity of the Supreme Columbus | tions of arm y will consider the con- | Court of Samea. § idan; Illi- :;’”\ hilippines as anything but an‘\ Later un,l\‘»ht‘{)\ orn il;]rurr-‘d the venworth, Kan Pri io, arpicd S Sbns the = | in will of Chambers and others by re- a, and j ort Crook. | o A B “"Y:I““r';”“"”’g] fusing to perform some act which they , and Vancouver Barracks. international obliga. | required of him to farther their o pct esult therefrom would | schemes, he was charged in an article, cies in the -regular end “,r § \I\;r;s«s ent. The Fili- hich was published extensively, with re u yeneral Otis' com- > have go reason to claim. [ having refused ile acting as presi- mand represent men whose terms of | cyel if they did not get It recosnition of | dent of the Municipal Council to pay enlistment have expired, and not cas- | tien o increasing the risk of forelgn com. | the salary of young King Tanu for the ualties. Most of the vacancies exist in | plications, would seriously handicap the | month of January, as ordered by .the fed States in the prosecution of war. | Berlin treaty, and proceedings were regiments which sailed for Manila with ' Un RE BEING ARRESTED : EW YORK, July 2.—@A Sun cable from Rome says: Signor Costa, a Socialist Deputy, WchChinese Student of Yale ‘Saturday evening for an offense committed in 1895. Tortured by Order of It is stated that orders have been issued for the arrest of Deputies De Felice, Aprile and Macol CHAMBERS MdY SOON! BE CALLED HOME. STATESMEN _ he was leaving the Chamber on Prince a. PEPNPEPDED P S SR P SO SOUD S WD S i S S S Sy S S5 S SE SR ICTORIA, - B. C., July A, strange story of the decoying of D! m Americanized Chinese doctor DTS =T R P from Yale University to China’s L . h capital, where he was imprisoned - and tortured before his release was ob- e i 2 tained by an American resident of Pe- 2 ) ® | king, is told in coples of the North ¢ | China Daily News received by the last 2 Oriental liner According to the ent of the Chinese Wing, LL. D. Peking correspond- paper Dr. Yung| of Yale University was s studyving medicine and law at Yale up to three months ago, when he was v ited by a Chinese, with whom he left | Yale for the West. It s since been learned that this Chinese brought to Dr. Yung Wing letters and papers from e Prince Ching, conferring upon him a | | position under the Imperial Chinese Government, providing he accompanied | the bearer of the letters to Shanghai. | The doctor accepted the position and |at once left Yale for San Francisco, whence he and the Chinese friend | sailed on the steamer Coptic for Shang- | hai. As soon as the two Chinese were put | ashore from the launch which took | them from the Coptic at Woosung the were met by a number of Chinese who bound the doctor and threw him into a | I SITUATION Professor J. G.|4 United s Ad- | from & | | eVvo fhe oo | BRUSSELS, July 2.—The situation in N o 4 | Belglum ‘to-night is regarded as ex- gl 0.4 4 | tremely grave, Socizlists and Radicals orate e $ | composing the opposition now demand bl ¢ |universal suffrage and will be satisfied f 1 ol .4 | with nothing else. All depends on what S CASTLE OF ST. ANGELO, ROME eree e pesnbn lersisiaisn e idtoda 6 . o . o+ |1t fails to bring in a bill granting uni- £ th N 8 ¥ g 2 X & | versal suffrage it is feared that there | FEIL f Santo Nieolas, | This fortress t been famous in the history of Rome since the Middle Ages, and now the principal | will be a revolution, with consequences | island Cebu, said to Mr. | stronghold of the Government within the city proper. Y| e v v aantnE chcater, : ; @o:vioieisieseieiedes PUPP O AP SPG P SO DS S U S U DU SO D S PP § The Government is in a difficult posi- By opposing the demand for uni- al suffrage it may bring about a lution which would sweep away the monarchy. On the other hand, if it gives in an appeal for universal suf- rage would apparently result in such a large alist-Republican majority | in the legislative body that the mon- | archy would be just as much in danger. | In addition to all this the workmen | in populous industrial towns in Bel- | gium have decided to go out on a strike if their demands are not yielded to on| tion. BY W. E. WILLIAMSON Tuesday. Active members of the revo- S s - lutionary party are collecting arms and | | instituted in the Supreme Court to-com- , property. Consul Osborn acknowledged L.’,",;‘,’;:]‘,',f{’“'il'f,‘i,."f',‘zflfl:; Sy prenare pel the payment. The dispatch also|in writing the receipt of the communi- | - Jh.day there was no serious disturb- | Stated that Mr. Osborn v the only | cation, and was seen by one of the| ance in Bru itself, but serious one of the American or British officials | English guard to hand the answer to a | events occurred in several places in the “who would have anything to do With | native fur delivery. This native was| provinces. Socialists assembled to-day | the German Consul General.” Mr. Os- | watched and a ed after the delive in ereat numbers in the park, where a born states that the whole dispatch was | of the note, and the pecurrence was re- | regimental band was to play during misleading, and was intended to be so. | ported by Captain Sturdee to Admiral | {hs afternoen. Soclalists gathered | 1y dutie diplomatic and con- | Kautz. The admiral at once sum-| around and sang the ‘Marseillaise” sular representative of the United | moned the American Consul General to | with such vigor that the music of the States and as acting president,” said | the flagship and warned him against| pand could not be heard. The police reguired me to have daily | having any further communication Ir. Osborn, | tried to intervene, but had to vield to | intercourse, by letter and otherwlise, [ with the American above mentioned el | Pk ot e : an & _mentioned. superior numbers, and the Socialists | Jethsch egitiice c908 presentatives | Consul Osborn was indignant at this | catried the day. Socialists to the num- and treaty officials. yuld be a pe- | high-handed proceeding, and stated that | her of 700 or 800 then formed a proces st three years there has been a ccn- t dispute as to the amount which | culiar ref tative a ar a- | he had but performed an official duty, | sion s rcl c Streets tion who, on account of a diffe of | and would certainly repeat the act If ’.",’T;,‘;"'\'I." f,‘,““,j(u‘ ;‘;fi,},“,‘:}‘s‘iggi;‘g*{;;. opinion on certain pc cal qu \'U4I§!5. 0c m required He sured A\d*‘ :‘\]'1“§C;I];4151"' a5 (hay: went AL thel “would not have anything to do’ with | miral Kautz that he represented the | Maison du Peuple a meeting was held his colleagues and others with whom | American Government in his official | 3¢ which resolutions for universal he must transact business. Possibly| ¢ as Consul General, and was | suffrage were passed with great en- very much which will ever be regret- | res Blebtorihiaricte o Fis Govera | fosoots | ted might have been averted if others | ment alon Phe “most serious disorders were | had not refu to ‘have anything to | The incidents, showing the way | those which took place at Alost. A doi selfted cther officials With | Consul Osborn has been misrepresented | meeting was addressed there by Abbe | hom it was their duty to co-operate. | and insulted by officials from whom he | Daens, a Catholic socialist, who by | “The Berlin tr contains nothing | dared to differ have never before been 5 hatever upon the subject of the ! published. They are ed as told ————— e = 1g's salary, either as to amount, or | the Consul General himself, and their | U or manner of payment. For the |truth cannot be questioned. STEA\ ! NV A | MATAAFA COMPLAINED the King should receive. For a whiie i he was paid $1800 a year, and at other | T only one-third of that amount. | OF A BROKEN PROMISE \i ! The reports are very imperfect, and ! l | TEES do not show clear! 1st how or when | LONDON. July 2.—The correspond- the amcunt of the salary was fixed and |en¢ of the Times at Apia Lty determined. In April last, after thelygande reports Apia,Samoar S ohnE i s nafi baes inktallcibyalie|haaus, YOROTLE that he “hasimads b | fes he question of | tour of the islands of Upolou and Savay and amount and manner of pay- |and had an interview at Falefa with Mataafa. The chief complained that the International Commission had not Kept its promise to have Mulinuu ment again came up. While 1 was act- ing as president the three consular rep- wtatives were in reality responsible | Alaskan Vessel Brings Down | a Million From the ‘ Klondike. | res E e vac- for my acts and for any disbursements | uated by all parties o e that | might make. 1 d the joint | question of the kingship was decided. | action of the three representatives, but | sy could not agree, the German Cc 1l contending that no disputed claim On returning to Apia the correspond- | ent laid the matter before the commis- ion.. He says that he found some di- | hould be paid pending the arrival of |ferences had existed between the com- the High l'umr‘.‘ ‘mn. In ..ratbj that C;‘mi oners with regard to the measures | SRR matter which had been a subject of |t made, but it is now decided that okl EDatt [he C: contention for years might be settled, I ; Malietoa Tanu shall go to Fiji and Special Dispatch to The Call. e soric Tns st ulinun, shall e ddmmedialely v ANCOGVER, BBAC, il 2. dhe i“ )rt bill asking a judicial determina- = = — steamer Tn; ar lnul n-n‘nghttfg.m the tion of the question.” The bill was filed, north with a large party of Dawson {and 1 apswered the same without sum- SECRETARY ALGER SENDS | miners. Wallace Haywood, ex-ser- { mons, interposing no obstruction but = | geant of the local police, brought out simy asking that the disputed ques- REASSURANCES TO OT'S i s 000 in gold dust. Eight others had tion be settled that 1 might be justified D s aeiouA e NEW YORK, July A Jourr 1 special | i of the claim and that 2 in the payment of the cla Captain Gosse says he had one million | | no liabllity of myself or colleagues | from Washington says: Alger cabled Otis { might be incurred. The proceeding|at Manila to-day to pay no attentior to | dollars on board. | was in reality for the benefit of the | the rumor that he is to be relieved. e | = — | King and the Government, and no other | rumor the Secretary refers to is one ul-| COURT Or' ARBITRATION. | course could have been pursued by a |leging that General Brooke Is to be suc- eeded as Governor of Cuba by Robert P. Porter and that Brooke goes to Mantia to succeed Oti | Germany Omciai ly— Announces Her | prudent and careful official.” Approval of It ! " During the troubles Consul General | 0eborn received a communication from e i cltize iding in Apla R = 2 THE HAGUE, July 2—The German i".’}h,\:?;f';‘:,';p;‘,‘("fa"“?s{%?é = ;\_‘%m,‘ .- Children sf‘"t a Blaze. delegates at yesterday’s session of the pathy with Mataafa, protesting against | NOVATO, July 2—A combination of | drafting committee of the arbitration e lactnE, v doaiedion | coijdren Jindtclies S0 e bele OEhAY 16 ) cainniiitesiof. tne Reace Conferenca a5 e o e Tany patives, and | sulted. at noon to-day, in a fire which de- | ficially anpounced the, assent of Ge his ety by T e natter | stroved the stable of Anton Swaze. Two | many to Sir Julian ~Pauncefote’s pro- sking him | horses were burned to death, and it was | posal of a permanent court of arbitra- to the admiral with the request that the o | revolver only by the combined work of all the citi- zens that the business portion of the town was saved from destruction. In the evening M. de Staal, head of the Russian delegation and president of the latter take some measures to put a stop to this pillaging and destructfon of his DECOYED TO PEKING TO BE » IMPRISONED Ching. o bamboo cage, in which he was carried to Peking. On the arrival at the Chinese capital the unfortunate doctor was imprisoned in temple. While there he was horribly tortured, his body being burned with hot irons. It was given out by the local authori- ties that Dr. Yung Wing was impr oned becau he was believed to have had some relations in, or connection with, the late unfortunate reform movement, but this was only a blind, for it afterward de -eloped that the doctor was imprigoned bv impecunious Prince Ching so that he might extort money from the doctor’s friends, who, it was thought, would be ready to pay heavily to deliver him from imprison- ment and torture or death. This scheme was nipped in the bud by an American resident of Peking, to whom the doctor managed to send word of his predicament by bribing one of his keepe The American, who was dressed in Chinese costume, went to the temple, and by threats, accom- panied by the persuasion of a pointed obtained Dr. Yung Wing’s re- From the temple he took him to a lez se. Tientsin b train, whence the unfor- tunate doctor took a steamer r Japan. He probably will return to America. N BELGIUM - EXTREMELY GRAVE. ’;The Government Will Have Great | Difficulty in Preventing a ution. reason of his attitude in the present complications has been repudiated by the Catholic party. An attempt to Lreak up the meeting by the police was strenuousl resisted. The police charged the crowd with extraordinary violence and many of the people were seriously injured. The popular feeling at Alost is in such an excited state that further serious trouble is feared to-night or to-morrow. Abbe Daen’s brother has been arested. Incidents of extreme gravity occur: red at Liege. A review of the civi guards took place to-day, and while it was in progress a procession composed of Socialists and Radicals marched past the troops singing the Marseillaise” and “Carmagnole.” While theSocialists were marching the ci guards re- mained unmoved, but afterward they marched in uniform to the celebrated Maison du Peuple of Liege, thus dem- onstrating their entire sympathy with | the Socialist party. A monster meeting of- miners was held at Mons, at which resolutions in favor of going out on a strike In the event of the Government’s refusing to give them satisfaction on electoral questions on Tuesday were passed. This means that from 25,000 to 30,000 men are preparing to go on a strik Mass meetings were held in Verviers to-day by all the workmen's associa- tions of that district, and a general strike was agreed on should the Gov- ernment refuse to give way. Some 20,000 Radicals and Socialists held a demonstration in Antwerp last evening. The Government was very hotly attacked, and there was a feel- ing of hostility to the Government in general. Order was maintained by the police. The Burgomasters of Brussels, Antwerp, Liege and Ghent have in- form d the Government that it will be impossible for them to be responsible for the maintenance of order unless the Government yields to the demand of the masses. According to the Petit Bleu here if no means of reaching a satisfactory so- lution be brought forward by the Gov- ernment on Tuesday the King is think- ing of dissolving Parliament and con- sulting the country. conference, gave a brilliant reception and ball. at which Mr. Andrew D. White, head of the United States delegation: Sir Julian Pauncefote. head of the British Qelegation, and most of the other dele- gates were presen BISHOP NEWMAN IS CRITICALLY ILL Report of His Serious Condition Sent Out From His Cottage at Saratoga. SARATOGA., N. Y., July 2.—Bishop John P. Newman of the Methodist Episcopal Church, whose episcopal residence is in San Francisco, is critically ill at his cot- tage here. Bishop Newman suffers from paralysis and pneumonia, and his recovery is nut likely. S DAN LUCEY CONVICTED. Found Guilty of the Murder of Pat- rick Reagan Near Butte. BUTTE, Mont.,, July 2.—At an early hour this morning the jury in the case of Dan Lucey. charged with the killing of Patrick Reagan brought in a verdict of murder in the first degree. This is the third conviction for this grade of murder in_a comparatively short time. Lucey and Reagan left here on Septem- ber 2 work. jast to go to British Columbia for Reagan had considerable money His body was found next day stance from the railroad track in the canyon. The head had been crushed with a rock and the pockets rifled. Lucey was caught later in Victor, Colo. e e Dr. Fuller Lived in Vacaville. VACAVILLE, July Dr. B. F. Fuller, mentioned in The Call as having been robbed of $1700, was formerly in business in Vacaville and is weil known here, as is his wife, who was formerly Mrs. Amby Hill. The news created quite a sensation here, and conjectures are heard on all sides relative fo the loss.

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