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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JULY 22 1899 - RELIGION 10 [PLIFT THE INDIAN Father Verwyst Declares It Is More Necessary Than E({l{(’g?i_on. PROTEST OF A PRIEST Objects to the Govermment's Policy | in Shutting Out Denomina- | tional Schools. ‘ al Trom | towi I make made u power Tuin. I protest ar mong « of educ witt] to th ¢ them is § jlized by AUSTRALIA STRIKES b Choss e C rst Page. | S5 A BT smoky appearance is seldom seen more | than 300 miles off shore and more fre- Jess than 100, while the Austral s over t the eruption yes Officer Lawless said: | “The afternoon left Honolulu the evening papers contained the news that the lava flow was withifi ten®miles of Hilo and traveling steadily. The inter- | island steamers were crowded with pa we sengers. Some of the people were going | to view the eruption, and others were going to see how their families and relatives w faring. In' my opinion the whole orest has been ' blown off | Mauna Loa, and if the waters of the sea have found their way into the crater | then the whole island ‘has been shat- | tered. In no other way can I account for the peculiar experience we had after | leaving Honolulu. I have been.to sea | a good many years, and never snvnun-! tered, such a. peculiar cross sea before. | It would cateh the ship onone side and | then take hold on the other before she | could recéver, and in consequence the | passengers hatl a-merry time of it keep- | their balance!” Among the passengers on the Aus- tralia was Major General C. P. Egan and his wife. The general has a coffea plantation on the Island of Hawall, di- rectly in the course of the lava flow | toward Hilo. It is situated about ten miles up the hills from the town, and | if the flow was not diverted in some manner then the plantation is covered by this time. The general is very much disturbed over the matter, but is hop- | ing against hope that the plantation | has escaped. There is just a chance that the Aus- tralia on her return trip will go to Hon- | olulu via the h end of the Island of Hawail. In that event the passen- | gers would have a four hours’ view of n a distance even hours ve mile the volecano in eruption fro of twent, from a di and nine hour: miles. of th from a di Mauna Loa is 13,650 feet high, | and when the Australia left Honolulu | er the mountain the pall hanging ¢ mond Head. could be seen from Di | Oregonians on the Stage. | A number of the Oregon men asslsted | at an entertainment given in the Young | Men's Christian Assoclation Auditorium | Jast evening for the benefit of the Chris- | tian Hospital Association, a benevolent | corporation recently organized. The work | of the Oregon men was to appear in the | tablean. here were ten of them, all| showing different phases of the life of the | campaigning soldier, and they were re- | celved with a double amount of applause because of the personality of the men who took part. The remainder of the pro- | gramme was made up of recitations, songs | and short gpeeches. one of which was d livered by Mayor Phelan of her honor. ?Worst Accident | ONDON, July 21.—An explosion | on the torpedo-boat destroyer | Bullfinch on the Solent during her trial to-day killed nine and injured four of those on board. It was the worst naval accident of this nature that has occurred in the British navy in twenty years. The victims were terribly injured, steam and boiling water filling the engine- roo: The Bullfinch is one of the latest- irty-knot torpedo-boat de designed t TORPEDO BOAT DESTROYER BLOWN SOLENT - - OF T e AT TRIESTE ofmThis Nature | That Has Occurred in British Navy for Twenty Years. DESTROYER BULLFINCH. stroyers, INGERSOLL THE ENOSTIC DI . Continued from First Page. ry one for whom he did some e to bring a blossom to his ould sleep to-night beneath of flowers. Life is a narrow the cold and barren peaks ties. We strive in vain to 1 the heights. We cry aloud ho of our cry. Frem the voiceless lips of eplylng dead there comes no word; Jut in the night of death hope sees a star and listening love can hear the rustle of wing. He who sleeps here when dying, mistaking the approach of death for the irn of health, whispered with his lat- eath, ‘I am better now.' Let us be- and were ev loving serv ave he aw of two look tween e dear words are T of all theé countless dead. And now, to vou who have been chosen from among the many men he loved to. do the last sad office for the dead, we give his sacred Speech cannot contain our love. was—there Is—no gentler, stronger, r man."” seech nominating Blaine Colonel rsoll said: > “The Republicans of the United States s their leader in the great con- man of intelligence, a man ., a man of well-known and ved political opinions. They de- \ statesman; they demand a re- former after as well as before the elec- tion. They demand a politician in the highest, bre and best sense—a man of superb moral courage. They demand acquainted with public affairs— s of the people; with not requirements of the hour, but demands of the future. They 1 broad enough to compr ns of th ver earth, 1 in f ¢ ve They de- powers, nd € a man well d prerogat f this a man who will the financial honor of the rnme: credly preserve United Stal knows enough to know that the bt must be paid through the ity of this people; one who knows know that all the financial the world cannot redeem a iar; one who knows enough to 21l the money must be made not by law but by labor; one who knows Jugh the people of the industry to make to pay it over ] as th ““This is a grand ye with proud an with the 3 vear in which the sons of freedom 1 drink from the fountains of enthusi- in which the people.call for eserved in Congress won upon the field; r call has torn from the throat of treason the tongue of slander—for the man who has snatched the mask of Democracy from the ace of rebellion; for the man who, ik llectual athlete, has stood in th of debate and ¢ lenged all comers, and who is still a total stranger to defeat. “Like an armed warrior, like a plumed knight, James G. Blaine marched the halls of the American Congress and threw his shining lance full and gainst the brazen foreheads of th it soldies a | de- famers of his country and the maligners r the Republican party to deserf this gallant leader now is as though an army should desert their gen- eral upon the field of battle *James G. Blaine is now and has be for years the bearer of the sacred and- ard of th Republican party. I call it cred, because no human being can tand beneath its folds without becoming and without remaining free. “Gentlemen of the convention, in the name of the great republic; the oniy re- public that ever existed upon this earth; in the name .of all her defenders and of all her supporters; in the name of ali ber soldiers living: In the name of all her soldlers dead upon the fleld of pattle, and in the name of those who perished in the skeleton clutch of famine at An- dersonville and Libby, whose sufferings he so vividly remembers, Illinois—Illinois nominates that prince of parliamenta- rians—that leader of leaders—James G. Blaine " Colonel Ingersoll's retorts were as quick as a flashlight and as searching. One of them was so startling and 8o effecitve | as to give a certain famous, long-drawn- out railroad suit the nickname of ths “Ananias and Sapphira case.” Ingersoll was speaking and had made certain state- ments highly damaging to the other side in such a way as to thoroughly anger a member of the opposing counsel, who s denly interrupted the speaker with the abrupt and sarcastic remark: ‘I suppose the colonel, in the hature of things, never heard of the story of Ana- nias and Sapphira.” There were those present who expected | to witness an angry outburst on the part of Ingersoll in response to this plain im- plication that his statement had not the quality of veracity, but they were disap- pointed. Ingersoll didn't even get angry. He turred slightly, fixed his limpid blue eyes upon the interrupter and smiled cherubically. Then he gently drawled out: “Oh, yes, I have; yes, I have. And I've | watched the gentleman who has just spoken all through this case with a curi- ous interest. I'Ve been expecting every once and awhile to see him drop dead, but he seems to be all right down to the | present moment.” : Ingersoll never became angry when in- terrupted, even if in the middle of an ad- dress or a lecture. A man interrupted him in Cincinnati once, cutting right into the lecturer’'s most resonant periods with a yell: “Thit's a lie, Bob Ingersoll, and you know it.” The audience was in an uproar in an in- stant, and cries of “Put himout!” “Throw him downstairs!” and the like were heard from all parts of the house. Ingersoll stopped talking for a moment and held up his hands, smiling. “Don’t hurt the man,” he said. ‘‘He thinks he is right. But let me ex) {nis thing for his especial benefit.” plain l Then he reasoned the matter out in lan- guage so simple and plain that no one of , in spite of ddubts and dogmas and | f this Government to | or the man who | down | ad- | | any fr gence whatever could fall compri d. THe man was n eje it sat through the entire S the close asked the privilege 0f beg- ng the lecturer's pardon. Like most men of genius, Colonel Inger- soll a pi onate lover of m and E st the harmonies of Wagner seeme m to be the very acme of musical e slon. In giving voice to his love for | Wagnerian strains he once said: | “There is something more In music’than | can be expressed in rhythmical per | some greater joy than can be felt hearing it simply accented in measured intervals. It struck me long ago that that 1y the me music which rose and fell at preci same dista with actly the emphasis did not ‘express the feelin | the heart; that there must be some splen- did composition that did not have to come back to the starting place in many beats.. There is a music of the heart and of the intellect and of thought, and this I hold to be the music of Wagner. Of all the composers of the world, in my judgment, Wagner .stands at the head. | Shakespeare uses the same words as w do, and yet they glitter with a light that it Is impossible for us to give. When we read him we wonder, ‘Is it possible that this man does this In a common way? And when T hear the nifusic of Wagner I say, ‘Is it possible that this is made with | ordinary chords? The moment the or- | chestra begins to play Wagner's strains all the instruments are transfigured. They seem to utter sounds that they have been | longing utter ever since they were | made. Even the drums join in the j ous riot. The old bass viol is alive with passion. The "cellos throb with love and the violins thrill with the divine feeli When I heatr this music It scems to m that it is full of glory of color thr which the violins picture the coming « the morning, and the horns the glory of the stars gleaming above Color comes gradually from the other instruments and then the orchestra floods the world with the day.” otwithstanding his thoroughly her- etical beliefs, or lack of beliefs, or. as he would say, because of them. Colonel In- s was a very tender hearted man. No one has ever made so strong gument vivisection in the all inte Ingersoll did in a speech z the tion of hi. st the ref of scientific crue e brought his most vivid imagination, his most carefui thought and his most impassioned ora- | tory. So. too, he was indignant concern- ing what the crimes a criminals, en, he beileved, mor inst than & “What shall be done,” he asked, “with the slayers of their fellow-men, with mur- derers? Shall nation take life? The of the e me penalty is it is easy for a jury to find a doubt. the penalty we imprisonment for the jury would feel that if a mistake wer made it could be rectified. But where the pe ty is death a mistake is fatal, con- sclentious man takes into consideration the defects of human nature, the uncer- tainty of testimony and the countle: shadows that dim and darken the under- standing, and refuses to find a verd that, if wrong, cannot be righted. . The death penalty inflicted by the ment 1S a perpetual excuse for mob greatest danger in a republic and- as long as States inflict the penalty of death mobs will follow the example.” WIN BY BUNCHING HITS. | Pirates Defeat the Phillies Through Hard Batting in One Inning. NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING, Clubs— W. L. P Clubs. W. L. Pct. | Brookiyn . 25 .897 Cincinnatt ..38° 20 403 Boston ......40 30 619 Pittsburg ...38 1 481 Philadelphia 45 New York a2 | Chicago .....44 Louisville . 32 ¢ St. Loui 3 Washington 3 Baltimore ...43 34 .557 Cleveland ...15 67 .183 PITTSBURG, July 2i—Pittsburg won in the fifth inning with six hits for a total of twelve | | | | bases. The other five hits, were scattered. }wy,n.m—n kept his hits well scattered and re- | ceived excellent support, the errors doing no Gmmage. Attendance, 5200. Score: % Clubs— R. H. . | Pittsburg " r" | Philadelph! z ) 5 Batteries—Chesbro and _ Schriver: Donahue and McFarland. Umplre | 2 WASHINGTON, July 21.—Mercer was match for Collifiower in the first game to-day and Cleveland won it handily. The" vigitors’ fielding was clean, while that of the Senators was ragged. In the second game Freeman mads | hia thirteenth home run, driving in two men ahead of him. This gave the Senators a Jead and they were never headed. Attendance, 2200 Score of first game: ¥ swartwood and Hunt. and Latham, |TOBIN THOUGHT HE The upper office men of the Police De- partment have for the past three days been engaged in a ghost hunt. Instead of following their usual occupation of trailing pickpockets, petty larcenists and other criminals, the detectiv devoting their time to Investigating a home-made spook who terrorized the neighborhood of Sutter and Octavia streets and incidentally certain members of the Police Department. It is needless to state that the spook is now out of a job, but before it went | out of business it came near driving De- tectives Anthony and Ellls and Tobin out”of their minds. e | It was a real genteel spook, 1ts nyahtly. Visltations at e Gortam e dence on Suiter street quite close to.the corner of Octavia. The lady of the house grew alarmed and reported the matter to Chief Lees. Anthony, Ellis and Tobin were detailed to do a star turn with the “supernatural bemng.” They visited the house and all three imagined that they really saw a ghost, and each crossed his heart in_asseverafing that he had not been In Chinatown that evening. Tobin | was convinced that he had at last run | afoul of the banshee. It was ascertained vesterday that the spook was nothin more_than 2 neglected wheel on one o the Sutter street cars which passed the house at 10 o’clock each evening. The of- ficers have each made a solemn vow to smoke nothing in the future stronger than Napa soda. Anthony hunted up a | Rabbi yesterday and took the pledge. of | | no Clubs— 5 TG Washington ? }g Eé Cleveland hy s ol | Batterles—Mercer and Duncan; Colliflower | and_Schrecongost. ~ Umplres—Gaftney and Latham. Score of second game: Clubs— R H Washington g Clevelard $ sy Battertes—Dineen and Kittredgs B Schrecongost. Umpires—Gaffn i SAW THE BANSHEE | have been | DEWEY TALKS AT A BANQUET Modestly Gives Others Credit for the Vietory in Manila Bay. SPEAKS OF AUSTRIA = After Calling Upon Emperor Fran- cis Joseph the Admiral Will Seek Rest in the Tyrol. e able to The Call and the New York rald. Copyrighted, 18%, by James Gor- don Bennett. TRIESTE, July 21.—Admiral Dewey | will give a dinner to-morrow night on the cruiser Olympia, in honor of Min- | ister Harris, with whom he may go the | next day to Vienna. Subsequently, the a2dmiral may go to Tschl to call on the Emperor of Austria and then to the Tyrol for rest. At a banquet to the admiral, given vening, after a toast to President | McKinley had been drunk, Mr. Harris, | the American Minister, as host, pro- | posed the health of Admiral Dewey, “I thank th | who in reply, said simpl | you sincerely, and drink to your good | health. in Fass responded to the toast, Navy.” Mr. Harris he Captain and Crew and requested Ad- | miral Dewey to ate something of the battle of Manila. The Admiral replied: “I only know that having asked the [ steward for something to drink. he | gave me lukewarm, weak coffee, which !'made me feel quite sick, but my flag | lieutertunt kept the record and I invite him to speak.” | Lieutenant | Flag | was a midshipman Capt | “The American ! then proposed of the Olympi $a: 1 Admiral Brumby under { Dewey and he taught me not to talk, so 1 will only say ‘Dewey did it Admiral Dewey rose again and said: You ask me about the guns and the superiority of our firing. We fired ten | shots a minute with our b-inch guns gainst three shots a minute. I found at Manila no more neutral flag than the Austrian.” 2 At this point Mr. Harris interposed, ng: “Austria is sincerely friendly to the United States. Admiral Dewey, then, addressing himself to the Olympia’s chief en- gZine said that he had contributed to the success of the ship in entering the Bay of Manila by admirable steairng, bringing the speed up to eighteen knot: immediately when ordered to put | full steam. - In concluding the banquet Mr. Harrls y roposed a toast to Emperor Francis Joseph. | A large crowd gathered outside the hotel to watch the arrival of the guests. WASHINGTON, July 2L—A cable- gram received by retary Long to-day from Admiral Dewey means that, in the presence of the President retary Long will present to the hero of Manila y on the steps at theseast front of the Capitol the sword which Congress voted to him in recognition of his conduct of the battle of Manila Bay. Se ary Long stated to-day that he had no reason to believe that Admiral Dewey would arrive in New York Har- bor before October 1, the date originally set by that officer. The committee here is doing everything it can to na- nalize and internationalize the Ad- miral’s return, and has addressed in- vitations to foreign governments to| cend warships to New York to take part in the ceremonies incidental to| the Admiral's arrival. Some of the of the Diplomatic Corps have represented to the na their governments me uno ficials that accept invitations from municipalities, | and the Department of State may con- sequently be called ypon to formally is- sue invitations, egpecially as some of the governments have indicated their desire to be represented at New York by a man-of-war when the Olympia is at that port. Admiral Dewey will be escorted from New York to Washington by a special sub-committee. He will travel in a special train elaborately decorated, and upon arrival there will be escorted to his hotel. After paying his respects to the Pres. ident and Secretary Long the admiral will be escorted to the east front of the Capitol, where the presentation will oc- cur. The evening of that day will be | marked by a grand military, naval and | civic parade, which will be reviewed by the President, Secretary Long and | Admiral Dewey. The city will be il- | fluminated and a pyrotechnic display | will add to the ocecasion. | ' he had reached no decision as to the | duty to which the admiral will be as- signed upon his return. “I will consult with him about the matter upon his return,” he said. There is little doubt, however, that the admiral will be stationed in Wash- ington and will be placed at the head of an important board, probably ad- vigory in character. Should a reor- ganization of the department occur and a board of admirals conduct the me- chanical business of the department Admiral Dewey will remain in Wash- ington. NEW YORK, July 21.—A' London | cable to the World from Trieste says: Privately Admiral Dewey expressed a determination not to be a candidate for President and hoped McKinley would be re-elected. | | OPENS FOR VENEZUELA. Maitre Prevost Argues Against Great Britain’s Contention. PARIS, July 2l.—Maitre Prevost opened the case for Venezuela at tolay's sitting of the British-Venezuelan Boundary Arbi- tration Commission. Maitre Prevost eited authorities on international law to show that the right of discovery gave ' prior rights under conditions which, he claimed, Spain fulfilled. Spain had occupied and | settled points on all the important rivers | Detween the Orinoco and the Amazon in 1630. o=l | Crocker’s Offer Accepted. SANTA ROSA, July 21.—A well-attended meeting of -grape growers was held at Windsor this afternoon to discuss- Hefry J. Crocker's offer to purchase the vine- vard output for the next seven years at $11 a ton. It was the unanimous sense of the meeting that the offer be accepted. — —ee——— LATE SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. SAILED. Friday, July 21. | Stmr Grace Dollar, Fosen, Grays Harbor. DOMESTIC PORTS. PORT BLAKELEY—Arrived July 21—Schr Wawona, from Newport, | “Sailed July 21—Bktn Charles F Crocker, for | Shagihai: schr Dora Blubm, for San Francisco. TS “HARBOR—Arrived July 21-Schr Norma, from Honduras. FOREIGN PORT. HONOLULU—Salled July 14—Br stmr Port Albert, for Seattle. . TRANSATLANTIC STEAMERS. QUEENSTOWN—Arrived July 21—Stmr Cam- pania, (rom New York, for Liverpool, SOUTHAMPTON — Sailed ~ July 21 — Stmr Koenigen Luise, from Bremen. for New York. NEW YORK-Arrived July 2i—Stmp Lucanta, from Liverpool and Queenstown. on | Secretary ‘Long told me to-day that | Without ONDON, July 21.—At the office of the British Admiralty to-day it was stated that the British cruiser Bonaventure, reported Vesterday ashore in a bad posi- tion at Cornilov, has been floated and is now en route to Nagasaki. From that place the Benaventure will pro- ceed to Hongkong for repairs. It is assumed that the cruiser, suffered no serious damage by her eXperience in running aground. BRITISH CRUISER BONAVENTURE IS SAFELY FLOATED The Vessel Goes Aground in the China Sea, but Is Got Off NODUS VD) W HOPED PO Prospect of Settlement of Alaskan Boundary. e NEGOTIATIONS ARE RESUMED | et TrOUble' | GREAT BRITAIN MAKES SLIGHT : | CONCESSION. ———— Has Not Given Up the Claim to & Port on Lynn Canal, but Aban- dons the Idea of Securing Pyramid Harbor. > Special Dispatch to The Call CALL HEADQUARTERS, WELLING- CRUISER SHINGTON, July 2 resumption of mego- BONAVENTURE. TON HOTEL, WA As a result of the boundary SAD DEATH 0 A LIFE-SAVER Jack Hogan Drownedin Heroic Struggle. Al Special Dispatch to The Call. FIRE ISLAND LIGHT, Y., July 21.— Adelbert G. Hubert of California, while bathing, although a strong swimmer, was unable to breast the strong current, and was gradually carried out to sea. He cried for help, and Jack Hogan of the life-sav ing crew responded with others, including | Edmond Lazard, a French cook. The | waves almost ingulfed them. When Laz- | ard reached the shore Hogan was just going into the surf. Howard Baylis threw off his outer garments and followed, Hogan and Bayliss finally reached Hu- bert’s side, almost exhausted. In an en- He they forced him under water. “Don’t push me under; 1 guess | man | gasped: I am all right.” |~ Bayliss and Hogan released their hold, | and “were quickly swept away. Bayliss got near enough to shore for the men who | were waist-deep in the surf to seize him and drag him to the beach, where he lay unconscious. Hubert drifted nearer the | shore. Several times-the waves buried him from the sight of the throng on the | beach. | Hogan, who was still striving to reach | the shore, was seen to throw up his hands and sink. His body rose and fell in the arf, but always just bevond reach. Hu- | bert, who had drifted close into shore | several hundred vards up the beach, re- | With assistance he | | gained his footing. struggled ashore and ran up the beach | to ald his would-be rescuer. Hogan was rolling face downward In the | surf. No lifeline at hand, but the deep in the water, men, who were Wi k One of them | dragged the rope after them. reach:d Hogan limp and unconscious, failed to resuscitate him. Hogan, who Is about 30 years old and unmarried, had a long record of lives saved. 5 Smith Oakley, who ha Tsland, which is State propérty nigh 1 have seen many drowning a cldents and rescu but I never witnessed a mo-e remarkable instance of presen of mind than that displayed by Huberl and 1o it he undoubtedly owes his life.” Hubert sald: “An immense wave swept me off my feet and carried me beyond my depth. While a good swimmer, my strength was exhausted by this "time. Again and again the waves swept ov me, and I s -d much water. I then alled for ‘Jack,’ and soon saw yd another man coming toward me. When they reached me they placed their hands heavily on my shoulders, thereby | forcing me under. Hogan was purple in | the “face and puffing violently. I saw they could not help me, and I said: ‘Let ou stay by me.’ d their hold and | me go; I am all right if 3 At this they both releas Were swept away. “T tried to swim on my back, but be. coming exhausted called to them to com: back. T turned my head, and when I saw the iwo men, one of them a life saver and a powerful swimmer, in a life and death struggle to reach shore I gave up all hope, I turned to take one last look at the shore, and my thoughts turned at once to the grief of my parents in Cali- fornia. “.Suddenly T heard voices and shouting. and ralsing my head carefully saw I was near shore. A big then and hurled me into the arms of those Wwaist-deep in the surf. I was dragged ashore, and was horror-struck to learn farther up the beach. FAI.3 TO STOP CONROY. Armstrong Gets ih’érnecision, but Is Badly Punished. NEW YORK, July 21.—Bob Armstrong, the colored heavy-weight, of Chicago, who has champlonship aspirations, falled to -stop *Stockings” Conroy of Troy in the twenty-round fight at the Broadway Athletic Club, although he got the deci- sion after a battle that was a mixture of | commonplace and sensational As far as punishment went, the victor ot the worst of the encounter, for he was fadly cut up about the face and narrowly escaped being knocked out a half dozen times. He landed the most blows, how- ever, and Had the best of it on points by a good margin. onroy came to the ring with twenty pounds of superfluous flesh. Armstrong, one the contrary, was in superb shape and towered above his stocky opponent. Tn the opening rounds Armstrong was wild, and Conroy kept up against him without doing any damage. ~The pace quickened and became a fight in the tenth round. Then there were three rounds of hurricane fighting, and out of each of them the colored man reeled to his corner bleeding and groggy. The 10 to 8 money that had gone on looked in danger. He pulled out, how- ever, and had the better of the last five rounds. - Defender’s Sails Da 1aged. NEWPORT, R. I, July 2L.—The De- fender and Columbla started this morn- ing on a trial race from Brentons Reef lightship. The course was to have been forty-six miles, but about forty-five min- | utes after the start an accident occurred Columbia seemed to be ahead at that time by about two minutes. gt No More Champagne for Tod. to the Morning Telegraph sa Sloan, the American jockey, who was cuspended a few days ago until August Says e Is going to New York for a week and will resume riding in England at the beginning of September. Sloan declares that he has foresworn champagne. ——— Building of New Cruisers. WASHINGTON, July 21.—The Board of Naval Chiefs decided to-day to give thirty months for bullding the six new protected cruisers instead of twenty-four months, as was first contemplated. This is due to the rush of private work at all the shipyards, which made the yards indis- posed to bid on the vessels unless more time was given. The extension, it is said, insures active competition and lower figures. e Injunction Against Horst Bros. SACRAMENTO, July 21.—Superior Judge Hughes to-night granted an injunction asked for by the defense in the case of Mebius & Drescher against Horst Bros., hop dealers, to restrain the trustees from exccuting a $60,000 judgment recently ob- tained in Yuba County, pending appeal proceedings. deavor to gain a hold on the drowning | who was drawn ashore, | 'wo hours’ work | Hogan |- vave struck me just | that Hogan's body was rolling in the surt | features. | im in large quantities | to the Defender’'s sail and she quit the | race, lowering all sails but her jib. Tue | NEW YORK, July 21.—A London cable | Tod | 5 for disobedience at the pdSt at Sandown, | tiations respect | | controversy adm tlicials seem | to be growing 2t the modus | Naturally the autherit | | | | expresston iy« | | two gove ents are | | vet out ds, : | | the I h Government replied to the | | American note, and it was stated author- | S 1n. vely to-day, had made a concession, | g slight, perhaps, but nev ess a con- Accuses McKinley of)| is considercd by well Informed : E | officials to mean cement may Cowardice. | yet be reached. Great Britain, acting S5T vet given up the hope of secu Special Dispatch to The Call | port on Lynn Canal, though she h doned her propositic | Pyramid Harbor be inserted i vivendi. I understand that the twc reed that the modu trued as ir DETROIT, Mich, July 21.—Go Tiagree to-day hanced to the | ated Press a prepared, signed inter- | view, giving what the Governor assert ne to be “facts which are absolutel reli- | jny T R in_con- able,” bearing upon the relations be- | trove aim to Py | tween Secretary Alger and President | mid Harbor Great was actuate | McKintey, with which the public is| it is believed, by a desi »w befo | not familiar, an arbitral tribunal that m be ap- [{*¥Xc the outaet the Governor says: x| Pointed! foidetermine the exact Hocation [{HEeE 75 esivation fit savine Thet tnal| oo tlc DORAGEEY B L s owh pre- course pursued by the President in this | tensions that it permitted her to occupy lmausvr is little less than cowardly. It O oblacton orith s, to say the least, very unmanly.” | _The determined objection of PHIS _Governor Pingree said his informa- | firitieh it T ) | tion did not come from General Alger, | still considerable difference in the claims but' from “one whose knovledge of the | 0f the (w0 & E e facts cannot be disputed.” Proceeding, be says that repeatedly sterds be sent vy ment will willi | since the Eastern newspapers began |further in order io meet the suggestions | Secretary informed the President that | p: to permit Great Britain to have Vit these press comments embarrassed | Jurisdiction over the territory | occupied | the administration in the slightest de- “io Strictly observe the gree he would resign at once, but the the boundary the 1',,' President as often protested emphati- | I n\,”"{ ‘}“\_‘ e Gz 3 cally that he hall the utmost confidence | Biciuse of the muddled condition of the in Secretary Alger and his conduct of v Hay been com- the War Department, and that the |Delled hlv I"‘Hll"‘“ ”':5 “fl&n';u! ;l\;»l' i sumption of active otlations anc country could not afford to lose his ser- H,.v\(]gmdrln’-{nu conduct the Secre! vices. The Governor says that at the |have strengthened the hope | time his “alleged alllance” with Gen- |dent and members of the Hi | ‘mission that it will not be I eral Alger was announced and before | his disavowal of interviews criticizing | the President had reached Washington, | modus_vivendi will be signed. ter is being activi 1 is settled. the deps General Alger told the President that |t announce whether the High Joint upon the President’s slightest intima- | mission will be adjourned to a de | tion he would resign, but the President | date or indefinitel £ refused to entertain the idea for a mo- | Senator Fairban was in confe | ment. vith Secretary nu_\r 1 St e r;lfll.er« ,pp.r c- [ 5 . s i o one; Ka n to-day regarc [ As to the alleged “alliance” being a ing imz:mgl(ukunr boundary question and | reason for asking for General AIger’S |jater called. upon the President with | resignation, Governor Pingree say | Whom he discussed the dispute. He will “Long before my announcement that | probably make an official statement to- morrow regarding the n ter. BROKEN-DOWN WEAK NERVES = 2, breate * Weak Hearts, Weak Stomachs, Weak Lungs, And_result in ph Gecline and prema ture decay. Weak nerves to begin with, 1 would su~nort General Alger for the | Senate, Secretary of State Hay, on | Ju- 2 last, requested Vice President | Hobart to intimate to General Alger | that his resignation would be accept- | able to the President and would relieve him from the embarrassing attacks of the press upon the conduct of the war. Mr. Hobart properly declined to be ay party to such an unmanly, not to say cowardly, proceeding, and expressed | his opinion in terms decidedly vigorou: “After that General Alger, entirely | ignorant of this miserable conspirac: | several times offered to end the attacks | | by submitting his resignation, but still he President did not have the courage to express himself to his Secretar: General Alger finally did hand in h [ resignation, to take effect January | The President dared not face the gen- eral in a manly way and ask him to re- tire and give his reasons for making the | requ He finally accomplished by in- Nervous Bxhaust | Qirection what. he dared mnot do In an R e enien open and frank manner himself.” Nervous Pr : Governor Pingree states that Mr. s g bart was finally prevailed upon b B A 1 torney General Griggs to convey to the nerve weakness are Srcx;]emry rt]hnt his resignation was de- n:un\" therefora tha ! sired, “and gave my ‘alleged alliance victims are man with the Secretary as a pretext.” .fi\[?‘“,.‘“'hif\fil‘f"‘éw ‘!P{": "‘2’"%3.-3.‘ Iness | Commenting upon the whole matter, | emaciation (Fig. ), coated tongue (Fig. the Governor says that General Alger’s sacrifice was compelled by demands of by Palpitation of the heart (Fig. ), weakened d Daction (Fig. 6), pain In small of back (Fis. B nactive liver (Fig. 8), weak lungs (Fig. 8 the | Uiakness of 1imbs (Fig. 10). All these | hote merve weakness. Other symptoms Fleeplessn New York politicians backed “unscrupulous and heartless pre: predicts that it will be learned ara tired and worn-out feeling, cos- sides < tiveness, and nervousness. 11‘1; PF‘ ldc_:t hlfnqexf’hus been Tespon- | “rmare’is comfort in the knowledge that a sible for whatever mistakes have been | positive and permanent-cure for Nerve Weak- made in conducting the war.” | ness and Nervous Exhaustion has been found. | x h “I am told o very | That cure is “HUDYA HUDYAN corrects n the very best | TRat QU8 00 eymptoms. HUDYAN tranquil- lzes the nerves, strengthens the nerves, pro- motes sound sleep, gives health and strength Physiclans of dls- He add; authority that General Aiger made very | few appointments of officers during the | war, and that the commissions were issued almost entirely upon the orders | | ———————+ tinction_indorse of the President.” [ N N D riDYAN, " podsessen | The Governor alleges that the more ADVISED genuine merit. Let- | recent attacks upon Alger in the East FREE. e adsfum were caused by his frank declaration of | | Call or Write. | ROV, i, AR opposition to trusts, and he added there ———— ¥ is a specific for all is a decided odor of trusts around the | nervous Wisorders, for it never fails in its | present administration, with Mark | §od worlke HUDBYAR, conmers it {Hanna as the acknowledged “king- | of*heaith (o all pale and emaciated faces maker.” HUDYAN is for sale by druggists—ilc a package or six packages for Tt your druggist does not keep HUDYAN send ‘direct to the HUDYAN REMEDY CO., Cor. Stockton, Ellis and Market Sts., SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. YOU MAY CONSULT THE HUDYAN DOC- TORS ABOUT YOUR CASE FF CHARGE. CALL OR WRITE Dr. R L. Walsh GEARY ST.. bet. vde and Larkin. Painless Extraction.. In conclusion the Governor calls upon | Michigan people and newspapers to | protest against the injustice done the State’s foremost representative in pub- lic life. It is conjectured here that | Brigadier General Henry M. Duffield gave some of the foregoing information, but the general declines to be inger- | viewed. Found Dead in a Tree. STOCKTON, July 2L—An inquest was | held to-night on the body of Thomas L. | Parker, the fourteen-year-old son of T. B. Parker of Lockford. The boy had | THito his fathef's orchard to Shoot crows. When_found he was in the branches of one of the trees, dead. the whole side of | his face having been biown off by the ai | charge of the gun. There were no wit- nesses to the shooting, but the theory of Crowns A Flesh-colored Pl “bad joir Conttnuous Gum Plates’ (n | aceident was easlly established to the ecialty. Have received T. tirst prize: minds of the jur 5 fh ranch of dentistry. No r:'mare‘nfs,s ¥ years' experience. Diplomas for Den.ists. e AT R s SACRAMENTO, ‘July 21.—The State | Chichester's Englisih Dlamond Bran Board of Dental Examiners met here to- { night and passed on forty-six diplomas | BT of which were approved ke ol ENNYROYAL PILLS Original and Only Genutne. SAFE, always reliable. LADICS ask Druggist e Chichester s Bnalios Da- mond Brand in Ked and Gold metaliic' . scaled with hise rivbon. Take 10 other. Refuse dangerows substine Fiona and imitati. ns. At Draggists, or send ey | Ocean Water Tub Baths. 101 Seventh street, corner Mission. water direct from the ocean. salt 1o stamps for Henla: stimonials anl = @ Eellof for Ladics,” in ierier, by rotarn o z 5 Moil, 10,000 Tosionals, o Paper. It is an Il Wind D A T Ay iy That Blows Nobo od- & dy Go SIE0 5 s g ptemmons Glect, Spermatorrh Rihicds, annatural find 8¢, or any inflam tion, irritation or I‘l"'\‘.g: tlod of mucous mem rieEvans Cemeat Go, branes. Non-astringent. Sold by Draggists, or sent in plain wrapper, That small ache or pain or aeakness is the ““ill wind”’ that directs your attention to the necessity of purifying your blood by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Then your whole body receives good, for the purified oy ""r"x"bo"fp"‘k-“ Blood goes tingling to every organ. It is 2ont on resicity the remedy for all ages and both sexes. Hoods S Never Disappoints DEWEY.STRONG &C0, SE\ Qg N