The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 14, 1899, Page 2

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THE SAN o FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, AUGUST 14, 1899. 2= I BRUTALLY BEATEN AND b DRAGGED IN THE RIVER Henry Henson, Witness in a Water-Right Case, Set Upon by a Band of Whitecaps. | ® ANACONDA, Mont, Aug. 13 s has just been rec ed of a @| 2 whitecap ou at Choteau in Northern Montana, in which George < | £ Henson w ken from his.bed last night, severely beaten and dragged & at the end of a rope in the Milk River. Henson was a witness .in a water right case which had assumed large proportions in the county voived c oney. The n trial seven men disguised as whitecaps vis- £ , Pt 1 H ed him and then beat him until he could ¥ HE transport Sherman is now beginning to make an 4 rope was tied to his wal and he was © San Francisco. At ne ) ver and dragged about until nearly drowned. He < therefore, be in the neighborhood of 3 promise that he would leave the country imme- 21 Captain B: D] gating the case, and men of considerable 2| Sherman before the 25th inst. 1 16 be involved in the affair. ©| ing that she left Yokohama at noon on the 9th she : 3| J. T. McMillan, United States naulical expert, [ =itttk DED LGB PG D G TeTe s Gedee@ | was in latitude 39 degrees 40 minui s from San Franeisco. A large copy et side of the mil, | consequence. I must give the Nation- credit for ing, from the very nning, foreseen what the revision d lead to. They in many things wed blindness. Tk cecepted the madman, Quesnay de Beaurepaire, their spok But they had a keen | nct for the ultimate trend of the revisionist movement. VAITRE L DREYFUS st i NTI-SEMITES sho ! himself from his ego to enter the fe Dreyfus is generally unfortunate iu! > of the pen. He lacks artistic | ilities and cannot disassociate | e attack in of othe One sees this h | Eh ezotism in his correspondence with his ; wife. He was never more unfortunate | Demonstration Stopped BATTLE OAF HOSTlLE than in the letter complaining that M. | by Police. Kr | . LO: correspondent of the I | *The i proval of the Orange VOLKSRALD impression upon th 208 knots from this port. arneson, superintendent of the transport service, said yesterday that he “She will average about 295 knots each twenty-four hour: will not be very far from the Farallones at noon on the figures that at noon yesters north, longitude 166 degrees 50 minutes east, and was, therefore, =3 %‘!THE SHERMAN’S COURSE FROM YOKOHAMA TO SAN FRANCISCO. e miles of ocean that separate-her from oon yesterday (San-Francisco time) she had covered about 1365 nautical miles and should, did not look for the said he, “and re h inst. day (San Francisco time) the Sherman 208 nautical ; of the above map showing the course of the transport is on exhibition in the window on the Market- business office of The Call. The map is attracting a great deal of attention, and crowds are gath- ered about the window to view it from early morning till late at night. s GPPOSED 10 WAR uger Held Responsible for the Crisis. e Special Dispatch to The Call. NDON, Aug. 14—The Johannesbu ally Mail say Government is awaiting the —ap- ree State and the TE Cape Colony Ministry before replying to the proposal of Mr. Chamberlain to sub- mit commission of inqui to | vaal | was the franchise controver: to a joint I am in a position sert that the first draft of the Trans- s answer was a refusal. The second an acceptance, conditional on the in- dependence of the South African republic not I being impugned. ; “This de; ndence on T(lfif'mfflann and the Dutch Cabinet at Cape Town is proof | se chaos reigning in Pretoria. ~ The of leadi to w th being responsible for the ¢ this, flict The Cape " correspondent of the | Daily Chronicle says: “1 am convinced | that the first shot fired in the Transvaa woul rising. asser cordi my ng members of the Raad are opposed | ar and accuse President Kruger of | is. More than preparations, the averse to a con- despite the aal generally war is d be the signal for a general nati The imperial Government, I ¢ rt positively, has heen warned ac ngly and Is postponing the enforce- it of the new Basuto hut tax. - ARRANGEMENTS FOR . | Casimir-Perier @id not keep a promise | FORCES OF FRANCE | to him. It exasperated Casimir-Perier, | et — who treated as a foul libel the er- | Special Dispatch to The €all. Associated Press tion that he, as President of the re-| . % public, entered into a pact with an offi- | S, Aug. 13.—Demonstrations f{ti | battle has | cer accused of treason. Casimir-Perier |CUITed this evening outside the office: tical bearings has a habit of thinking morbid He | Of the Anti-Semite League, where Jl;\lk'd £ of Paul Derou- 1s taken deep offense at several asser- | O Ueri, Pr dent of m(f lmx,ux: _an Je ) e o & Sof Mercier and will try conclu | Max Regi, lvhtm former Jew-baiting SR ke Repulyiand poes mnd twen! : Mayor of Algiers, for whom orders of | with him to-morrow. We expect Mo e 29 dhesh Gl Fitng ¢ of vonspiring 1o bring about ine; in Mercier’s, feline. . of Government, -are still be- e of Coun Marie von Mun- ed by the nolice. o ster's letters in the secret dossler were| Fifty anti-Semites took up a. position to Mile. Lucle Faure. ' They fany be | SO0l M. Guerin harangued ‘. = e < them from a window. Finally the po- forgeries. I cannot imagine that she jjce closed the thoroughfare to prevent| gave them to the Minister of War as|the demonstration becoming serious. ¥ f that the family of the German In the course of the evening M. God- Embassador took an interest in D | frey, pre nt of the committee of the It fus. | Jeunnesse Royal was arrested and EhlGhana RO shac e S koot _ . |a dispatch from Saint Lee, capital of emaciated red-h Jew, whose uni- he Schwarzkoppen letter, speaking | the Department of Manche, announci captain. 5o il fits | O .the impetuioys Intervention in the | the arrest of M. L. Meunet, secretary nd physi iir of the German Emperor for rea- | of the League of Patrio % ‘, S sons unknown even to Hohenlohe, is| It appears that the report of the ar- ing b the believed to be genuine, In this connec. |Fest of M. Mariel Habert, member of tion it is said in military circles that a | th¢, Chamber - of Deputles for PR ] i : L @ pouillet, and a high official of the fefviin hom seror William took a | League of Patriots, was incorrect. He deep interest has fished out for him | still at larg Out of thirty-seven | Dreyfus as a person competent to in- | warrants some twenty-five have N juestions. Th "!\,M = ,1‘ x,\.”:,"‘m" ‘\]‘“ f‘,’l M. Denys Cochin, monarchist and t blood. S sald, was a| ;. of the deputies for the Seine de- relative of th late >ques Saint Cere the Premier, written to partment, ha 1 :au, announcing his era! polic; Those already | Comte de Sabran Ponte Lebaudy. artist, a He came to Paris a pictorial the story goes, and exhibited arrested include . Comte Che its ending in @ a desper- a *neck or 1 4 i eliher il eive | 2 the Salon. .There was such a lady, | ally, M. de Monicourt, secretary of the g ! 1 E I would be sorry to declare her the | Jeunnesse Roy ts, -and M. de Frechencourt, vice-president of the tress of “the German nperor- and white carnation soci- The mor ituation of thrj forces en- tempt of Dreyfu: What the Oeillet Blance, or gaged reminds one of that of the armi ool e e =, e Al ihore ey say about her may be another flly was a former friend of 2 A : lie, which should be nailed to the coun- " Paris and is now a fervent had to fight. The Dreyfusites view the | partisan of the Duc d'Orleans. The situa- Military credulity is boundle helieved to be less dangerous than Ant 'hihi']"};l ‘”’“fl"f ity EMILY CRAWFORD. tended. The arrests serve to turn ;I“)' |‘xl “,\..\,v‘. i e ition from the Dreyfus f(ur.l\\hxt!v ey w recr se e of the pa snable the neously 1 GERMANS RIDICULE the seizure of the pan mrr(n’r : le the m = | a o superior officers of the e MERCI=R’S STATZMENT | T e Tasaoe, cwho optal and may | admission to the offices’ of the . Semite League, found the place a verit- BERLIN, Aug. 13.—The statements of | able fortress. The grand hall contained General Mercier before the court-mar- | twenty Winchester repeating rifles and plenty of ammunition, revolvers and tial at Rennes y erday regarding the imminence of war and France excit sidearms. is composed men and Fr g is formed of ATS MAY between Germany only ridicule here. IOWA DEMOCR The general opinion is that the former 000 office right wit sists of the church. All profess re.|War Minister ought now to be judged| CHOOSE H. H. BASHOR spect for legality, but only from the lips | from a pathological view-point | == out. One side 18 just as unscrupulous | The semi-official newspapers declare | pojjticians Are at Sea Regarding the other, but the most active and | that there never was any idea of war i {and that even had Count von Munster, | the Ticket and Bi8te a Ci s side does really fight for Platform. SS numerou S A ador in Paris, be ; the cause nity, tice jpnd Affaires would haye| DES MOI Aug. 13.—Everybody is Lruth. {iThe have, at any | peen jett to car ‘mbecssy busi. | at sea regarding the ticket and platform rate, won be and they | pegs, “" | of the Democratic State convention which are sure ly neutrality of — - | meets here on Wednesday. Only the head pdmina of the ticket has been ed of as vet, the Governn |PLANS MADE FOR A [4nd for it three names are mentioned as Their adv. s can no longer mak candidates. Rev. H. H. Bashor of W, e that hung Pickard, or| terloo is at present the favorite, as he is use of the rc | SENSATIONAL ARREST known to be right on the 16 to'l side of |‘l‘1f ZOT xrh;x\z cut n‘(lm,\ lh;mu. 1h:x - | the silver question. Cato Sells of Vinton, Mi r of War could not, if he wanted | 7T,0NDON, Aug. 13.—The correspond- | Who Wwill be temporary ch also to, read a forged document in parlia- £l he correspond- | 1 "pushed by his friend ,vernor ; ent of the Times at Rennes says strict | hut he does not want it, and the tone of ment. It now to stuff the | orgers have been given to the local po- | his speech will T to do with his dossier wit for Mother Goose ; | suce: a 1s no one knows tales. But 553 s | lice and special commissary men to | just exactly what his views will Cpslieigdd mbErs, Pres- |y 19 themselves in readiness, and on | M. J. Wade of owa Cit S Ing POWEIS. | the slightest provocation effect an ar- | also been brought out In the b >oubt s are su ok il b % i < a gubernatonal candida S Gt R WHIch il he S sensational | {1t antly has little ichance of success, plied with J thout ac- | than any yet chronicled. as his position on the main issue is | cepting M. ¢ | doubtful. For the rest of the ticket ab- solutely no names have been mentioned. «1 DUEL TO THE DEATH 1t is believed the Chicago platform and n Jews must 1 LAS S | Bryan will be indorsed, but n«I»z unani- Ithy ~ Geéntiie mousiy, as there will be several contest- i ON A DALLAS STREET ing delegations from various countles, i sides will make a flght for the - on T 5 ) The platform will be anti- Two Men Fight With Revolvers as o N imperi ate Issue ful campaign. a success- on which to mak Weapons and Both Receive Dreyfusite r's depc Mortal Wonnde. | Hon. W. J. Bryan will speak here Tues- Hon ey DALLAS, Tex., Aug. 13.—A sensational | day evening, whe e delegates are i < "It fo | duel to the death occurred here to-day | expected to b 3 A “1‘ ! between Policeman A, H. Rawlings and = i) eing bad. | charles A. Danie Revolvers were the jiLt e have AL now print. It has | weapons, the distance three paces and CALIFORNIAN SLAIN qualities h did not give it | both of the principals are dead. Eight or BY ALASKAN INDIANS credit durix 1i They are easy, | nine shots were fired, and plate glass win- | e flowing statements, st plausibil. | dows for blocks around were shattered. | : : 3 L. W. Martis of Santa Rosa Falls a Rawlings lived ten minutes an hour. The former was & and the latter once and Dani full reports ity and the art of the deposition appears in Victim to Murderous Kotzebue was unde: of the Figaro, who was condemned to | M. Waldeck-Rous: thirteen months’ imprisonment for | intention to interpellate, when Parlia- blackmailing the late millionaire, Max | ment reassembles, regarding its gen- | aal mobi and Pretc been Gove port from missi JOHANN onally | South African quire “TRANSPORTING TROOPS ISBURG, Aug. 13.—The Trans Government, it is reported, has pro- arranged with the Netherlands Railroad Company for lization on the shortest notice if re- d. Immense_ stores of provisions war material have been colle .1t is réported that ord issued to mobllize the artille alleged from Boer sources rnment proposes to introduce a pa: law aiming to prevent outlande leaving the country without per- on in the event of war. AFRIKANERS FAVOR CHAMBERLAIN'S PROPOSAL CA prom cated acceptanc ernm mi from ment. sent Reick | agoa Portuguese PE TOWN, Aug. 13.—A meeting of inent Afrikaner leaders to-day advo- by the Transvaal Gov- Chamberlain’s joint com- 1. According to a dispatch ent of M on’ prop Durban, al, the Liverpool regi- , which r ntly left her will be to form a camp at Laings Neck. The have detalned the steamer g, from Hamburg June 23, at Del She has on board 15,000 rifle hs Bay. and other war material consigned to the Fran | | | LO. vaal 000 the t tain svaal Government. — - ADDITIONAL SOLDIERS FOR THE TRANSVAAL NDON, Aug. 14—The Times this morning in a special article on the Trans- situation says: In the event of war, in addition to 12,000 troops from India, will be sent from England, making otal British force 55,000. It would be idle to ignore the fact that | should we unwillingly be driven to ob- by force that which justice should accord, an entirely new South African situa LO: corr G « cit ing Governme of this measure. STRIKE OF SMELTER ion. ted. tion will have been cre - 'EXCITEMENT OVER THE COMMANDERING DECISION 14—The Johannesberg Times says: The are especially NDON, Aug. spondent of the ans and Americans od ove Many sympathy W t are now the new commandering de- who had retained a linger- h the Transvaal EMPLOYES IS ENDED Defection of American Members of DE empl Refining Company’s plants the Union Causes the Men's Defeat. NVER, Aug. 13.—The strike of the es of the American Smelting and in Colorado that the | allenated because | CROKER OPPOSED TO IMPERILISH The Tammany Leader’s Change of View. e Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Aug. Richard Croker at the Democratic Club to-night said: 1 was wrong in the state ts T made | be fit for either politics or private life. Publicly I made the statement that T did not believe we should give up the | Philippines, which had cost us so many lives. T am not ashamed now to say to the public that I was wrong. 1 am not playing a political game through that interview. No one man was respongible for my change of mind. While I was in Europe I talked with some of the best informed men there or anywher; else on the subject of colonial conc I made investigation for myself. I re ion that we ha all t the Philippin wrong in the first place to pay $2 for them On a question like this there should be no dividing line between Democrats and Republicans. Humanity, not poli involved, and I am convinced th: manity, as represented by the vot American citizens at the n election, will record its hor: | tion of "the men and the party for private gain, putting bloody pages inio history. Believing these things now, I go straight to the public and frankly say that I was wrong. 1 said 1 believed William J. Bryan was one of the greatest men America has pro- | duced. 1 believe that very thing I that does not mean that I shall work for Bank Director SALINAS, Aug. 13.—Henry C. T Bank of Salinas and of the Allianci 12:30 o’clock this morning as the re: last night. Tollett left town at 7:30 o threshing machine was at work o west of Salinas. It was neaily Jar] Noticing something wrong with th into gear, causing a mass of grain o ward the cylinder. Tollett either lost his foating an could not extricate himself, and wen tore his flesh into shreds and crush knees. The machinery was stopped, an Tollett had just been extricated fro He was conscious and suffering t but he never rallied from the shocl Mr. Tollett leaves a widow, on able circumstances. He was a nati will be buried under the auspices 0 NG PRAISES € THE ATHERLAND German - Americans at Chicago. e atch to The Call. Special Disj | CHICAGO, Aug. 1 thousand German-American _citizens participated to-day in the celebration hefore 3 away concern he Phil- | ippine Ilsn;x::l-"“1"1,;.»54'1 ming Ahe Bhilt | incident to the opening of the four- we should not give up a foot of soil our | teenth annual convention of the Krei-| ““.muu'x:( Heoyel wonan nfermat on e R | cerbundiand €he Ewenty-fitthannualizes | cents for & man who, when he had been | union of the Deutcher Kreiber Verein. | wrong, would not at_the very first chance | The former includes veterans of the et himself aright. Such a man would not | German army and the latter Veterans of the Franco-Prussian war. The day signalized the opening of the conven- tions and the paying of tributes by German-Americans to the men Wwho | made possible the present greatness of the German empire. The cordial tions between the German-Americans and their fellow- | countrymen was made manifest in the enthusiastic cheers that greeted on every hand the two young women rep- enting Columbia and Germany, and in the singing, by a multiutde at Shar shooters’ Park, of German and Ameri- 1 anthemr began with the arrival delegations from all As each train up at the depot committees forward to welccme the vis- f the arrivals were recog- of the committee battlefield, nation day bearing of the countr | can sary to cut away a portion of the framew 13.—One hundred | of | HORRIBLY MAIMED IN THRASHING MACHINE Peculiar Accident Causes the Death of Henry C. Tollett of Salinas. ollett, director of the First National e Flour Mill of San Miguel, died sult of an accident which occurred ‘clack and went out to where his n the Foster place, three miles south- k, but the machine w still rur e feeder, Tollett threw the machire n which he was standing to move to- d fell or became entangled so that he t feet first into the cylinder, wnich ed the bones of both legs to above the d when phy ns arrived on the spot m the cylinder, it having been neces before he could be released. erribly. Amputation was decided upon, k. e son and one daughter, in comfort- He 000080800000 CDH0H2 00D ve of Arkansas and 49 years old. o OKLAHOMA WA BUIKDS S | Chicago Packer Invests in Scrub Cattle. e Special Dispatch to The Call. PERRY, O. T., Aug. 13.—It is reported | here that an Oklahoma cattleman palmed off a gold brick on George B. Swift of Chicago in Oklahoma some weeks ago. Swift came to the Territory and inspected, as he thought, 12,000 head of fine cattle on the Kiowa, Apache and Comanche Indian resery: tior Later he made a big purchase and leased a large tract of land on which to graze his 12,000 cattle. He put a competent territorial man to look after the purchase, and soon the man- ager, so it is alleged, found that Swift had ‘purchased only 100 head of first erade cattle and the remainder of the 12,000 were nothing but ordinary scrub stock. It appears the agent who sold the cat- tle, who is said to be a man named Williams, had the good ock so ar- ranged on the grazing pastures as to deceive Swift, who paid a large price for them. It is said Swift will soon bring suit to recover several thousand dollars from the agent who sold him the cattle, HIS SER)ON WAS forme: s on the | 0 JES S EW and the welcome extended was a | N7 = US THE J hearty one. Among the visitors were | Rey. E. A. Woods spok e vereins from St. Louls, Cincinnati, | Jew” iast night, A ‘M_“HSHN‘“J;X'_.{;A(t“‘l: Cleveland, Elgin, Milwaukee, Dubuque and man ther citie To-morrow the business sessions of filled the irst Baptist Church to listen to T the stirring addr of the Dr. or. Woods spoke in part as follows: the nomination of Mr. Bryan or that I| i % | think he is the only man fitted for the | the conventions besin. Many of the great men of ancient and pomination, e is as kood a man and | = modern times were Jews. Jesus was 4 eader as d be founc | J Was He somethin ore? In | But T have no candidate. Tt is for the | REBELS LAY SIEGE | 8 all great men are the product. « | convention to name the man, and the con- | | age and their environment. The | vention will not meet for 'at least ten | TO MONTE CHRISTI | have their national characteristics. Plato | months. 1t would be a travesty on popu- | G | was a product of Greece; Caesar was a lar suffrage to pick the candidate before | true Roman; Gladstone was essentially an the people's delegates meet, and I shall| CAPE HAY™IEN, % | Englishman, and Washington was the em- have no part in such a selection. T shall | vy icti is now be: the insur- | Podiment of the American spirit. not even try to influence the New York AUISEE A RS 2 € Ins | “But Jesus belongs in character to no State delegation for anybody. gents and the town is without provi- | one nation or age. He was manhood in “Will Tammaty take another fght|sions. General Pepin, Governor of San- | perfection. Ho had not e chaetae against free silver as it did at the last election?” was asked. | “I don’t know,” said Mr. “There’s lots of time and e may change except the ones against trusts and against imperialism and slaughter. SHERIFF WHITE FEARS ASSASSIN’S BULLET | | Believes the Baker Faction Will Mur- der Him, but He Will “Die Game.” | LOUISVILLE, K Aug. John | Feland, a prominent Eastern Kentucky | poiitician, who has just returned from Lexington, says while there he met and | had a’ long talk with Beverly White, | Sheriff of Clay County, from whose | house Tom Baker w assassinated ile being guarded by State troops, ‘Sheriff White told me, aid Feland to-day, “that he knew his s on earth re numbered. He ifident some of the Baker crowd will kill him | as soon as a good opportunity is pri sented. He added, howev he W prepared for the worst, and touched ried two huge | his belt, in which he cz | Colt’s revolvers and a bowie White remarked he might leave County but for the fact that all relatives and property were located | there.” There are at present, however, no in- dications of another outbreak in Clay Count though it is not believed the end of the Howard-Baker feud has been reached. -— CAPE NOME’'S FUTURE NOT A BRIGHT ONE Good Place for the Poor l.an to Re- | main Away From, Says Cap- tain Harkens. PORT TOWNSEND, Aug. 3 thousand dollars’ worth of gold dust f it will everywhe read with delight | the influence of liquor at the time, and.a | Natives. 2 the Cape Nome mining district w: by those i ded that Drey- | LAoRE Was (UL L'rg'j3;"{'1“‘;,\":["'}“33q:g:i_ SEATTLE, Aug. 13.—The Tndians of (helgas declared off mx a r;l'eeflnf Of the |\ ought down by Captain Harkens of the 1 nc e what | oer Aown in Tront of a drug . store. | Kotzebue country, in Alaska. have been meltermen’s Union in this citiy. The | schooner Una, twenty-seven days from e WAL | wlings pointed. his_ finger TUE atore. | guilty of several atroclous crimes recént- | 2Ction was taken upon the recommenda- | the mouth of Snake R The gold rep- i e PeI- | and applied an epithet to him. This was | ly, according to Hugh Kennedy, who re- EOEHAILID Gt et RO U e 2t dave work op gueof e sure e depo- | repeated three times before Daniels got | turned lay on the schooner Townsend. | St e S “does e Rreniats sition, which | R e e S antonchia - Mo | T3y Maciis of. Suntasitoss e uppaned | S 10e sesclutiong anopied o, 41nt on (e | DiReRss S sy T o DRl for the. prosecution, shows Mereler to | % half dozen, words were spoken before | o have heen (el fISOCHR: pive MAd | committee, make note of the fact that the | e, shortnes: the mining seacon, be a flautist of the highest order.. He | ' SRCERE e jrene rer Bol oD R e o Diokuring | decision-to call off the strike was due to | Which WIIl not exceed four months. A 3 A | =3 WERLIEHATS e ering | the defection of the American members | Scarcity of wood prevents winter mining never loses his way the most intri- | Lumber Yard surned. 1l»rtyv_lh\ rs {rom x\‘-ytzluvk)l.md Metis of the union, the foreigners having all | and will make wintering there very ex- cate variations and keeps in view that | RED.BLUFF, Aug. 13.—Telephone Te-| qares ot returned and sald Martis wan- | along stood out for a continuance of the | pensive, When he left miners were ex- o id s o0l ealemntine : , 18 h¢ | dered off “and probably ¢ - | Jockout. The resolutions also advise all | periencing much difficulty on account of reyfus is a , calculating, wellin- | ports from Lyonsville give news of the|dered by the native e had SO0 | {he o, e TR R reiiing 's | the frozen grounds. He a good formed traitor. destruction of the lumber yard there this Pickering and an Indian searched for | o5 \When the strike was declared, to r)r*- place for a_poor man to y aw u" f‘;un‘ The immediate issue of the morning, The fir H:\x-t;ri Dear the e r‘:\;l“"lh and found only his pistol and L'\'m-;lgm to ‘work s soon as they are offered | &s r;’oa‘rnlyl;:ll :!1‘3, S0 ey 1;(u‘ been staked, 3 . end o he rpion mill, an > @ re % eir ol o 8. = time o S i o the freedom of Dreyfus, but yest e D B Al e | P Ghnedy says that later in the season | "t {ought mow that It Is but a ques. | 1Ot to exceed $20.000 Had beea talar e idents and episodes are the d. - The property belongs | both of the Tickerings were Jllled Two | tion of a short time until all the plants of | but mining operalions, had Juse = com. ning of a struggle of a far Lumber Company, of which | other murders are credited to the natives. | the American Smelting and Refining Com | mended, Thore were about W people at n!nf‘S“n Francisco |.| pres ufu-m_ | 5\11‘;' ‘(*nbg;:_ being am Q i .im;t- in Colorado will be going at full | Anvil City, but many were leaving. nden ansom s absent from | e S s | blast. b g | fown. There were two of three million | Charles Becker, said to be from San e RO feet of Tumber in the vard. The sash. door | Francisco, was found hanging by the neck | DR. FINOKE DEAD. TROUBLE OVER FRANCHISES. and box factory of Red Bluff was largely | in his cabin on Kobuk River. He had| s 2 GRASS VALLEY, Aug. 13.—Captain supplied from the Champion mill. The fire | commi i C = OF Pavhe of — will probably cripple local operations. — - Had Charge of a Department in the | John Cross and Major Payne of Los An- e - Convicts Armed With Knives. | Paris Exposition. e o psfmnsies s S SRS e day 2 of eapitalists of Swiss to Celebrate SAN QUENTIN PRISON, Aug. 13.—Ths | CHICAGO, Aug. 18—Dr. F. H. Fincke of | (0t oy “California trying o obtain a SAN RAFAEL, Aug. 13.—The Olema |rule adopted by the Board of State Prison Swiss Club is making extensive prepara- tions for the celebration of the anniver- sary of Switzerland’s independence on ptember 17. basket picnic, a pro- gramme of musical and literary exer- clses and a dance at the large pavilion in Bear Valley will form the principal with a weapon on his person or in his cell to the incorrigible ward is proving almost worthle: Yesterday “Jefr" White, serving an eight-year sentence for grand larceny committed in San Fran Co, was searched and found to carrv a knife with an_cighteen-inch blade. It is No other soap in the world is used so features of the day. In the eveninz a | ol such knives are carried by ke . ball will-be given ft the Dinlay Ghay (o | sald ten such knives are carried by other much= or so: litte: foff Bl eie a0 e Drilas Hal mihainentl e , ? President, A. Bul : vice president, Jo- Ly X seph Ma l'l"i\' t A. Martinelli e 'Toop ag Seattle. 2 secretary, D. Cavilll. The committee on | SE. UE, Aug. 13—Troop K, Third s} far_ arrangements 18 composed of Messrs. [ Cavalry, arrived to-night under comm: it goes S 1 Gambont, Compill and Ressill. M Lof Captain Hunter, k. BasHP e ry Directors consigning every conviet found | BA Ais wel Baltimore, a member of Commissioner General Peck’s staff, died here to-day of heart failure. signed to duty as an expert in medicine, surgery, dentistry and chemistry in the | department of liberal arts and ‘chemical industries at the Paris Exposition. Dr. Fincke had been as- —_————— Beveridge in Good Health. NFF, N, W. T.. Aug. 13.—The friends | of Senator Beveridge of Indiana, who 1s taking the waters in the Canadian Na- tional Park, are crowding him with dis- gvao[cahes of .inquiry concerning his heaith. lllLtht Senator has answered that he nor spend another cent for improvements Adn the eltv, dnany pow in the West franchise for an electric rail | this city and the count ‘Trustees of each city have signified their | intention to_ advertise for bids for the them and kept them in repair for vear He says if his protést is ignored he will not build the much-needed new theator A | tiago province, has telegraphed to Gen- eral Cordero, Minister of Public Works, to defenses Ag0 he not able to oppose the revolution. The village of Jaunnunez, situated between Macoris and Moca, has risen in favor of Jiminez. HAVANA Aug. 13.—General Jiminez, the aspirant to the Presidency of the Republic of San Domingo, says he has ved news of numerous recent suc- s partisan: He declares he all the money he needs, as well as men under arnm pects to receive news of e of the present Do- an_Government, when he will go an Tomingo as soon as his parti- sans, who, he saj} are a majority of the population, de: PURCHASE OF LAND FROM CROW INDIANS EVANSVILLE, Tnd., Aug. 1 special from the Crow Agency, vs: Government commissioners ha effected an agreement with the Crow In- dians which will become a treaty when ratified by Congress. of land will be purchased on the northern end of the Crow reservation from Fort | Custer to Yellowstone River and from Pryor Creek to the eastern boundary of the reservation, embracing the lower Big Horn and other smaller streams. This leaves the Crows 2500000 acres, and will make them independent in time | find furnish homes for thousands of civil- izod people. The price to be paid is about §1 per acre. Part of the land is arable, but most of it is excellent for grazing. with timber on the st The Nort n Pacific Railway runs along the north- orn border, and the Burlington diagonal through it from east to west. 5 - HAY TO VISIT . (cKINLEY. ‘Will Discuss Questions Arising From the New Possessions. PLATTSBURG, N. Y., Aug. 13.—The President decided at the last moment not to attend church this morning. but instead went for a drive with Mrs. Me- Kinley, who has been prevented by the cold, rainy weather from going out of doors for the last two or three day: This afternoon the President and Mr: Cortelyou took a short walk around the ground: Secretary of State Hay will be here on Tuesda coming from his summer | home at Newburg,'N. H. The greatest importance is attached to the of ha . thousand rly date he ¢ collaps. [ the utter [ Mailey of the First Nebraska voluntee: Line n the Philippine Hospitals,” at the Central M. E. Church to-night. The po- | litieAl phase of the Philippine campaign that one of the companies of Royal Ar- tillery at present attached to the Halifax $armson will shortly be transferred to ictoria, B. C., being re; lgfed by a com- es. return to At an | hout 1,000,000 acres | Secre- | tary's visit here at this time. as it is General Griggs and family will arrive 13.—Chaplain James spoke on “My Experience on the Firing Him as the ideal perfect man.” —_— e — Two Homeless Children. Two children, John and Joseph Gere, | were lodged at the California-street Po- | lice Station in a pitiful plight last night. | They had gone to their mother, who spends her time in a dive on Dupont | street, to get the key to the woman's | room,’at 127 Trenton street. She refused to give it to them. The luckless young- sters then searched for their father, find- | ing him in a_saloon. He refused to have | anything to do with them. He had plenty of ‘money to spend for drink, but none to | shelter his childr Officers Fleming and Daggett took the | boys to the station. They will be doubt- s taken to some public institution t y. Gere, who resides at 519 Jackson | street, has ‘quarreled with his wife, and a 'f"" for divorce is pending between the wo. ——e—. It's always the man with the short end of it who advocates equalit: TMEN CURED. | DR. MEYERS & CO. are the most reliable | physicians because they are the most success- ful. They are the most successful ~for —the | reason that they are the most skilled and ex- | perienced. They have been curing diseases and weakness of men for more than eighteen years, and have the larzest and best equipped medi- | cal institution and the most extensive practice | in America. They never use injurious remedies. NO PAY TILL CURED. Patlents can arrange to pay when they are well or may pay in monthly installments. Consultation and private bookt for men free. HOME CURES A SPECIALTY. It you cannot call write for free advice, question 1ist, terms and other particulas Thousands are cured annually without seeins the doctors. All correspondence confidential No printing on envelopes or packages to in- dicate name of sender. DR. MEYERS & (0., 731 MARKET ST., S. F. Elevator entrance. Hours, § to 5 daily: 7 to § evenings; 9 to 11 Sunday. ; et (bl : ; wis:y DR. JORDAN'S crear | believed he is coming to confer with President McKinley regarding the IIISEIII OF ANATOMY many questions of state arising from 1051 MAREET ST. bet. G:2 4743, S.F. America’s new possessions. Attorney The Largest Anatomical Museum in the World. _ Weaknesses or any contracted disease pesitively cared b the oldest Zhureday.o il ot o Speciatior cu the Coase. Est. 36 years DR. JORLAN—PRIVATE DISEASES Chaplain Mailey Lectures. Copsuliation free and strictly private ¢ STOCKTON, Aug. Tresment. persosally or. by Jener. & Pos.tive Cure i cvery case undertaken. Write for Book. PHILOSOPHY of MARRIAGE. MAILED FREE. (A valuable baok for men) DR _JORDAN & CO., 105 Market St S. F. % e o S o e a1 ] e s left severely alone. is tragic, pa- = 5 franchise. Hon. John F. Kidder, who now | {hetic. s s ane hn B Kidder. w etic_apd_humorous word pictures of owns both county road franchises, has | the First Nebraska's experiences in_the RUPTURE, ¥ ¢ irass Valley bodrd u | field were interesting to the 1500 persons S £ protest .against the granting of a fran- | present. o uR Inox chise to include the streets of the wes- e e S Sheel pcinaw form pact of the alty. M. Kidder owns wad | Artillery for Victoria. | and comfort. and thousands cadi | Grty on these streets and has imo: | HALIFAX, Aus. 13.—Tt is stated here oy CUHEDIbYIDR LA, cifice or write for New Pam et phlat MAGNETIC ELASTIC TRUSS COu - L @0 Markes st,, opp, Pajace Hotel, San Franciscs

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