The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 21, 1899, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, AUGUST 21 [ B e i e A e e TWO LIEUTENANTS SHOT BY TAGALS Insurgents Leave Nineteen Dead Battlefield on Negros Island. GUNS SENT TO CAPE COLONY Boers Armin_g Their Supporters in| British South African Possessions. DRI SIS SR A A SR aR i SN S5 SED AP ESS SD SR SO S S S S DD OSSO on a Aug. 21.—The Trans- ent, State. Over seven tons have been it is reported | landed at Port Elizabeth, on Delagoa its reply to the | Bay, and sent over Cape railway lines Pretoria, to be |to Allwalox for distribution. Alfred Milner,| The Cape Colony Government com- ssioner for South | plains that it could not prevent thelir of Cape Colony. transportation to a friendly state and | are given as to | if permission had been refused the sup- sible that the re- | plies would have been sent to Delagoa | d that the reply | Bay. It is probable the matter will now | wing to the trouble | be referred to the imperial Government: | ut transportation of LONDON, Aug ).—The Colonial to the Trans- Office denies that the Secretary of State slagoa Bay. for the Colonies, Joseph Chamberlain, ng has been aroused here has sent an ultimatum to the Govern- fact that the Transvaal is send- | ment of the South African republic juantities of war material for with respect to the demands of the Out- APE TOWN, ; g sources of the islands were great, but ANIL dyp. | 20-—One|oiseaiol (the \elands were grear bt licutenant Df the :&‘L‘/fih | the subject of making them a part of this Infantry was killed and | country. | another seriously wounded while | ARRESTED BECAUSE HE | reconnoitering last evening north of; CRITICIZEEH[S COLONEL Angeles. The Americans encoun- | : 5 | Surgeon-Major Warne of the First tered a large force of mxurgt'ut:‘ South Dakota Volunteers in o > » 2 3 Duress. and fi![?uf f/lL!li from flmrfiu.flhon.j TN NEATOMISAIE. 1 - A sipetatith Lieutenant €ole of the Sixth In-|the Times from Sioux Fall ay fantry, with cighty men, encoun- to Sir B S o e e e e = &ned OFFICE OF THE ANTI-SEMITIC LEAGUE, Senator Pettigrew is in receipt of a ca- n among its supporters in |landers, as was asserted this morning o ¢ ! | blesram dated at Nagasald, Japan. from e Colony and the ange Free by The People. ered 10 Suroents -enche r. R. C. Warne, major and surgeon o ape Colony and the Orange Free by The People. {perec o0 sy genisienirenched s o i e L A e teers, which says: Arrested by Frost for published of his Sunday dinner, flung the window open and shook his first, exclaiming: If & single one of my men should com- the mountains of the Island of Ne-| gros and routed them after an hour | and a half of severe fighting. The let- ANTI-SEMITIC LEAGUE’S LEADERS AND HEADQUARTERS. o»‘-*w B = SO S S S + ‘his 1s the culmination of the charges made by Warne against Colonel Alfred S. Frost of the South Dakc regiment in HARCHISTS 01 plain of hunger, I will blow Lepine's P 3 Americans had three men Sh‘q/l([\r a letter published here last month. in 1 (Prefect of Police) head off the first i Ni My . ~"5"" | which Warne referre rost as a “low, time he passes through the wert. Nineteen dead msurgent : I_ You policemen, who have the misfor | were counted in the trenches. Six ¢ man in the regiment for a fe tune to serve a band of scoundrels, | lars tn his own pocket or a little gl has no interest in the them for his own sel- himself, and that he men except to us fish advancement. ¢ thc FOUR ARMIES MAY BE Hoy. leadingiio SENT INTO THE FIELD Calmba, on the south shore of the | rifles and a quantity of reserve am- munition were captured. The insurgents recently cut the | cable in Laguna ought to let things go. You can't allow us to die of hunger. Ah, bon dieu, but we shall resist. Send us up what our friends have thrown us or fire on us at once, savages.” An attempt was made to fire the choir A St. Joseph's with petroleum and the CONVICTION IS CERTAIN ENNES, Aug. 20.—General Mercier, who was Minister of War when Captain Dreyfus was condemned, and who in the present trial is the virtual prosecutor, was this afternoon invited to make a state- ment of the position of the anti-Dreyfusards. General Mercier HITH POLICE Continued from First Page. R R | firemen were called on to quench the | * gave through his eldest son the following expression of his views: lake, but the break has been re-|Plan Likely to Be Put Into Execution wilding in th > Chambrot, | flames. Several parishioners were | ¥ | General Mercier considers it useless to attempt to convert foreign opinion o When Otis Receives His Re- building in the Rue de Cha Eelin e e s L regarding the Dreyfus question, in which, moreover, foreigners have no right paired. inforcements. le ha where M. Fules Guerin and his 6%~ |fena the church from sacrilege. The | @—+0—-0-4-0—4 -6+ oo oo £ "k'"*‘;}““; 1""";"" Soplethove h"l"'m‘*“‘\‘ "7‘ ":"“’ r"r“;“-f""“.‘":‘ ’: Ul [ WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.—The fol-| WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.—The map of S 3 4 i b £ et ently Dreyfusard, for the good reason that a majority of the foreign ne o ; 2 = b I et N % ti-Semite companions are in- ‘?‘::,h,m sltuated In the poorest quarter | winl not be finished before the middle of papers have been bribed by the Jewish syndicate. General Mercler considers |10Wing dispatches, announcing engage- | the [Elliunties, autfesmenly) Gl i R ) Sihatolof Sicoe aroimst] e Sepiember g 5 | % that anything he might say explaining his position, which is that of a major- 4 |ments with the Philippine insurgents, | portion o Nt SRl b trenched in a state of siege again: Up to the present Four fifty-six per- oooE o he Meholoe Fecls este ity of the French people, would be useless. The best reply to Dreyfusard + |were received at he War Department ;*"‘"I“‘ SR e police, zvho have orders for their | Sons have been reported injured, in ce, General Chamoine, who took the statements abroad will be the condemnation of Dreyf | to-da: assume a more important part in the com- in the Boulevard de Magenta, h runs past the end of the Rue de e B ¥ = | = el : ) ; e Chaialent o S e RO Syeihe Trial WALl Lee M Lo e e e R O . S duarley WILL SAVE DREYFUS et UL |+ houtes. . Labori-was taking the air in the gavden.: He has been suffer- L of police were constantly — NEW YORK, Aug. 20—The Journal has ing severely from insomnia and to-day was feverish and excited 1 d around the Rue de New Trials to Be Ordered Until the following from 1*.\{.i-l» (;;.”rg,}(m.nm,,_ b Sl Chambr nd @ rge force is read- g 3 i u, in a review of the Dreyfus trial ere has been nc apse. : ; o I“l' el Court M;’;‘,“l Acquits tie says: The trial at Rennes will surely lz In view of his general condition, his medical advisers oppose his go- 2 e G much longer than was expected at first. |3 ing to court to-morrow, as he had desired. They predict that the exer- n ,-;""“ ‘fl{‘_‘ anar- 2 i\u;.v .{r M. Leon Bureau of | At this present moment there are enough | 4 tion would so overtax his strength as to compel him to take to his bed, LONDON, Aug_ 20.—The Rome correspondent of the s the scuffling was , formerly private secretary of M. | witnesses to occupy the court down to | oh b vl n bl flca v g v for s Tues- i i i i ‘ nies of the Re- | Laborl, is in the city a guest of Dr. Dt niew witnessenrarelgathe |11 1 Lichle would mot pidbdbly lesve Injthac eyent, for amonth. - Tues Daily News writes that Lewis M. lddings, secretary of 5 AL oreas |G Auta f6Sab e (B readiieial b Mercler-Sennelder for- | $ court. He will be provided with a specially_constructed chair that wil the American embassy at Rome, enabled him to interview ancs s J fus would res SR 5 very strong case which habIe B to lcondun B tion e e outset, with Ring : S ¥ Sk ;“_»m]‘: ’u!_lgvum"‘““}nr ";‘“‘”_“":"l‘;;',; ’.lf"r: FotEbedn Fooken Vet j,m'*|“ S e ;n.xm! ihnn t nduct the cross-examination at the outset, without risin Admiral Dewey at Naples at the moment of the Olympla s Y o € o ¥ were returned the Co Chanoine are rom his seat. 5 | P £ i e R ‘f‘“: of Cassation, the highest French author- rely oecupy M. Labori is intensely anxious to return to court, even if he has to be + | departure from that place. According to the correspondent, r 1 th ard de Magenta. A | jty, would at once set it aside and order sittings of f!vlron‘u”‘ | carriia thore in an ahiianie. He is dlisiiied with W Démaisss and while tr; literal wn eman cording to so I ri up and used s | which it could’ set aside such a sentence: | *5o N (L HED8 0t witnesses have |+ he expects to use the Schneider and Panizzardi telegrams also to con- than any other American, because | know the Filipinos inti- o atliebouse thors 3 of Cassation sent | TOMATK that they ke mmutch more jmpor- | § found Mercier. mately. They know | am their friend. The recent insurrec- onflict.. The police had d them with stones. Now this Is the only thing he could | " A matter of wonder is that the French | danger of a relaps ands. e wounded, two be tried for. Instead of sticking to this sreme: Court, has Increased. with. great witn was Colonel Fabre, who | | 2 - 3 to be taken to the hos- | the GOUrt has Permitice. withesscs to teik | Supreme Court has Increased with great | R ranein | BY A HURRICANE ¥ after being accustomed tc no law. | believe and affirm, : of his relations with women and Other | eoust-martist is called ta move: Judees, weenithe mandwHUBEIOn S s | ilinpi ti hortly will outside ma s, whi s ectly a vio- s a OYnRY S of the bordereau. 5 b e o ey ulch Is idirecllypavio. RO S o G "his conviction of the sullt "'“}Ternfying Experiences of Passengers nevertheless, that the Phi ippine question very shortly wi pro-Drefus sgarded as a 2 8 he ‘ « ct greatly to the | B cor,cnocent. T fact, thore were bue e | it Hatteras | g g i Jreyfus innocent. act, there were but zed as g in the | 3 acquittal. | two things for that triburial to'do—cither sternazs gally. | Plotters to Be Arrested. SAVANNAH, Ga, Aus m.—Tne| % Selves. Itis a question of time, but the only way to settle 1 djudge him not guilty or send him back tion before the e EW YORK S S able | steamer F < City, which reached here | : . P D e e the vers do oo baria Savs: Mhere are rumors that | this morning fitty hours overdue nad | & N€ insurrection and to assure prosperity is to concede self- [ deemed best, through etrial a me ment the very documents | from ‘Pari : a 1Oors < Y iy due, had a | % x 2 i over the | dfiim would be furnished and so give th mettfoned 18 B Dor- | further arrcsts of plotters against tho | thrilling experience in the West Indian | % government. | have never been in favor of violence against but they e hurricane. The steamer encountered the iment’s desire ds against the anar- | cluding several policemen. Nearly all were hurt by being crushed or trodden r Office secret dossier 'to Rennes, ha started suddenly for Paris. Adriene Monod, the French Vice Consul wpital que: are to be made c is no use to anticipate bates before the 10th or 1 and I should not wonder another court-martial, and so on until Dreyfus be acquitted. This court knew that French law was being juggled by the military court, and had two grounds on L of Septe: if things c Drevfus back for a second trial he was remanded on the charge of having been the author of the bordereau,” said M. Bu- tant by personal character and title than by the weight of their evidence. In no en French court seen. English or American or e were such witnesses ever lation of French law. not_taken nto acount this deci- It has been bordereau M. Bureau said it was within the power of the Court of Cassation to have dec military party a chance to redeem itself. | dereau It would look so much better in the eyes There is not the slightest doubt left This condemnation is only a m demned Dreyfus certainly will be. 1y, therefore, w day or Wedne conduct of the c: R R R RS R S SRTS P SESS SP PP RIRVOHSES PSSO PP ORTRR S S S e S S UOOOUOPU part in to-day’s proceedings in view of the I ving: = he wrote the bordereau. Government will be ma | not be_confirmed. aid the arr It These Who Were Drowned. tter of ten da oreigners will then s The correspondent then called upon Maitre Labori, who lives within wound itself has not made the progress the doctors hoped for, although more probably see his reappearance in se thus far, and on his return he intend eral Mercier and the other generals placed upon the witness-stand. reading their evidence he ig confident of his ability to crush Mercier and or a fortnight, for con- e that their jour- -to have Gen- After |NEARLY WRECKED on the Kansas City, Off Cape storm off Cape Hatteras, and battled with | porate and establish headquarters in this [ R i B e S - e S NS SCS FA AR KRRk AR A AR A& K ok k& kA & ok ok k ok ok ok & ok & ok ok Ak Aok kK ok K | colonel of the MANILA 20.—The lieutenant antry with eighty the admiral said: “I have the question of the Filipinos. The islands ar FOR PHILIPPINE AUTONOMY tion is the fruit of the anarchy that long reigned in the isl- The insurgents will have to submit themselves to law be solved. The Filipinos are capable of governing them- ing campaign than has been given it ner | : . Lot theisiy : ofore. Secretary Root has not only a : - - als haye dec them, for they will recognize that the mass of the French men attacked and routed 100 of the enemy | tofore. Secretar ot B e e o CLEMENCEAU,S REVIEW [T niton ™o will receive the mewa of the conyietion bf.Dreyfy joyful tid- + | intrenched at Tibuan, Negros Mountains, | certained where the United States troo two' ‘cafes “were|lad talen iefuge In fhel courtyard of 4 | ings, 18 not composed of officials, and that the majority of the French applaud + | having three men slightly wounded. The | are located and has them nicely marked At a late hour 20,000 people the Gare de I'Este, was expelled by the the condemnation; it will be because it is just and merited. 8 S == police, who made twenty-five arrests. OF THF DREYFUS CASE S % S © P R P e e e P e e e P R @ the Philippines more at heart e now blockaded by the fleet, L2 23 S 2T R R R R R R TR T TR LT L LT TR TR E SRR ST Candaba, San Luls, Calumpit, Malolos, been misinter- A = o P any o 3 8 o e | 5 of the world and help to take away the | that Dreyfus had never any connection |of M. Millevoye, a Natlonalist leader, was | it for two days. The ship was driven | 2 _ results. odiu ; acqui by th of Cas- | whatever, direct or in ct, with Ester- | 5 16 went to Prefect of Po- yS. e ship iwas | o . . ° s e b R L el D R no- i s "pint. con- | e o 3 e Feport wor. teue. | 100 miles off e course seaward. The sa and war reigns in the interior. | would like to see auton 2 et g tested, Nobody ever argued that the two | o 3 e Government had no | 10¢ as flooded wi vater, the passen- | . - ” mstration ! upen @t o ONEY FROM ABROAD men éver had any. so that it the law | (it on of arresting him. Lo Petrie de- | gers were wet, bedraggled and sick, and omy first conceded and then annexation talked about. g hel night. The was followed the whole trial at Reenes | |ares English newspapers paid Esterhazy | some of the women became hysterical. : i e Ju Peuple, edited by Sebastian might faltly Jast one or (w0 hoUrs, 11 | 5,00 trancs to declare himself the author | Most of the passengers remained in thels The correspondent says Dewey told him he had in his 1d €5 e y s olonel Picquart had been abused. He | 0¥ 5 S % 2 5 < 5 sty u manifesto de- TO ASSIST DREYFUS o incnice iy o e Je told how he | °f the Rordscehl = roome, and those on, the upper deck were case made the first exception to his rule of not giving inter- the anti- —_ had discove that Esterhazy was the | £ | unable to get out. e ship rolled anc 3 : A res g . not D s. He told what | | lurched as vaves struc! er | i and”the French Paper Declares Thirty-Five | Loth fAioL,fot Drvits, 1 told what | MAJOR HARRISON ILL FEVER | 510,500k over e ocks.” Ty toors ana | & ViEWS 10 newspapers. v ests and urged its supporters to Million Francs Were Sent to plain, but to ‘show how the plot was | windows were battered, and every mo- | & 2 x force with force. His Friencs ,;g';g‘j\_f ainst-truth, right and law. This | WITH YELLOW ment during the florcest of the storm it | © MmN PR R MM e Nm Pm m Mw e Mem e Pem M e Mm Mm m m Mm@ Soted ™ B g 'C . B = was feared at t ¥ ts d be Should Dreyfus be convicted,” sald | pARyS Aug. 2.—The Echo de Paris,| Later on when the historian shall try ’Th Fi C: That Has Occurred in !Iu'l)kon in and let mec E \“:'lihr‘:gu'h_ A‘( enemy left in the intrenchments nineteen , off on the map but he has also taken into mar will be a triumph of | in commenting upon the testimony of. | to unravel the knot of this tragic fm- e First Case Tha IOy eitime i s ecia b v dded Yo the | dead, six rifles and all their reserve am- | consideration such information as can ba ; he be acquitted the fored 4t Rennes by Captain Culgnet, for- | brogilo he will b ing to do but to | the New Camp at Cris- | Rorror ot the Storm. Friday morning the | munition, ' They are’ supposed, to_be the | obtaincd refative to the piowation of the section willvbe openi ortebelal mep e Rl L o s ICEwILIEhy et s e I e e 1o el noata e | Tl Gl fo whed tF e e 5 whom was assigned last year the task of unive 3 we already now | SANTIAGO DE CUBA, Aug. 20.—Major | worked its way. alon, eing o the 3 5 OTIS. | The Secretary has been studying the lines ) g A A ollecting matter bearing upon the Drey- | proclaim, % the victim an e 5 inspector general, 18 | main salo " alg B e A of transportation and learning what he he(papericallenjon aljsnsschistaft Picquart and Esterhazy affairs, | that Picquart is the hero. e e Do T e o eeney | (MANILA. Aug 19 Pirst Lisutenant Al-| can of the zeogzaphy of the country demonstrate a t the priests and the | gqys: | ———— At L R oundeh . THa oo v it TS Lere . Drew, Twel antry, was in- s believed that more than one army = . e SN S S 2 - | ease has progressed for three days, al-|sound or st at its | tantly killed and First Lieutenant Willis v operate to advantage in the Philip- Jesuits. Copies festo et e Shel? (U™ SUdtree e (hat| DREYFUS COURT-MARTIAL | 5iiit was'ot pronounced yetiow fever | RelBht but th orew rosponed quickly {6 | stand lled ind First Licutenant Willls| may operats to advantage, in the Phifip scattered broadcast and the result was | (oo, mynjcated to the court-martial, A | until this afternoon. The case is the first | @ (o Ties “were among . the officars | wounded vesterday in an attack on some army officers that an army flocked into the | document has been withheld which | RESUMES ITS SITTING | to occur at Cristobal, to which place the | bag Casual Captain Fisher was injured. | Surgents in the vicinity of Angeles by two | start from different points * and e and ery- | proves the existence of a vast network of s | headquarters was removed last month to | though not seriously, by a fa el s s of the Twelfth Infantry. No | operate in such a manner as to distract and ery | headquarters was r | though n ously, by a fall, and First = and destroy the Filipino fore r« Drumont~ | *Epionage under the direction of foreign 3 . | escape infection. Officer Smith was thrown against the|Other casualties. The enemy was E the Filipino forc as Drumont’ ! military attaches and of negotiations on | Colonel Fabre Reiterates His Convic- | “(f'late the quarantine rules have been | deck and internaily (njured. Soumay chs | o M of raline. Lo "A leg of mutton and other | Shlatives of forelen powers. | the Bordereau. | from headquarters have been in the habit | work, PAeSNe e toned dm the | ot ha been o ugsested that 1t ona ring been thrown from a | tplhe dossier, moreover, contains proof | RENNES, Aug. 2L—The Dreyfus court- | of coming to Santlago daily and returning | —— D L T T o | Hove s shhe e T Eayen, ang ng "n thrown from a | that the sum of .m{(fl 'bram; ;uas - | martial reconvened this morning at the |to headquarters at night. Major Harrison NEW RA'LROAD TO BE Military B A anarc. of tha | was moving north there wouls her noiner use opposite and having fallen into | c¢ 1\;'.;;1«9'"0; e o ";;‘y;‘h‘: | usual hour. Maitre Labori was not pres- | I8 been isolated, but not brought to the ';‘\gnffd' asHseon Duerum;mo W with, | Ereat probability of soon securing ' cthe , re selze ; o [ REIpre % = Bili= 2 = 5~ | tev S B 'welfth Infantry. = the street, they were selzed by the | campaien.” | ent. His doctors considered that it was | “Y§f NOSPIaL, o o Journal, n its fs- COMPLETED IN A YEAR| Spafin he Was mzxsor."t the Third Texas | :rr‘\}l’reflfgl}::li‘rg?rlrfis!h‘:m‘xllsde S lice. M. Guerin, enraged at the loss | The Liberte says that the Dreytus trial | inadvisable for him to attempt to take | sue of August 12, reports the death, from S | Volunteer Infantry. @ | into divisions east and west by the rail. yellow fever, of Private Beattie of the = ot | road as they are now divided into north- @+ e+t OeDeD IO I IT e DI I OEO I VIR OISOV EOGD O +9 30 +9+& 0@ | Eighth Infantry, the report bearing the | Initial Meeting of the Stockholders of | ern and southern bands. Between Angeles | signature of Major O'Reilly. This {s an Ba Siaanian IGNORANCE CAUSED | and Lingayen is Tarlac, a town of cone 1 | error, due to translating “dead,” the word -Sacramento | siderable size and situated in a province & | % |in the code message, which should have Road. THE INSURRECTIOQN | Fhere the natives are said to be not un- i | been rendered ‘‘sick.” STOCKTON, Aug. 20.—The | friendly to the United States. TIf this 8 e e e | uaeamen of Loy Al meet ey | Braat S e SR, [ might bo of © even doubtful whether the disorder was v roas a > Government. . vellow fever. He has been on duty now | between Stockton and Sacramento was | President Schurman of the Philippine While these are merely suggestions § 4 several days since his convalescence. held here this afternoon. Those present Peace Commission Talks of }fr“;‘ne; fima]‘ :;:‘e;'f t&ew%rmx in che Phil. 2 ————— voted to keep ali the plans secret for the the War. “or 2 e e FIVE PERSONS LOS present, several declaring there had been 5 have f¢ ® too much discussion already. The result| CHICAGO, Aug. 20.—Jacob Gould Schur- | stead of two as during the last campaign. ' IN A SHIPWRECK | of the meeting was the election of H. T.|man, United States Commissioner to the | The location of troops as marked by @ Compton as chief engineer, and authori- | Philippin: arrived in Chicago to-day | ?{r*‘";t 2%(‘;&;}]?; afif’:fi‘?d,"{r Secretar: $ | zation was given him to start the survey | rom the islands, of which he has just| "X tn°5¢ ' Manilac Under Geraroy Srrs: 1 Wife of the Owner, Who Was Travel- | as soon as he can make necessary prepa- | completed a slxdmonfl‘); stmldy at};heli¥;‘<§%‘hur' & point above Angeles (General | Health, One rations. It was further decided to incor- | Stance of President McKinley. He le heaton), Angeles, Porac, Calucul, Santa i | ing for Her 3 of | for his home in Ithaca, N. Y., and will | Rita, San' Fernando (MacArthur), Batis. R e e R S O R S S S o = = SR DETROIT, Aug. 20.—A Tribune special | from Harbor Beach says: Five liv were lost this afternoon by the capsizing off Pointe au Barque of the gchooner Hunter Savidge. She was bound from Sarnia to s. owner. pena, wiie of the ve ETTA MULLERWEISS, aged MRS. FRED SHARPSTUNS‘ wife of the captain. — 8 TH HARPSTON, son of the captain. OMAS DUBUY, mate. are ver~ meager, and the fate of Mullerweiss of Alpena. His wife had been ill for some time, and Wwas making a trip on the vessel for her health. o |MERRITT SAYS OTIS WILL STAY IN MANILA PLATTSBURG, N. Y., Aug. 20.—At the close of his interview with President Mc- Kinley to-night General Merritt sald: “So far as I know there will be no immediate change in military command- The present ldentity of those interested will not be made public, but the personnel of those present at to-day's meeting in- dicates that several farmers and shippers are the prime movers. A positive denial pleted within twelve months. It is learned Stockton channel. There is already a bulkhead on it and several miles of grade running north, which was completed sev- SRRy ADDITIONAL CASES OF BUBONIC PLAGUE It Has Recently Been Decided by the Sanitary Board That Oporto Be Isolated. MADRID, Aug. 20.—Three fresh cases of bubonic plague are reported from Oporto. They are said to be of mild character. The Spanish Consul there will be prosecuted on the outside that the company has the | option on & valuable piece of water front | property located on the north side of the | report to the President as soon as a meet- ing can be arranged. In an interview he sald: So far as the results of my official negotiations with the representatives of Aguinaldo or other Filipino officials much to be told. In my opinion the rebellion, the last of which we are try- ing to suppress, was due in the first place to several causes, the principal of which were the tyranny of some of the religious orders, the eXercise of ar- bitrary power by the Governor Gener- The leaders of the rebellion tell their followers the most astounding tales of the Americans, and the common peo- ple belleve that the priests under American rule would subject them to the same tyranny. That the American army kilied priests or otherwise mal- treated churchmen or church property is itself utterly without foundation. Aguinaldo is believed in the islands to be honest, and I think he is acting honestly in money matters, but wheth- er from moral or political reasons I would not say. While I don’t care to discuss the real motives behind the re- bellion at this time, I will say that If it were suppressed there would be Quinga, Baliug, Bustes, Bigaa. South of Manila—Imus (Lawton's. head- }lmrlers). Mingting, Tupa, Cavite, Bacoor, ‘alaba, Paranaque, Taguig, Quinguinto and asig, Mari- | quina and points 'adjacent around { | s ¥ ¢ a |Is made that the Santa Fe is in any way ibe: o rtay | " re Boltoniak Dyers | interested, and those enlisted In the ‘en.| Were concerned, I am not at liberty to | aqueduct Morenoomping station, Taytay, | ane oapateads § WCI®| terprise are confident that an independen | talk of them till I have made my re- | Zntlpolo, Moreng and ¢ el o 1 i v o resident concernin he 20 C4 n by MKS. JOHN MULLERWEISS of Al- |line through the upper valley will be o || BT L0 L el Hawover, Dice s | land: S | DEATHS IN OTIS’ ARMY. | WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.—General Otis’ cable to the War Department reports the | following deaths since the last report: in, pa'rlugi lhh:\‘\'srlyev}[1?0‘:“(}\?‘":?2;19.“ rech EZ"J;‘E;’.’R 'fi‘&fifir o '&i" I.%glid}revr\rfin:; als and the delay and corruption of (FRED, A. COMLEY, Twenty-tourth Infantry; Brne Hunter Savidee was owned by John | Railroad. justice. ever, 1ith, ALLIE W. LORDE, Twelfth Infantry; ty- phold fever, 15th. SECOND " LIEUT! T JOSEPH B. : MORSE, I, Ninth Infantry; acute dysentery, 5th. JOHN SMITH, K, First Washington: 17th. WILLIAM K. HARRISON, K, Thirteenth Infantry; 18th JOHN 'H. DUNN, D, Fourth Infantry; ab- scess of liver, 1ith. ADOLPH M. KREITSER, | general arterial’ schior FRA C. LER, F. Sixth Artillery; 17th Twenty-first In- | tantry. | German Prince Coming. LONDON, Aug. 20.—The Daily Mall's & ers in_ the Philippines. General Otis, | for failing to notify the Spanish Govern- Berlin correspondent says that Prince 3 CITY AND HARBOR OF LORENZO MARQUEZ, DELAGOA BAY. whom 1 regard as one of the most capablg | ment of the outbreak. It Is estimated | Many prominent native officials out of | Henry of Prussia, a brother of Emperor DY andflefllclelnt oflgcue;;einofthemservgce, nwm thst al‘xi'eadly the‘c%naoeorce of Oporto has ;-[“ 06;“’:"‘ on. e wuué;m. thk now commanas ltl}lle German he demand of the British Governme: i continue in ¢ e American | suffered a loss of ,000. r. Schurman declined to answer the squadron in Asiatic waters, will visit San . At this place the Portuguese authorities, on the ernment, are detaining shipments of war [ | £orc 2t LISBON, Aug. 20.—The sanitary board | question as to whether he had been the’| Francisco, and perhaps ofher American 4 supplies belonging to the Boers. ““‘Will you be sent to the Philippines?” | has resolved to isolate Oporto, where the | subject of any anti-imperialist commu- orts, after leaving China. He may per- o was asked. bubonic plague has broken out, with a | nications, saying that on that question he Knps pay a visit to President McKinley B 6 00ed0eP 00 000000aet0t0tPt0t00000 040000000 6090000+00000-+0 “Not now,” replied the general. sanitary cordon. would not speak. He said that the re- at Washington.

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