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TIIE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, VEMBER 10, 1899 e e s SHADY CHARACTER OF THE NEW LORD MAYOR Investigated. ® 1 Lord Mayor's show, which marked the Induction of @ & A3 lay by exc lliant weath- 4 Q Londo poured out :2 bd : enthus streets were 5: sence of a detachment of the Hou Qo P yol-boy brigades t 6 ¢ t. A car represen at & and Australian volunteer: ? 3+ evok Duke of York's Royal Mili- ¢ S ki uniforms and refused to 9 % X and other emblems of purely g % I . > 1 ng t the law courts this afternoon the @ % gainst Mr. Newton in connection with 4 PS Justices that the Lord Mayor courted @ 3 = stice said he had heard the statement 4 PR 1 ymmunity woul wrtily rejoice @ Y ane 1 Mayor had cleare ation. + ) N , some of wt () V:> be nece to refer it to the ¢ © prose © Prussian w - = SCHLEY RECEIVES ORDERS. | i i KENTUCKY Governor Areds CITIZENS ORGANIZE , TO PREVENT FRAUDS! P. Breckinridge were more temperate. out how Bradley may, ue Governor or until the s tion was contributed 1ds in this county. LOUISVILLE PAPERS GET | One | to| LOUISVILL Jour plural- Com- - NSPECTORS | N EJECTED BY POLICE | Rhinock | to each re broken o al to the cour| yectors before *n_by s resto the da the od To-day warrants were sworn out cor Rhinock and several of his oers, chz them with inter- fering with the election. To-morrow 150 | more warrants will be sworn-out with the | same charge against the policemen that | obeyed Mayor Rhinock’ AS REPORTED BY THE WESTERN UNION CINCINNATI, Nov. 9.—The Western Union issues the following bulletin to-day Kentucky election: ucky—With complete returns from y-one counties and incompiete re- orders. i ndents’ | ¢ | have their own D4OHOLT+THDI04Q+T+ 2T+ 600006000009000&00‘&; t m_thirty-five, tal of Republ ¢ being yze c figures, | BRYAN'S NOMINATION CONSIDERED CERTAIN NF YORK, Nov. 9.—Dispate! - ceived by the Her from all parts of y show Democrats unani- regard the r It of Tuesday's making cer 1 J and country PATRICK CLAIMS THAT CALDWELL WAS DEFEATED COL uis large ¢ A flurry to-day State 1l circl Democratic trick (D.) h by nt Governor ove 1 (R.) The returns show that C 1d be 1eavi he result ¢ t ma nst him by the Ar aloon League, the Republics o ttee had not ven_the matter msideration. To- men we on Lieutenant Go v- ity of 12,16 Republica election of idence. y over P Re > ticket show head s plurali 1 tha is 5 JONES TALK TR S OF A CHRISTIAN POLICY | TOLEDO, Ohio, to-day issued a which he denies that he had said: “If race has in way contributed to of John R. McLean and a re- = infamous policy of the ad- I feel that it has not been Mayor Jones then says of imperialism: “I believe tHe Non-Partisan vote of Ohio be recorded as favoring a Christian y toward the Philippines. Persan- .’ believe the Filipinos hav : to be free as well as the Americar I have frankly sald so whenever question: was raised, but I have thought whatever of trying to repre any other man as believing as I do. men to be frec to speak for s —_—— FUSION VICTORY SURE IN NEBRASKA LINCOLN, Nov. 9.— omplete returns n eighty-seven out of the ninety coun- t n the State give Holcomb, Fusion, 1 Reese, Republican, 9,259, a fusion majority of 1 Remaining’ countlies, based on last s vote, will make the fusion majority in the State 14,00. The | Fusionists elect Neville to Congress in the | Sixth District. MRS. HAZEN WEDS ADMIRAL DEWEY Continued from First Page. to the lower floor of the station, instead of leaving by the wide stalrway to the street, and entered one of the Pennsyl- vania Raflway Company’s cabs. erowd in front lea when a cheer rose from some be carriage entrance to the station, rriage sped out and across to h street with the horse at Half a dozen coupes followed e was a race to the Waldorf. Se tary Root's coupe followed the admiral's d what he trot. as far as Fifth avenue and th: turned off, The admiral's carrlage turned at | Thirty-third street and stopped in front of the private door to the apartments of | Mr. Boldt, proprietor of the Waldorf. The admiral and Mrs. Dewey hurried out of their cab and Into the door before other crowd could gather. F. D. Thomas, Mr. Boldt's manager, met the admiral and his wife and led them to the private suite adjoining the apartments of Mr. Boldt, where they will remain while in the city. Mrs. Dewey's maid had come on an earlier train and the baggage was already there. Dinner was also ready to serve In the apart- ment. The admiral and Mrs. Dewey will use Mr. Boldt's private entrance and will dining-room. The ad- miral s not going to go about in guise, but it is his wish to be as little noticed as possible and his movements are not to be heralded in advance. The admiral must have known when he was here a few .d ago that he was to be married to-da for he had everything ar- ranged. Some flowers, sent to Mrs. Dewey, were delivered il at the hotel in the an- | dis- | Special Correspondence of The Call. ANILA, P. I, Sept. 20.—The equa- nimity of his excellency, the mill ta governor, Gene ral Otis, has been undisturbed by the moun- tains of reproach and piles of odium that have been heaped upon his devoted head by the hosts of volunteers and press correspondents that have either returned to the United States or remain in these islands. And as the administra- tion, it seems, is determ ned to retain | him in his post, why, indeed, should such | trivial matters annoy him? The publi- cation of cables from| Washington an-| nouncing the *“full confidence of the Presi- | feature the 1 wee the local sheets are obliged to all fulsome news, and none of a| gatory type. - charges that have been made, not | by volunte but also by cor-| re. s, “that our troops have shot down and killed in cold blood the poor in- | nocent Filipin re a pack of 1 The | truth is that these scoundrels have been ell and far too leniently by Otis tre ated te he Amerfcan authorities. In fac and his officers seem to have been g | of the criticisms that might have devel- | oped into charges of cruelty on the { of some missionary and other organ | t who have the ‘“welfare” of poor ger at h Your Fijl knows no such a thing as Kindne | the trite saying here “that for every Filipino bo \ttan is created” is an axiom that ue and appropriate The Fili are cruel, treacherous and unreliable and only kept in order and | ) duty by a stern exhi- | nd firmness. Although, | neral Otis has bee Vhw‘ of criticism and | question. Im- no wise i | 1 dent of fact the the 2 in a ght to the notice | 00d pinos who ad- | American nation Once e recognition, these fel- | nowledge of moves and s conte ed by t United ‘ ates troops, within a few short hours the de ere known to their na- tive frie ront ‘ the strength of having accompa- | bug and bird hunting expedition | to these isla me years ago, and as his fellow t who has been se- a commissioner (at a salary of | and $50 daily for expenses), | d d | | | ote a book on these nds and boo him up, this individual became recog an authority. The recognition of the Filipinos intro- duced by this man and their further re- iz ceiving attentions and | i ———+ being consulted by the | Craft “usele commisston | 7 has er his depart- | $1ipi ure been ascertained | Fllxpxuo { to ha been wh‘\u\!l} | the slightest value. ers. Seham Like all the race, these | ',,,7._.,‘ ___{ Filipinos have made ‘ use of their recognized position with the authorities to impress | their countrymen with the idea that Gen- | | eral Otis will do anything they counsel | a to which their approbation. | mm the 11 mentioned a doctor | individugl namea | y de Tavera, a fellow whose past | career is known to ever. pectable for- resident In Manila, none of whom - willing to trust him beyond ken. An- r of these coun 1o the proprietor of large distilleries here and an ex-mem- ber of Aguinaldo’s Cabinet, who saw that to pretend to sympathize with the Ameri- cans was the best way to remain in Ma- nila an sneak into favor with the power that be to obtain news that might be useful to his countrymen, at the same time ping himself from harm. His name is Hector Legarda, and his con- stant companion in daily dfiv is Com- missioner Worcester, whose sole aim i establish municipal governm and point the respective Mayors, who after a while are invariably found to be colonels in the insurgent army. Daily the Filipinos appointed to posts as | Mayors and head men in the villages where Commissioner Worcester has made | his rounds are reported, after having taken the oath of allegiance to the United irgent office: use. And s or in ill this sym- man ates. to be in pathy with the c: Worcester is vain enough to imagine that through his efforts the future regenera- tion of the Filipino race is to be accom- plished. His constant companion, as men- tioned, is Hector Legarda, and there is a shrewd suspicion afloat that the “‘Mayor' appointments are made by Worcester upon Legarda’s recommendation. | “Just what qualifications Worcester had | that caused the administration to appoint | him as Commissioner must be a secret to | all in the Philippines, for beyond his | career as a bug and bird hunter and his | launch into literature his ability to grasp such important questions as have. pre- | sented themselves at this juncture are | very limited. But then there is a deal in | looking wise and saying little. Consen- sus of opinion, if freely expressed in the army and navy and among civilians, who from iong residence among these islands are entitled to have knowledge of affair: is that the labors of this wonderful com- mission will be of but little value. Colonel Denby is a nice, mild old gen- tleman, who from several years' r dence in China . was + supposed to be pre- | eminently suited to be Their one of the elect. No S | doubt his .degal | knowledge and ex- | perience with affairs stamp him as the most capable man of the party. He: and Dewey and, now, Watson may be classed | as the bright minds of this remarkabls | Junketing commission that are supposed | to be giving McKinley and the nation at | large an insight into how the Filipinos | should he governed. | 1 venture to state that Admiral Dewey | and the officer who is now in command of the naval forces, John C. Watson, { could and would make a better report | upon the entire question and all its phases than any clvil or military mémber commission. Fancy three men, ding a private secretary. a special disbursing officer, a secretary and four or five assistants, all drawing m the fathomless pocket of Uncle Sam, under the “appropriation for | national defense"; carriages and horses | at their disposal, house rent free; and |an allowance for entertaining that has | been utilized but once in a public manner. 3 | | Come High. | | in | And vet these two editors and their a And what has resulted from this; com- | mission’s labors? So far as Otis {8 con- cernedas a member of the concern, naught, for he rarely attendeditssittings, while, if the truth is known, Dewey simply went Philippines. to the sessions ag a matter of duty. The whole show seems to have been run by Schurman and Worcester, aided by the | trio or rather quartet of Filipinos intro- duced into prominent notice as ‘‘amigos de los Americanos.” To make some show, in view of the presence of this commission, Otls has es- tablished petty courts of justice (or rather a travesty), over which Filipino shyster lawyers recommended by the “amigos” preside. Faney a court in the South, presided a negro judge, and a white man as the prisoner! What justice would he btain? And this is the state of affairs An American soldier or :ailor, a civillan or any European has scant justice. *They are fined ten or twenty times more than a Filipino for the same offense. The intricate, obsflete, annoying methods of Spanish procedure are still in vogue—modes misty and unfathomable that are beyond the comprehension of not only the learned judge advocate of the army, whose only experience has been at the army post, but beyond the power to unravel of the majority of the so-called legal lights who have hung up their shingles as ‘“‘Abogados Ameri- canos.” Not content with consulting the alleged “amigos,” the commission through Otis has subsidized a paper called the Democra- cia. edited by the be- fore mentioned Pardo de Tavera. The pa- per has a rival for the same considera- tion, El Filipino Li- bre, ‘run by another + gentleman of the Ta- ra type. The contents of these papers the main seem to be daily attacks upon the Catholic church and its priests. Church. sociates were the recipients of the ut- most charity and consideration from the Archhishop and the heads of the clergy. 1 venture to predict that these two scoun- drels would turn against their American amigos at the slightest provocation. Their past character is proof of such a pre- diction. T have never seen such filthy and outrageous matter in print as has ap- peared in the columns of these papers; and when the paper Libertas, conducted by the Dominfcan fathers, attacked them in turn they went like slinking curs to the censor to complain. While writing upon this theme, it may be opportune to state that the trouble fter this revolt is ended will be of a re- glous character. There are a number f godly men in our midst, some of them chaplains of the volunteers and of the army, who have endeavored to win over the natives from Catholicism, by hook or by crook, by holding out various prom- fses of their power to obtain positions in the United States service for those who embrace their views and place them- ves under the wing of these ministers of the gospel. They have, in view of the -t that Spanish laws prevail here, placed themselves, according to the opin- jon of the legal light attached to the provost marshal’s office, in jeopardy of being brought before a court of justice. Not content to administer the rights of matrimony to the ignorant Filipinos (whose idea of marital obligation is in the main, but vague) in a private manner, they openly announce through the papers that on such a day a Filipino wedding will take place, the performance to be gone through under the auspices of Pas- tor Prautch (a commission agent mis- glonary), to which ceremony all are in- vited, Including Archbishop Nozaleda and a number of Catholic priests. All liberal minded men here are disgusted with this missionary crowd, who seem to deny the right of the Catholic church to remain in these islands, and being perverse and ignorant of general matters as mission- aries generally are, are bigoted in the ex- treme. As a sequel to this religious war sus- tained in the papers edited by Filipinos and the Dominicans, the Spanish resi- dents are sore against the American au- thorities for allowing such scandalous at- tacks on their church. For, while they have no love for the rule exercised over the Islands in the past by the Friars, they have respect and veneration for the tenets of their religion—and, also, it must be remembered that in this Eighth Army Corps there are also a number of men who are Catholics. The two pa- pers printed in English are also mixed up in the controversy and print the most pal- pable lies anent the Catholic church im- aginable. Two da ago the Manila Times, from information glven to its editor by Pardo de Tavera and his co-editor of the Filipino Libre eres Burgos, published the story that at the request of these two worthies Otis had ordered the suppression of the Dominican paper Libertas. This, as as- certained, was a lie. The Freedom print- d a yarn that big, open-hearted, liberal Captain “Dick” Leary, one of the idols of the American navy, had expelled the Friars from Guam when he arrived there to assume the office of Governor. As a matter of fact there was only one priest there and he was the recipient of a letter from Governor Leary tendering him a QO+ D00+ 0-00+0-+0+@ CHANGE EXPECTED AT MARE ISLAND Hobson May Be Placed There. Special Dispatch to The Call. WASHINGTON, Nov. 8.—The Secretary of the Navy is not entirely satisfled with the present conduct of affuirs at the Mare Island Navy-yard, having more especial reference to the construction and repair department. In order that he might more thoroughly be conversant with matters he quletly had Naval Constructor Taylor visit the Pacific Coast a few weeks ago and report to him in person. The con- tinual wrangling among the working force and Naval Constructor Frank Hibbs, coupled with numerous letters from State Senator Luchsinger, Congress- man Victor Metcalf and several business men of Vallejo, has rendered him not at all agreeable when discussing matters about that locality. Labor unions in San Francisco have for- warded him any number of documents bearing on the recent reduction of wages at the yard. He realizes the fact that in order to accomplish the best results complete harmony should exist between the employes and the head of each de- partment, and he is serlously considering a relief for Naval Constructor Hibbs, al- though at present there seems to be no one available to fill the position. Hobson, who is now in Manila, has ex- pressed a desire to return a little later on, and he may be given the duty in rec- ognition of his past meritorious servides, To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All @ruggists refund the money It it falls to cure. E. W. Grove's signature 15 on each box. e, ’ GENERAL OTIS UNDISTURBED BY THE RAIN OF CAUSTIC COMMENTS Side Lights on “the Rings” and “the Bosses’ That Direct Trade and War in the passage to Manila on the transport Nan- shan, as he had been ordered to return here by his superfor. And so the merry religious war goes on. Commissioner Worcester is very much to blame in the matter, for not only in his book on the Philippines but since his arrival here he has exhibited the utmost dislike and hatred to all connected with the Catholic church, and in licu of acting as a conciliator, he has fomented in every way the bad feeling dormant among the natives. His “amigos”” are well posted on the value of the, property of the various religious orders and are hopeful, with his aid, of obtaining thefr lands if some meth- od is devised to sell them on orders from Washington. The most outrageous high handed pro- ceedings are practiced against the owners of property managed +——————4 by the church and the | Some | various orders by the | assistant quartermas- ter, who is charged Epscimen l:lth the rental and i iring of buildings for ol | dwellings _and office: - 4 for the United States | officials. Despite all protests, he pays what rent he pl s (in many cases retaining payment for several months untll it sults his conveni ence to pay) and in some instances the buildings are forcibly entered by armed guards that take possession. An instance of this kind took place last week, with regard to a large building under the care of the Archbishop's office. The de- tails and forcible entry have been sent to Rome and no doubt the papal legate and | ©4+0+0+0+0+0+ 04840 + C+B+OITITIDICHOHO+04 0 4T+040+040+ some of the Catholic clergy in the United | States will bring the matter before the President. Raymond Sulzer is an assistant quarter- master here and his lot is far better than if he had remained in New York as a pet- tifogging attorney. Since his arrival he, in common with all the officials connected with the administration department of the army, except perhaps Major Brainard and Major Sam Jones, have shown an open preference 1in all bids for public | works and supplies to patronize English, | Chinese and, in fact, every nation except Americans. This Sulzer shares with the captain of the, port, Lieutenant Braunersreuther— the hero of Guam—the odium of dislike, not only of civilians but also of ninety per cent of the army and navy, with whom they come fn contact. With regard to the latter, opinfon is unanimous. he cringes. a- lleutenant in the navy is not at all commensurate to maintaln his style of living. He rides a splendid Australian horse that at the present rate of horse- | flesh cost at least $1000, while the dash- ing carriage that his wife and daughter use, accompanied by a coachman and tiger in buttons and a cockade forsooth— to ape the styles used by the foreign Con- suls—cost a good round sum. The inter- No one has | a good word for him. He cannot be civil | to any ome except his superiors, to whom | Public gossip is severe anent | this captain of the port, as his salary as | | | | | chanical preter of his office, who was miserably | poor when the American occupation of Manila took place, now rides around in a swell turnout and sports diamonds, on & | salary of 200 Mex's monthly. From all these incidents conclusions are drawn. Merchants and shipowners are wishing the return to the office of captain of the port of an officer like Captain Glass, or some one of his type, so that the dlscourtesy shown by Braunersreuther and his immediate inferiors would be at an end. The various correspondenss have devot- | ed themselves to denunciations of Qlis and his shortcomings, but have refrained from noticing the various officers who de- | serve far greater scorching for their in- capacity and uselessness. To give a list would occupy a column, but prominent for getting credit for work that is done by his immediate subordinate officers and men is the depot quartermaster, Major Devol, His men, Captain Walcott, Lieu- tenant Halsch, il Engineer Mead of San Francisco, Transportation Chiefs Norton and Harvey and others do all the work, and Devol, looking wise and assum- jng an air of knowing everything, gets the credit. Not a line of praise has been vouchsafed to the members of the pay corps under Colonel MacClure, no kudos has given the people of the United States the idea that Major Brainard and his corps of officers and men of the subsist- ence department have worked themselves nigh unto death, despite all the obstacles placed in their way by Devol, whose spite against some of the members of the sub- sistence department was always a matter for comment. Paymasters, few in number considering the large body of troops here, work day and night, incur danger when out on the lines in performance of their duties, but of whom no mention is made. That efficient officer, Captain Martin of the Fourteenth Infantry, whose duty it is to keep the streets of Manila in order and attend to sanitary matters, has never been deemed worthy of notice. And in- deed if any man is worthy of praise Mar- tin is that man. Considering the filthy, disgusting state of the public and private residences, and offices, the dirty streets and byways of this town, that had been uncleansed for more than a year, and look- ing with impartiality at the resistance of the inhabitants to sanitary methods, Martin has accomplished a work that, in view of the annoyances and obstacles prevalent, seems almost superhuman. The work of Major Kilbourne, as the general treasurer of the islands; of Major Kehleher, as chief paymaster of civil funds, has never been given a word of praise, and yet these men, while never catering for newspaper notoriety, like Devol and others, are worthy of com- mendation. Then, too, there was the gallant Miley, whose desire to conduct the extra work imposed upon him by the cheeseparing policy of Otis resulted in an attack of brain fever that ended in death. Others who get all praise can ride around in carriages paid for by Uncle Sam, whose purse is evidently unlimited in capacity. It may be thought that in this letter I have indulged in personal feelings. On the contrary, my object in writing has been to let the public of the United States know of matters and events that the cor- respondents of the various newspapers are ignorant of and have little desire to make public, devoting their attention to military rather than civil subjects. In my next it will be shown how these wily Filipinos sought to entrap Otis into assuming the presidency of the cutthroat Katipunan Soclety, and also to show the restrictions, the burdens, the unjust im- positions that Americans are suffering under in common with Europeans. One word in conclusion, it is better to be a Chinaman, Filipino or Englishman, or, indeed, any nationality at present, than to be an American, for under this Otis regime and in combination with the course pursued by some of his subordi- nates American merchants and those who desire to settle here and aid in de- veloping the lsland; are subjected to the grossest Insults and Injustice. As this mail leaves the news, welcome to Otis and all the military world, is to the effect that the commission ig ordered home. It is no secret that their return in an official sense i§ not wished, as now military operations can be entered into without seeking adyice from Worcester and his amigos. FLOWER. Henry | |CASTRO DECIDES TO SHELL PUERTO CABELLO General Bolivar, Who Visited the Fort Under a Flag of Truce, Arrested and Held Prisoner. CARACAS, Nov. to-morrow eral Bolivar, Castro’s envoy, who v 0 ARMIES SAFELY CARRIED Worl\ of the Quarter- master’s Department. W Special Dispatch to The Call. —The report of Ludington, made o WASHINGTOX s eral Quartermaster G public by the War Department to-day, shows an immense amount of work ac- complished by this department in con- nection with the military operations of the past year. This includes the organization of a transport fleet, the moving of two armies to the Philippines, in addition to the troops transported to Cuba and Porto Rico, the repatriation of over 55,000 Span- ish soldiers from the variou: nds cap- tured, the care and transportation of the immense quantites of animals and sup- plies necessary for the support of our own soldiers and the disinterment and return to the United States of over 1200 soldlers and civilians who died in the Government service in Cuba, Porto Rico, Hawaii and the Philippines. General Ludington gives a list of thirt seven vessels now included in the port fleet. During the fiscal vea vessels have carried 202,387 pe; tween Cuba. Porto Rico, Hawaii, the Philippine Islands and thé United States. All this has been accomplished without the loss of a single life through this count. There have been carried animals and 86,150 tons of freight. The work of sanitation and reconstruc- tion accomplished in Cuba and Porto Rico aos been immense. It has included ihe struction of water wor the re- building and purifying of barracks and the rebuilding of wharves and cleaning of whole towns and cities. In the Philippines two distinct armies have been landed and one returned to thé United States. The handling of this great force has been accomplished with s delay in face of great natural obstacle lack of wharves and landing facilit in the presence in many instanc hostile natives and armed Spaniards. Since the oecupation of Luzon and the adjacent islands the same work of build- ing and sanitation has_been prosecuted as in Cuba and Porto Rico. In addition to distilling plants for water and me- devices for coaling ships, the eneral Castro has decided to shell Puerto Cabello the fort having failed to surrender t vas arrested there by General Parado true has largely influenced Castro’s decision. ment will be participated in both by land batteries and the Venezuelan cruis- ers recently sent to the harbor by Castro. as agreed upon last week. Gen- Puerto Cabello under a flag of and this violation of a flag of It is stated that the bombard- ed B O+O+0+0+0 DENOUNCES Th TRANSVAAL WAR Andrew Carnegie Favors the Boers. Special Dispatch to The Call. Nov. 9.—Andrew Carnegie W YORK and Mrs. Carnegie were p: s on the White Star steamship Oceania, which ar rived to-day from Liverp M negie appears to be in good health. He said to a reporter that the reports that he ntended to become a citizen of Great Britain were without n, for, he said, ‘‘where a man's treasure is, there his heart is also.” Speaking of the present war between England and the Boers, Mr. Carneg said: “The war against the Boers is most infamous and unjust and it is brought about by England's lust for domain and is on a par with our attack on the poor Filipinos. These two attacks are a dis- grace to both branches of our race. “The people in the Transvaal and Orange Free State have a right to rule themeelves. One war is an attack on an existing and the other on an embryonic the republic. : “It is_worse for us to attack the Fili- pinos than for England to attack the Boers, for we fall from a & height, as We believed .in governm of the governed. The best men | land have spoken against the war in the Transvaal vwhere it is deplored exc by whose interests are served by it are a smail k lique of | misti department has begun the installation of | a refrigerator plant at Manila with a ca- pacity of forty tons of ice a day and co taining 1650 tons of perishable provisions: Material has been forwarded from the United States for a bridge over the P: River, and the railroad & been paired and operated over such parts of the line as are in the hands of the Ameri- can forces. A total of 1214 bodies of soldiers d others dying abroad have been returned to the United States from Cuba, Porto Rico, the Philippines and Hawaii. Many of them were returned to their friends at the expense of the Government and the remainder were interred in national ceme- teries. This has been a labor of great difficulty, but a large number of the re- mains have been identified and many pieces of property belonging to the de- ceased have been recovered, marked and returned to friends and relativ or ‘.re being held at present in the department waiting reclamation by those entitled to them. | | jingoes, heade v, whe Mr. Carnegie entertained decidedly opti- views of the business outlook and the prosperity of the country. He said I can only look at the business outlook here from abroad, which is sometimes a good point of view. But I beliey thing can stop 1900 fre great prosper view of th world and _th d war begetting war, the Uni States keeps out of the struggle ow that this country ign po ons there is more than ever Mr. Cs tion « w true that the syndicate H. C. Frick had failed to o $200,000,0.0 company to purchs -4 iron properties. MAKES ARBITRARY RULING. Chicago School Committee Acts in Outrageous Manner. CHICAGO, Nov. 9.—Superintendent of Schools E. Benjamin Andrews, formerly president of Brown University, wag de- nied the right weak before the school management com of the Chic Board of Educatior y. He w terrupted in the midst of an emphat protest agatnst an action which the com- P itee was ahout to take. The committ refused to h is protest to its end refused to t him an opportuni and then the mea explain, iinst his ad The Superint forth by an of the committee to the certific of elem rotest was drawn tion on the part nt x teachers Three for a half, and the best assortment of colors and combinations to select from. tan, brown and navy. Among the designs are tiger stripes polka dots, fleur-de-lis, etc. If you are fond of colored hosier The plain colors are cadet blue, ro yal blue, , plain stripes, y this is a treat—sce Out-of-town orders filled—write ys for our new illustrated catalogue No, 2. Prices from $330 to 4%. Largest manu- facturers in the Uni- ted States. No Quacks connected with this establishment. 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