The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 25, 1899, Page 2

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o L e AR e s S S S S e e B o o o WHO HEADS 100 NORTHUMBIAN ** TROCPERS sew Qoot00000 00000 APETOWN, Dec. 18 in order to © , residing ) but within . miles of milltary camps now established | & or hereafter to be est 1 north g rkstrom, are re tely & . > . * cer commanding . untfl further é own needs ¢ radlus withe ¢ . LORD STANLEY. ® WHO GO IN THE RANKS AS TRUCE BEING KEPT : ON CHRISTMAS DAY * LONDON, Dec. 2.—The War Office could not drown. The doxology was sung yecelved a ca from Gen t once, Mr. Hughes pronounc the Walk ¢ Cape Town yes- | Penediction in the name of the Prince of e terday, sa Peace, and the congregation dispersed. -——— “Have no i rther news of the gencral } BRITISH HAVE LIVED It may almost be safely predicted that IN AN UNREAL WORLD nothing will occur to-day. A truce, either 3 1 or 1, is Del kept for the e i b the opposing | NEW YORK, Dec. %.—The World has o g | this from London: The London Morning The Morning Post’ Chieveley, t P cember 15, and con ready cabled, s “At dawn to-day the column struck .""‘1.1"“ "!‘\ nd £« ed a new one, three miies | both par e outh, owing to the scarcity of | 1n an unreal world, where war 2 £ on Monday, De- | following from its military expert: s have for many years lived ' ged with a view to such a war, and the public now suspe ation o1 politiclans to be es. They now has of entrenched works which ed with war and policy. *The case, the {s that of a people In rounding o« Boe back to their followers for guidance, thus A large numi unded have recov- ady to resume t r places | 145k do S Recruiting in Canada. OTTAWA, Ont., Dec. 24 enlisting and equipping the Second Carna- e mctual facts, 1t|dlan contingent for South Africa Is pro- | that, man to man, we | ETessing rapidly. It is fzxpecl:‘:liml‘h(:; ::: elves pr Il matched, | first steamer carrying a _po ave always the choice of nd then becon to the Dally News from r River, dated December 18, s are now w but the Boe positions. Let E: 10 the ed for a fur a force will prove the both biood and t Among minor news that Col. MacKinnon 10 com 1 the City of Voluntee The Sixt been expected to procee the Cape to meet th cavalry. The O has been n > . - - = staft Good Dinner at San Quentin. It is remarked v about to move the seat of government from Bloemfonte! st%. the S mer belng | Dr. Leyds, who has viewed, asserts that tt in all parts of the countr — Kitchener Nears Gibraltar. ed MALTA, Dec. 24.—General Lord Kitch- rted | ener, ch Imperial | erts, arriv s have | on the Bri from Bombay to | He went ‘mmediat ng need of | ish crulser Dido, w Fes tar, where he will join Lord Roberts. uest ecor h second-class cruiser Isiss. n again inter- | to rs have amy arms and ammunition ring that th 1 the services of men who have bave Mausers enoug il & golden harvesi from the gher two and an equ Mar. | conv ormerly the inmates of tae prison who were blessed with a fat pu | could purchase whatever they might ¢ iticizing the | sire from the storekeeper. This ye arles Warrer’s | however, the system which 4 to reinforce | 10 the lieart of ma: ke convict beer eing concen- | Aguirre has m tni-Henrys. The morning papers fact that Gener St fifth division is bel various points, trated at once to that which will be s The men who hav TRANSVAAL WAR AIDS . | iwie es to wealthy prisone | mor CHICAGO, Dec. 24.—*If the war in the | the good th Transvaal con months longer, the cause have been won said f States Se the silver Republican leade Chicago to-day “The short time it has been in prog- ress,” continued Mr. Dubols, “has fur- nished proof of the contentions of the | ® friends of silver that there is not enough | ¢ £0ld in the world to form the b of the | @ world's money, and if war continues | 4 the length of time I have indicated th truth of this will have become too ap-| { parent for successful contravention | ¢ “I believe the Transvaal war will be a | 4 mighty influence in the campalgn of | next year in this country, and that the | & . . * siiver will | from the toitom of their hearts. rmer United s, who was in | ¢ T i object lesson will convince the people of | this country that it is not safe to place on gold the entire burden of the mone- | tary volume of the world. “It may be inte sting to observe that the panic In New York was simultaneous | with the passage of House gold stand- ard bill. Now, If a panic had followed the passage of & silver free colnage bill the wise men and the press of the land would have attributed i1t to the passage of the bin. i e CLERGYMAN TALKS WAR AND IS HOOTED NEW YORK, Dec. 24.—The World has the following from London: Rev. Hugh Price Hughes, a Methodist clergyman, grguing in his pulpit to-night for war, was interrupted by groans and back talk from his congregation. Such an outburst of cries against him forced him to declare that no fanatical crowd could clamor him down. The preacher sald that no native could own a foot of land In the Transvaal. “Same law in Natal,” shouted one of his auditors. Mr. Hughes said the Boers did not rec- ognize the rights of natives to marry. “Neither do they in Kimberley,” an- swered the congregation. A reference to Mr. Chamberlain’s diplo- macy brought long-continued hooting and | PePeBeieisis et beDeDeHe b The Naval Brigade be hissing. which the oheers, very thLA.+0+flHHWWW S+-0+00-+d0g DOYVNE GOE! LORD ROBER! "soNA\.s*noM”r LORD WoLVERT, Yeomam rncbflgqo;j B S R S e e . PATRIOTIC BRITISH NOBLEMEN. B e I = ALLIANCE 0F ENGLAND ARD THE SULTH ed From First Page. Post prints this (Christmas) morning the - “What should be our thoughts this rming intelligence al- ke | Christmas day on the war in which our aged? British public men of s a strug- gle for existence In behalf of just cause trom Modder River, dated | had no existence. The consequence has been that fighting services have not been when some m res are expect- ts the present gener- Irish-American king of the matter to-da untrue—or, at least, careless—views of a respecta- ble number of Irishmen who are ready to a healthy condition, but badly led, the Jeaders having got Into the way of looking her it IS to the Transvaal or to Can- s the same end can be ac- More will be known after the There will be a great deal of work done by those on the inside between now and that date, the na- ture of which I cannot tell you. be done secretly. ada, so long showing themselves unequal to their| The work of | There will be wheels within wheels and more than one organi- zation of Irishmen will be involved.” Conferences with a Americans who pretended at knew nothing of the movement dis- | that the conviction them that there should be an organization effected among them which could make its existence felt if only by a Fenian invasion of 18 the British from sending any more troops Irish- | contingent will sail from Hslifax on Jan- uary 10. The rush for enlistment continues quite general £ of staff to General Lord Rub- . 48 it would deter d here to-day from Alexandria | Prominence has doubtless been given to Omaha and Nebraska In the rumors of this movement because of the actvity of the Irishmen of Nebraska in land lea affairs within the last dozen years and be- | cause of the further fact that the bones of the most prominent of the leaders of the invasion of over thirty-three years ago rest In an Omaha cemetery. a handsome monunfent placed over his | be the ratification by our own Chamber of Dep- Natlonalists General John O'Nelll sleeps in an hon- ored grave in the Holy Sepulchre Ceme- tery just beyond the western limits of the He commanded the Invadin, men at the battle at Ridgewa: 4 | sara Falls, June 2, 1866, and the inscription on his monument proclaims him the hero | of that eugagement. on board the Brit- hich salled for Gibral- | the Free State is| SAN QU TIN PRISON, Dec. 24.—In ars it has been the custom for - | the warden of the prison here to let out | the privilege of selling Christmas supplies keeper. Warden Aguirre has dical change this year and dis- | ought grief Y a poverty-stricken bolished and Warden P arrangements for a | Christmas_dinner for the convicts equal ved at his own | old delicacies | 3 s in former years naturally feel more or THE CAUSE OF SILVER | icss disgruntled. but the poor men whe to stand by and see their fellow-convicts feast on s of the land, while they for two or three|dlned on prison fare thank the warden German Lloyds Buy Ships. BERLIN, Dec. 24.—The North German- Lloyd Steamship Company has boy, out the Seottish Orlental Steamship Com- pany's steamers, fourteen in number, and the service to and Singapore with This 15 the second instance of the pur- ght | in a few months ator Dubols of 1daho, one 6f @ ® P90 6060000046 00004506600d6bededeie MERCHANT SHOT B1 HIGABINERS Trouble Again Breaks Out in San Jose. A {WHITE MAN IN THE CASE e LURED THE VICTIM TO FACE HIS ASSAILANTS. . e | Although He Stood a Target for Five Armed Men and Was Badly Injured Fong Ling May Yet Recover. e Spectal Dispatch to The Call.” SAN JOSE, Dec. 24.—There was a shoot- Ing scrape In the Sixth-street Chinatown | this morning about 5 o'clock which re- | sulted in the serious wounding of Fong Ling, a prominent member of the Hip Sing Tong. The affair occurred at the clubhouse of the Hip Sing Tong. Five Chinese, belleved to be members of the Wong faction, and a white were engaged in the fight A clever ruse was adopted to bring Fong Ling to the door, when a | Beneral fusillade of shots was discharged |at him | The assassins knocked at the door of the clubhouse about 5 o'clock. Ling in- | quired who was there, and the white man replied that it was the Sheriff and asked | admittance Fong Ling opened the door, whereupon the Chinese opened fire on him, some dozen shots being fired Ling received a bullet through the right cheek and another through the right shoulder. He fe]l to the floor and the men made their escape before they were detected. Although Ling’s wounds are of a serious nature, It is not thought they will result serfously. There was another Chinese in | the clubhouse at the time, but he was so frightened he remained in his bunk and failed to see the highbinders. The police | and Sheriff responded promptly, but were | unable to find any clew to the men. Of late the Wongs and Hip Sing tongs have been clrrying on a warfare, and in the last three months have engaged in not dess than twenty-five rights. A month ago Him Tue, a Wongite, was assassin- | ated. It is belleved that a number of Police Court lawyers who handle most of the Chinese cases are the prime cause of e disturbances. They incite the Chin- e in order to gain fat fees. Leong Poon, a Chinese, who has figured in these factional fights, was arrested here to-day for the murder of a country- man. alleged to have been committed in Glenn County on December 19 last. He will be taken there to-morrow. | TURKEY PUZZLE FOR. MARIN AUTHORITIES Row of Fat Birds, Dressed for the Oven, Found Along the Rail- road Track. SAN RAFAEL, Dec. 24—8ix hundred turkeys, strung in a ro | local sleutbs to exerc: { of their brains so ind e the gray matter striously that they are already referring to the source of | | their bewilderment as the “turkey mys- | tery.” The turkeys are there — several | hundred big, fat fellows, all picked and | dressed and ready for cooking before ifying the palates of as man but whose they are, where they came from, and why, ate questions that Ga- 3 himself would be puzzled in trying swer. i distance from the local depot of the Donahue iine to the new town bridge is nearly half a mile. When the first train pulled out for Tiburon this morning the trainmen and passengers were astonished, shortly after leaving the station, that the route was lined with turkeys prepared for the oven. The first turkey lay within 200 feet of the depot and the last a few feet beyond the creek, about 5 or 600 in all. The authorities were notified, but have wner of the Ch stmas birds. They are all healthy and fat, and no reason can be found for thus throwing them away. rybody is certain they were not there last evening. and that s about all of which anybody Is positive. The turkeys | must be worth at least $1000, DUPES OF ENGLAND. Americans Who Oppose the French Treaty, Designated as Such. PARIS, Dec. 24.—The Journal des De- bats, In the course of a long article favor- ing the Franco-American reciprocity treaty, says: Some are opposing the treaty because they have become the dupes of Fnglish newspapers, which are spreading the idea that the United States s only a branch of Great Britain. The Americans, however, have affirmed thelr deter- mination to be independent. President McKin. ley's message showed their ability to disen- tangle themselves from English embraces when these become compromising. As for ourselves, untll there Is some proof to the contrary, we must regard the Americans as our allles and friends. Their conclusion of a treaty with us was a friendly act, and must be considered as h. Our only desire should utles and the American Senate of an agreement o significant and precise for the maintenance of traditional relations between the two coun- tries. — & Irish- Big Fire in New York. | NEW YORK, Dec. 24.—The six-story brick bullding at 134-38 Willlams street was gutted by fire to-day and the adjoin- ing structures at 132 and 138 were dam- aged considerably. The fire resulted in a loss of about $80,00. The burned bullding, which was many years old, was owned by |the Berlin-Jones Envelope Company, whose loss | timated at $55,000. The building at 132 Willlam street was occu- pied by Henry Allen, wholesale druggist, whose loss said to be about $10,000. No. 138 was occupled by Thurston & Bradich, importers of gum, whose loss is $15.000. More than 200 girls employed by the en- chase of a BEritish by a German line with- | velope company will be thrown out of em- | ployment. L ST AII‘S(‘)UND BELEAGUERED LADYSMITH. Ladysmith October 30; the 4.7-inch gun mounted on Captain Scott's carriage in action. . have caused the | tami- | baffled in their effort to discover the | THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1899. DUTCH TO BE HERDED AS RECONCENTRADOS General Gatacre Issues an Order Affecting Col- onists in British South Africa. - TAOOPS ADVANCE |PROTEST AGAL FROM L0 Active Campaign Is Now Under Way. CALL HEADQUARTERS. WELLING- VARIOUS TOWNS OCCUPIED| | TON HOTEL, WASHINGTON, Dec. #.— HERETOFORE BUT LITTLE WAS Through the Briush Government the Eastern Extension Cable Company has A | submitted clatme for subsidies allowed in —— . concessions granted by Spaln and has pro- | tested against the laying of cables In the Greater Portion of the Island of P"i l’mUDPHEO! by the L.’“md States. nay Had Remained in the While sending the communications of the company the Britsh Government has Hands of the Insur- unfformly declined to support them diplo- gents. matically, simply transmitting them to % this Government. Deprived of govern- mentai support, the company has been trying to secure some recognition of Its {nmcn,,mn by the United States, going so ILOILO, Nov. 13.—The island of Panay. | tar as to- accept and transmit free of sister tsland to Negros and others of the | charge all Government messages from Viscayan group, has for months past been | Manila to Hongkong. The Government in the hands of the insurgents. To-day the | however, informed the company that the American forces are taking the aggres- | {'nited States preferred to pay for every sive for the first time, and are moving out’| message sent. The Government has not to cover and hold more territory. Up to the | pajq any bills thus far due the company, present the American troops have pos-| hut it is stated that when they reach sessed the half-burned town of [loilo, | §250,000 it will be wiser for the Government | and nothing more. The Twenty-sixth| to purchase the concession for about Regiment, under Colonel Rice, arrived at | §1000,000, as it has the right to do under Hollo two weeks ago from the United | \yo” terms of the Spanish grant. It will States. An officer of the fegiment sald: | prohaply not be long before the United We at home knew that our troops were on | States will be indebted to the company | Pauay, but we had the impression they occu- | {n the sum of $260.000, as its charge I8 75 pléd the island; that the important coast towns | cents per word. This is three times as were at least our; that our possession was | creat as that for messages between the more than nominal. Hence we are surprised | United States and Europe. to see the American forces actually besiege The elaim for subsidies will certainly by the insuggents upon three miles of land im- | 0B CETR G0 SR GOV rment. It Is mediately surrounding lioilo. | People in the United States may have the Correspondence of the Associated Press. NST THE LAYING OF NEW CARLE Owners of the Manila-Hongkong Line Fiis Claims for Subsidies Against the United States Government. | true the subsidies were an ob | against the Government of Spain. w) entered into the contract f ! rights. It has been suggested that th obligations might be considere fom ing part of the Philippine debt | the treaty of peace was signed | company ~ questioned the right of t} | United States to lay cables in the Pn pines and demanded that this Govern ment should walit for cable facilities til the archipelago came into its | sion by treaty The Government d that it had the right to lay war es In any part of the archipelago ar - the Hooker for that purpos stood that General Otis w other (ransport to take the j Hooker, which was wrecked a trance of Manila Bay It is the authorities that before act taken in the matter of lay cable the question of th the Eastern Extension Cc determined. Should it be d | concession must stand Congress will ha | to make an appropriation in ad the cost of the Pacific eable proper for t purchase of the Philippine cable conce sion. The Eastern Extension Company w of course, prefer to retain the privileg granted by the Spanish decre and w probably make a very determined to obtain formal recognition by this ( ernment. The administration, t desires to connect Luzon with Japa Guam and other poin in China w Hongkong, where the cable ends. and | 18 anxious to arrange for rates not s | high as those now charged. same ideas as had the officers of the Twenty- | sixth Regiment. and to them It would be well to say that our lines_ up to the present, em brace the subyrbs of Jaro and Molo, ' both within three nfiles of this port. and nothing more, Insurgent trenches face us on the nort! | and west, and outpost firing is to be heard at | any time: | "Wijth the coming of reinforcements, a battal- | fon of the Nineteenth Regiment and the Twen- ty-sixth Regiment entire. General Hughes, in |ie midst of a typhoon that swept the country e with driving rain, flooded ricefields and made quagmires of the roads, sent out an expedition composed of the Elghteenth Regiment, under olonel Carpe the second battalion of the Torenty-cicih Regiment. two. battaiions of the | Statement by National nth, Light Battery G of the Sixth Ar- e N nder Captain Bridgeman, and Captain Examiner ng. e s mounted scouts from the Eighteenth | Spectal Dispatch to The Call. Regiment. _They advanced into the enemy ountry. The battalion of the Twenty-sixth and the two battalions of the Nineteenth con- stituted a provisional regiment, under Colonel | Rice, while the first and third battallons of the | Twenty-sixth garrisoned Tollo and Jaro. BOSTON, Dec. 24.—National Bank Ex- The objective point of the expedition was the | aminer D. G. Wing, temporary receiver of ‘-upp.\.-:-d eurgent stronghold at Santa Bar- | po' G1ove Natlonal Bank, gave out a bara, eight miles north of Jaro, but ae the di- strongly intrenched the American forces made | in the course of his regular examination a Jdetour 1o the west in order (o approsch | of the bank's affairs, on September 19, he Santa Barbara on its unprotected side. Yes- utstandin terday General Hughes had occupied success. | found $500,000 of Globe checks outstart g ively the villages of Oton, Tigbaun and Gurmal, | which did not appear on the books. Pres on the coast and west of iollo; likewlise Cor- | jdent Charles N. Cole admitted this to be doba, four miles north of Tigbaun | ) that to close Company 'C of the Twenty-sixth Regiment | N3 personal loan, l";‘li:l‘d B o had the only contact with the Insurgents on the | the bank at that time a . first night out. One of the men of the com- | sults, Mr. Bigelow, the only director B, Tas sersouaty wounded; twa o the.an: | within reach, and Mr. Cole and Mr. Wing ]m—: road between these boints had been | Statement to-night, in which he says that | 7 er emy were found dead when the trenches were | Went to Washington and lald “he‘ gy captured, and much ammunition fell Into our | before Comptroller Dawes. Mr. Wing hands as & result of the brush. To-day General | gaiq: Hughes' column is resting #n the four towns : 5o mentioned. waiting for ammunition and provi- | Mr Bigelow agreed to F;r:on:;!:d:u‘unn s | #lons to be conveyed to it, and also for the | that Coie's shortage should be 0od raing to stop and the country to dry. The town | the bank at once, Cole having turned over cer: | of San Miguel, within sicht of Tioilo, was par- | tain securities to him and Messrs. Clark "’nx."ld tially fired by the rebels when they thought our | Coolidge assisting in guaranteeing Mr. Bige troops were about to enter it. | low. The Comptroiler of the Currency directe | The town of Moflo to-day presents a woe. | that Mr. Cole should resign at once as presic | begone and dismantied appearance. A third of | dent; ghat the whole matieg should me lak | the place is In ruins, and the partial recon- ould at the struction of business houses and the humbler | before the directors and thd? I = proper time report the to the District At | dwellings of the poor, with debris from the | torney At this time Messrs. Coolidke and conflugration on Febpuary 11 reminds ome of | Clark were each borrowing not more than | the wreck after a Western cyclone. | $100,000 of the bank, with plenty of security, bout 000 cash on deposit and each had abou ot A 1 Mr. Bigelow owed not more than that an |LOGAN WAS KILLED more” thap enauen i Sepeus L iy s okt BY A SHARPSHOOTER | siir cohe, K0 %ouid shion of the. ssonon: by the sale of Cole's securities, & part being KANSAS CITY. Dec. 24.—The incidents | bought by Coolidge and Clark through their re- attending the death of Major John A. | spective brokers. i Shceaned’ - by are described In the following letter, re- | 35000 10 Lol AOOC R [0 before the fuli | celved to-day by L. S. Letberman, from | poarq of directors, and further investigation his son, Dr. B. Albert Leiberman, major | showed that there were $3,000 more of checks |and surgeon of the Thirty-taird U 8. | guistanding not on_ the books and that the | Infantry (Major Logan's regiment): indebtedness of the Lovell Arms Company was | SAN FABIAN, Luzon, No you the day before yesterday that wo were 10| by the books and that Mr. Cole was himself it, and although we whipped them It cost us | Lovell paper. There was also found an ap- eoveral killed, including Major Logan. We left | parent overdraft of Squires amounting to $525, here at 7 a. m. and marched about two or three | 499 1 addition to their regular loan, which it- miles, when we ran into the enemy, Who Were | yeir was in excess of the $109,000 limit. In pouses, ricefields and tops of trees, along | “Mr. Cole admitted his responsibility for this the road, and intrenchments without end. Cor- | overdraft, elther to the bank o to the Squires oral Robinson, In the advance, was wounded | ora™y\inig over to the bank his own securitie: by the first volley. Major Logan, in paesing | {7} aing the Lovell paper owned by him to him, stooped over and asked if he had & | ..cure the entire indebtedness for Which he first-aid package, and was shot through the | hamirted responsibility.. This amounted to head just above the temples. 1 was only &| n.ariy §1,000.000 and the securities turned over, short distance behind, and 1 called to my act-| g¢"(heir then market value, were considerable ing hospital steward, Mercer, and went for- | fit (lOR PO T moune, ward to him. T took' Major Logan's head and | ""rtiUS %irectors and Messrs. Coolidge and Mercer his feet, 60 as to move him, when Mer- | (ol $5 WO CS nto @ written guarantee cer Was shot through the heart from the tree | ;g the securities should be sufficient to make under which Major Logan fell. 1 looked up and | that, {1 (ouriioR FOE S Sy G o0, TR saw the fellow about fifteen feet above me, and | K003 the Cole TBlCtANCot . e direc grawing my reolver, 1 shot him. and he feil from the tree. Then, Tight at that spot, several oo e DEen Al mnse others were killed or wounded, and when 1 cs- | then done everything in thelr pawer And made tablished my dr'nhin( station at r;mu place the 7;::“ eatinee. sharpshooters in the treetops made things very 5 = - : lively for us until a detall of men cleansi | The banks assets nre Befter off to-day by them out. One hundred and fifty natives | about #500,000 cash. SFT BLOSLIE C6 noves MG ot 0 ine wore ek, T Laxen and | gentiemen than ft was at the tme 1 brousht o bRl s AT had been tainine “rre | the condition of affairs to the attention of the something terrible, as it had been raining. The | P B s e of Cote itk (he ricefields were like lakes. and the streams were | Comptrolier. 9 e v so-called copper Interests was not the greatly swollen. The natives all had Mausers, e s R and they knew how to handle them. The battle | of ~the Globe = National = Henks S lasted about three and a half hours. General | but Rls connectlon viemy s Wheaton to-day sent us a letter of congratula- | Provided bim with securities amounting in e . ate at the then market prices to nearly Vo sarteq "1™ (he blegest one ince the | SEEC0. These securities were not In the bank ——— when 1 examined it. but were put up later by Mr. Cole to secure his indebtedness OTIS’ LATEST LIST T make this statement at this time to correct the various rumors now in circulation as to the OF CASUALTIES fatlure of the Globe Bank. In justice to Mr. Bigelow it may be stated that on September 19 —_ he was the largest {ndividual depositor n the all th it L WASHINGTON. Dec. 34.—The following | Jinka 11s geore. & L0 2/Fest Whan the bank is General Otis’ weekly death report: NILA, Dec. #.—Adjutant General, Wash- 1 Following are t the since last re- | QMITH DOES GOOD Nephrolithiasts, November 7, Sixth Infantry, John - Smith. - Company €. " gunahot woun WIRK IN NEGROS November 15, Thirty-third Infantry, Arthur D. Radseinski: Thirteenth [nfantry, Sergeant Major Charles E. White, Company K: December 11, Thirty-fourth Infantry, Oscar E. Dolan, Cor BACOL:.' 4 ;MP“ N'“";, Ph".‘”'"” pany G, December 21, Eleventh Calavry, Jo- | I8lands, Nov. 7.—Panay is the shipping seph Kessinger, Company D: December 10, | port for all the products of Negros. Ne- Thirty it Infantey. Rainard Anderson. Com- | gros Island was first garrisoned by the any . Accldéntal. ypho! ever— e imn ber ~, e ThtR Ao Resiend Carpenter. Com. | California volunteers, which regiment was pany L; December 7, Fourth Cavalry, Harry | Feplaced early in July, 1889, by the Sixth ’I;eno, .er‘e-n'z“(}nmmnymx:a K;!ec::l;‘lber 19, | Infantry. Brigadier General Smith, for- wenty-seventh Infantry, Claude B. Christmas, | merly colonel of the Californjas, is mili- e Tatantey, Heary €, Meomoer B, Twenty- | tary governor of Negros, and since last December 17, Sixth Infantry, John 1. Fres Company K; December 22, United States trans- | and well under his direction. Last July port Hooker, James Conwny, cableman; De- | the situation had two sides—the military cember 23, Fourteenth Infantry, * Wilitam | and the civil. The Sixth Infantry had be- Schneebel. Peritonius—December 20, Twenty- | fore it the duty of suppressing the in .rior ninth Infantry, Paul Gains, Company L. Ma- | mountain bandits, as well as the scatter- laria—December 15, Twellth Infantry, George | ing of the revolutionary party, which was Burg, Company I’ December 8, Twenty-second | operating under instructions from Aguin. Infantry, Kenneth Rodenberger. Company 'A: | aidy in ) 8! December ), Twenty-firs nfantry, Isaac C| Watson, Company F Decemper si. Thtreenth | (10, Ciyll matters, General Smith heid BT hontts ety e Decem- | nance of a ctvil and elective government, any K; December 1, Twenty-fourth Infantry, | WDich would ultimately serve to show the enry Cunningham, Company F. Dysentery.. | Other revolting islands what good things December 14, Twenty-first Infantry, Edward | Mould be enjoyed under American rule. Ewanson, Company M; December 5, Twenty- | NeETOS was Selected as the most promis- second Infantry, D, Buck, Company A: Decem- ln! fleld for this experiment. ber 4, Thirty-fourth Infantry, Fred Morford, | ince July last these bandits, who have Company K: Decgmber 22, Hospital Coros, Al- | held undisputed control over this par :;: Dughi lp!'«“mm 22, Fourteenth In- | this country for years, have emx)sm:r:!l ry. Osca e, Company G. Drowned— | the Bixth Infantry and they are ng - December 1. near Nlerbican, Luson, accident. | ly as numerous as Tormerly and conse: ally, Thirty-third Infantry, Willlam Axtell, | Quently the profession has lost much of g:mp-ny K. Intestinal trouble—Deces r 15, | its popularity and m: be considered to Tuwenty second Infantry, George H. McLean. | be upon its last legs. "¢ Wouid be unwise Twenty tovrth Tory delibllity—December 22, | to state In print just how many of these ux;l, ;-[ mu%:::':—’ mb'r'nn l;!nl:; x:n.u%eln rr'.nva been killed by first. Infantry, Willlam Blouchir, Com N g Sumbes 18 large, - Company & |and there would surely be people “at — :‘;:-‘1“0 u‘n' Irl;nonnce of lhel fact that drastic seve measures alon Damage by Prairie Fire. this evil, and who mnuéuififiy",'.fl'.‘i.’{ ABERDEEN. 8. D., Dec. 24.—During a | raise an ‘outery against the killings. = A wh wind on Saturday a prairie fire start- | PArt of our Inheritance from Spain is the east of Eureka and swept over the | fobber chlef known locally as Papa, or country, causing great destruction of | Popisso. He s the leader of the band op- g:?el;!! Detalls are meager, but it s ©rating in the southern fon of the isl- leved many farmers must have been | 2nd, Who are called Babyalanes. a wild, ireilo'yined out The fire was the most | JUDeTstitious people. = Against them the 1 ers extensive for years. American soll have a n.__ :ell;f:r:“llh;l su r;l:ll:&l ndlhec'l:'l#d‘l'l‘.: ed, demoralized and sc Thrown From a Buggy. A handful of American troops h;v:‘::m SAN JOSE, Dec. 24.—Mike Vonalman, sitions that fort; g y tralned men could a milker, employed on the O, R:v 1d agal arm; near town, was thrown from l“ ;:l.:;‘yn:é’.' g poatola B s o day and sustained MISS WEAR UND. brain. His tecovery.llcsgnwb::::l.n & —_— o Y o ———— AUBURN, Dec. 2%.—Miss Wear, o '{:x Cure a Cold in One Day Aisappeared from her home at Awle:u’:: | o ative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All | a few days ago, was found to-day on th }mlmndxhamnnwhmwn. s ¢ v Fores road | E. W. Grove's siguature is on each box. %o, | tion Sha wes b-':u'ooht:-ll'm"h.-‘} Dok attack a town, 1 will now tell you that we did | personally the holder of nearly $500.000 of the | tors and Messrs. Coolidge and Clark have since | July affairs here have advanced rapidly | establishment and mainte- | !lng was badly torn. Several weeks a; the young woman lost her brother, w was a vietim of the scarlet fever, and ]Is belleved that she has become so dis tracted over his death that her mind has given way. The Wears represent one of the oldest families of Placer County. —_—— | | TWELVE KILLED IN l AMALFI DISASTER | | } ROME, Dec. 24.—Dispatches fromAmalfl the popular tourist resort on the Gulf of Salerno, where the landslide occurred or Friday, say that twelve persons are known to have been killed, that at least fifteen others were injured and that many are unaccounted for. Among those who were killed wers Miss Weir and her governess Miss Weir 18 a daughter of James Calloway Welr, member of the British House Commons for Ross and Cromarty. They had escaped, but returning for their valu- ables were killed together. It now is known that some earth tre mors and other premonitions enabled many to get away before the catastrop occurred. The Mayor of Amalfi deck his belief that the landslide was due t the fact that a huge flssure, left after similar slip ten years ago, had been care lessly filled with faggots and plece timber. This had always been considered a source of danger. The Hotel Santa Caterino was ecom | pletely buried and other buildings are in ruins. The peasants, fearing fu slides, refy return to their _———m———— ADVERTISEMENTS: INTENSE SUFFERING FROM DYSPEPSIA AND STOMACH TROUBLE. Instantly Relieved and Permanently Cured by Stuart’s Dyspepsia } Tablets. The balance, $400,000 was repaid In three days | | A New Discovery, but Not a Patent | Medicine. 12.—As 1 wrote | really much In excess of the amount shown | Dr. Redwell relhtes an interesting count of what he considers a remarkable case of acute stomach trouble and chronic dyspepsia by the use of the new discov- | ery, Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets. He says: “The patient was had suffered, to my knowledge, for years with dyspepsia rything he ate seemed to sour and create gases in the stomach He had pains like rheumatism In the back, shoulder blades and limbs, fullne and distress after eating, poor appet and loss of flesh; the heart became affect- ed, causing palpitation and sleeplessnoss at night. “1 gave him powerful nerve tonics and and blood remedies, but to no purpose. As an experiment I finally bought a 50- cent package of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab lets at a drug store and gave them to him Almost immediate relief was given, and { after he had used four boxes he was to all appearances fully cured There was no more acidity or sour watery risings, no bloating after meals. the appetite was vigorous and he has gained between 10 and 12 pounds | Of solld, heaithy flesh, .~ o® 7 welght | “Although Stuart's’ Dyspepsia Tablets | are advertised and sold in drug stores | yet I consider them a most valuable addi- tion to any physiclan’s line of remedies, as they are perfectly harmiess and can be given to children or invalids or in any condition of the ‘stomach with perfect | safety, being harmless and containing | nothing but fruit and vegetable essences, | pure pepsin and Golden Seal | " “Without any question they'are the | safest, most effective cure for indigestion, biliousness. constipation and all derange- ments of the Stomach, however slight or severe.” Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are made by | the F. A. Stuart Co. of Marshall, Mich and are sold by druggists everywhere at 0 _cents per package. Little book on stomach diseases mafled {ree. Address F. A. Stuart Co.. Marshall, c man who . DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. | Catalogues and Price Lists Malle1 on Applieation. BOOKS AND STATIONERY, THE SAN FRANCISCO NEWS COMPANY, 343 to 350 Geary . .reet, Above Pow. PRRIODICALS, KS AND !‘.I‘A‘I'hfl‘litfl' COAL. COKR AND PIG 1RO J.C. WILSON & CO., . %0 Battery Strane. * Telephone Matn 1384, FRESH AND SALT MEATS. JAS. BOYES & C0.,. £isving, Paichers, s JAS BOYES & CO... &1257 4., ke ™ Main 114 FURS. J N LOFSTAD, [ <onr . commestum: styles, lowast srices remodeling. IRON FOUNDERS. Morton & Hedley, !ESCI:EIN F&Ufg‘)fl. Prige. Fremoni Order. " Tel- Black 100 i PAPER DEALERS. WILLAMETTE “VF A35Faren co. 2 Montgomery st PRINTING. E C NUGHES. . shmT=™, 5, STATIONER AND PRINTER. Tt PARTRIDGE * Cutorme | WHITE ASH STEAM COAL, 35=5, 2 | DIAMOND COAL MINING CO., at its GREEN | RIVER COLLIERIES. is the Heat Coal in the market. Office and Yards—450 Main -”.I: COKE! COQKE! P. A MeDONALD, ‘Wholesale Deiler and Shipper of Cola OFFICS %13 FO! [

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