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WARRANTS QUT FOR ABSENT LEGISLATORS Democrats Wil Resist Arpest and the Clash Mau Be | Hastened. | 4040404040404 O+0+040+0+ :ocococoe o | ©+040e04ce0e0e0e0e0 - 1 of the House and C. H. day) morning on e arrest of absent De: was finally decided he arrest of the Demo: utenant Governor M o by @O+0+040404 4040 404040404 040404040 4040404 040404040+ 0+0+04 0+ 9 Repu : EVIDENCE REG.ARBiN GOEBEL'S ASSASSINATION REAR ADMIRAL M'NAIR DETACHED FROM DUTY C ainwright Succesds ntendent of the N Academy. BEECED T0 B SENT 0 PRISON BurglarWished to Break the Drug Habit. Specia] Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, Feb. 5.—Walter Kellogg. a d, stood before Judge Lorigan d to Folsom prison that he r e enslaving drug. It was the time set down for the of K on a charge of ry had pleaded guilty. He had robbed five different houses, and 1 ch case his loot consisted of lead h he tore out from under sinks. ed of to junk men s, Wiliie Fernandez and the proceeds se cocaine. eliogg has asked to on, and to-day he Judge. He stated age, and a native of is was his first arrest for he became addicted r e and now cocalne. e and two children. At his wife secured a divorce from through_desire to reform him Mrs. May Hawkins Will Help Every Woman Save @ Drunkard. A Trial Package of Her Marvelous Home Treatment FREE for the asking. Any true woman might weil be to have ved ane poor soul :ramt.hel::d(:‘:ddmk. but rs.Hawkinshas redeemed thousands by herpoble &ad practical work among those who Bave bees y Jail at Stockton to rphine and had broken to drinking the mulant returned to gg asked that he be given a m. In that time he would cured of the habit, and af- charged he would devote the to rescuing fellow suf- the oplum, morphine and bits. origan looked at the unfortun- ate man's plight in a kindlier way. He said he did not believe in sending a man to St prison to cure him of such a habit, as the stigma of being a convict would always be attached to him. He continued the sentencing of Kellogg for one week, and it is probabie he will only b:ugl\'en a six months’ term in the County | Willle Fernandez and Albert Donovan, perance. M: years | n s - aged 14 and 16. who disposed of Kellogg's e e e g i Shared by o who | 100t Were arraigned before Justice Rosen- Eavedrink-aflicted fathers, busbandsor scns. She | thal to-day on a charge of burglary. Thelr | Cetermined toovercome this feartul evl if possible. | SXaminarion was set for February 12 The st ¥s probably be sent to the Whittier | s search for a barmless, perfect and gecyet home Reform School. 1 — | MINERS DISCHARGED. | Hundreds Thrown Out of Bnploy-] ment in British Columbia. ROSSLAND, B. C., Feb. 9—The mining | community is In a condition of genuine consternation, owing to the discharge to- day.of 100 men by the Le Rol Mining Company, and the announcement from Nelson that the Hall mines and smelter had also shut down to-day on account of the enforcement of the eight-hour law for underground mining. Following_so quickly after the partial shutdown of the War Eagle and the Cen- | ter Star, these further cases of cessation #f mining o] tions has created dismay in both mining and business circles. Un- fortunately, too, there is said to be a| probabiiity of still further instances of | ‘wholesale discharges and shutting down | before the middle of the present month. ' e BT wictims of intem; re. Hawkins for cure was at last rewarded when an oid friend came SUISUN, Feb. 5.—Charles Pritchard of pleaded gullty In the Superior Court to-day to a charge of assauilt with in- commit murder. Pritchard was to the State Prison at San for a term of four years. ta e | geven THE BAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1900. Beautiful R e e i WASHINGTON, Feb. 8.—Major General Henry W. Lawton was buried to-day in the National Cemetery at Arlington. It was a nation’s tribute to a national hero and the sorrow of & whole people was ex- pressed when America added the chap- FINAL TRIBUTE TO THE NOBLE LAWTON ites Witnessed by the President, the Diplomatic Corps and Army and 1 | | | | | let of cypress to the brow that so long | had worn the laurel. The burial service beneath the leafless trees at Arlington was preceded by services in the Church ? the Covenant on Connecticut avenue, at which every department of the army and navy within reach of Washington, Lawton’s old comrades of the line and staft, the diplomatic corps in all its bril- liancy of uniform and decoration, and as many citizens of all degrees as were for- tunate enough to find standing room with- in the walls were present. But the crowd within was Insignificant e Geb e eD e Qeiesisisiossisisiotsieisisioioieieie® g winter day for a glimpse draped caisson with its m! nding the army stood with the last d been fired and the bugle sounded “taps.” It was the home-coming of a hero. For weeks, since the sad news ad been d world, th st master fighting It was se qualities that the Lawton fund had in a few weeks been swelled past ail the expectations of its inators, for America knew that = ving been a soldier first and on d left to those who loved him no herifage save his fame and a spotless name. For a day and night the body of the soldier lay In state in the Church of the Covenant. 8o it lay this morning when the doors were opened, troopers from his old command, with sabers drawn, keep- ing vigll at the head and foot. Beneath the soft lights of the altar arose a tropi- cal jungle of palms, and higher than the flag-draped coffin arose banks of flowers, tributes from every quarter of the land. At his head hung fn dim folds the dingy battle flag from San Mateo, still on its bamboo staff ana supported one of the men who was near him when he fell. From the ceiling hung the red-centered flag of the Eighth Corps, nich he had won perpet- ual fame land wars. About him, ill pipes of the organ trembled opening anthem, stood grouped superiors, and his brother officers, with whom and for whom his life work Fiad been done. Close to_the coffin sat President Me- Kinley and on his right the Secretary of State. With them were the Secretary of War, the Attorney General, the Secre- tary of the Navy, the Postmaste eral, the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of the Interior and me%ecre- tary of Agriculture. Close by were Mrs, Lawton, little Manley and the others of the family, and to the left General Miles, General Merritt, General Brooke, General Shafter and their staff officers, all in uni- form, and all Lawton’s comrades who at one time or another had camped and fought with him. In the body of the church was a scarcely less notable gath- ering—assistant secretaries and heads of bureaus; the military committees of the House and_ Senate; “diplomats, the Ori- entals In_their flowing robes of somber color and the Europeans resplendent in decorations, among them the Spanish Minister. the Loyal Legion, the Gi other patriotic socleties. Chaplain Plerce of Lawton’s old com- | mand read the Presbyterian burial ser- vice, that epistle to the Corinthians, whose words of comfort seem freshly runed for each occasion of bereavement. Fhen President Stryker of Hamilton Col- lege, New York, clad in his divinity robes, arose to deliver the oration. He had been selected personally by the Secretary of War, who knew his fitness for the task. The choice was -mnlf‘ justified. Seldom has any ceremony called forth a tribute more scholarly and eloquent, more sim- ple and direct and more appropriate and fitting to the occasion. Dr. Stryker said in part: Over the width of the earth a soldler’s house- hold has brought its warrior home. The dust | hat the nation gathers to its guarding is that of no common man. and mourn him. But while we recall the record %0 compact with manliness and which the white blossom of modesty crowns withal, while we recite the story of one Who personified the | best American traditions, first this day do we sorrow who that n' the sanctity of whose her God. peopl regard ber aisie of pal are accessible only to Hither have We “solemn shadows le's chosen | head, and all authorities else from n:eu- high several sessions—to pay our poor but tender al There were delegations from | rand Army and | We are met to celebrate | i o ot o i | | compared with the thousands who braved | 4 | | fen, front to his duty. let the valiant frame of Navy Officials. ® e ebeb e b ebeieie@® men and women, brothers and sisters, Nfting, as children, our wet faces toward the consola- he stars of the spangled flak. <h ? " eral Lawton’s | n to say: | ) is one who has ngs of which no poet ! a i heroes by the his supreme deeds. Gustavus Adol- would gladly kav admitted to the fi equality and peerag: Here was one whom Raleigh, phus, William of Orange, Wilnkelried, - bronfie, Garibaldi, would know at sight. He was of that time-enduring breed which has by and Quebec and | -, He was comrade en who passed the Pleasanton, who Orchard, who ran e at Manila, who held antaname. Let it be said and let it be said here. that nome of us is of those who walk backward Into the future and transiate the present upside down. Duty fs in the imperative and unconditional mood. When, in the name of mankind, and that peace might be real. we undertook in 189§ to cleanse the seas we affirmed a principle and for cne, hoid to have the ging through the made a precedent that I, written the most honorabl I that has bs of professional | malcontents wit m will not dle, no a priori abstraction, can unsay what this dead soldier's zeal did for America. Rather does | such a death enjoin upon our purpose and per- formance such ends as shall vindicate us from | cowardly indifferentism and evasion in the | face of whatever duty. and, however unex- pected or complex, enjoin us to regard and to ty it far away, please God— when those isla: , undlings no longer, shall have been rendered as a majestic deodand to civilization, to regulate freedom and to the God | of these, there, in fair Luzon, right where he this true liberator rise while, understanding brothers, gazing upon th ute, ail in one, ehall say: ‘‘He was American, but he is ours, too. He was slain by us ig- norantly in unbellef, but he has forgiven.” A dozen troopers, as the doctor closed, | lifted the flower-laden coffin and bore it | to the door, where 3000 soldiérs and cit- izens in greater number waited to honor the soldier in his last march to his final resting place on the Virginia hiliside be- yond the Potomac. With a clatter of iron hoofs the cavalry escort cantered forward to form the guard of honor. Or- ders flung from rank to rank down the broad avenue brought troop and platoon wheeling into line. | With crape-shrouded colors lowered | they filed past—scariet-caped artillery- | men, cavalry with their orange plumes and facings, and the ranks of blue-clad infantry—moving _with machinelike ca- dence. At the rear, with rumble of hcavy wheels and clash of trace chains, came the guns, field batteries and siege trains. ‘Ahead of the scores of carriages was the -draped, flower-laden caisson, the jdeal soldier's bier, and behind it was led the officer’s charger in a_ shroud of black, With the boots reversed In the stirrups, & | picturesque remnant of superstiticn in | this materialistic day of machine guns | in immutable bronze, | at_last, our brown | statue, ‘stature, stat- anrd smokeless powder. The consisted of a squadron of the Third Cavalry, Light Battery M of ihe Geventh Artillery, Slege Battery C of the Seventh, a b de of gismounted ar- tillery, two battalions of "the Fifteenth Infantry and one of the Second, three battalions from the Fourth and Fifth ar- tillery and a battalion of United States | marines. The whole was under command of Gen- eral Wesiey Merritt, Myjor John A. John ston, chief of staff, d the following mounted officers: Special Aids—B; er | E. Bates, Colonel John F.i ral (¥eaton, Colonel Theodore A.. Bingham, | Lieutenant Henry G. Sharp. Captain Jo- | seph E. Kuhn and Lieutenant T. Bentley Motley; aids—Lieutenant Colonel Willlam H. Carter, Lieutenant Colonel Culver C. Sniffen, Major Willlam A. Simpson, BarlES rhe. Major, Hazvey C. Carbaoeh cununochrlu G. Treat and Captain Te Sas a dreary walt in the cold, wind- siopes - of Arlington for the | | | | e e oot oo e ol o o o o { R AR R e S R S S *3ed e B e hundreds who had early in the day. B 1o sun boom of the Sylph’s gun on the Potom was answered by the crash of m guns from Fort Myer, and then solemn notes of the dirge were borr the wind as the procession moved thre the winding avenues of the great city the dead. The grave was In the open space south of the amphitheater and in sight the Mansion House. General Merritt his mounted staff deployed on thc s road, while solid ranks of dismour troopers held back the crowd on side. Nimble cavalrymen swarmed the caisson, casting loose the lashi N and bore the coffin to the open grave, wkile the President and the Cabinet, wi the gray-haired generals, stood silent and bareheaded as the chaplain pronounced the words of committal that consigned forever the honored dust to the dust whence it came. de the pilgri d uth ed Then, in answer to a low command, the | firing squad wheeled into line. The snap- ping volleys of the carbines scarcely echoed among the bare trees, but the wail | of the bugle as it sounded “taps” lingered | long and sadly In the gray o | twilight and echoed faintly from the winter the distant hills. As it dled away the coffin sank from view. General Lawton’s home-coming was accomplished. | —_— BLACK PLAGUE STAMPED QUT No New Cases Develop at Honolulu. | | BY HORACE WRIGHT. Epectal Correspondence of The Call. HONOLULU, Feb. 2—Seven days have | elapsed since we have had a case of the | plague or even a suspicious case, so that | even our very cautious and conservative | medical men enterain hoges that the dan- ger is at an end. This is due to the dras- | tic measures that have been taken in de- stroying by fire nearly half of the busi- ness portion of the city—that is, China- town—and removing no less than seven- eights of the total Asiatic population and all the Hawailans who were in touch with the infected districts into well ordered | camps of detention. So far not a single suspiclous case has been reported from any of the plantations | or from any of the other islands. The | ¢pidemic confined itself aimost entirely to e Asiatic quarters, and they are no| more. The Government feels much relieved at President McKinley's approval of the | Council of State appropriating money to combat the plague, and now that the au- thorization is complete the work of sani- tation in the destroyed districts will be carried to a completion, and from the | ruins and ashes of Chinatown will arise | a new city more gorthy of the flag under which Hawall now nestles. i It is the intention of the Board of| Health to be on the safe side, and to that end a strict quarantine will be kept up for some time to come. If no other cases ap- pear in a week there may be a relaxation of the rules as they affect travel and pub- e gatherings. ere will hardly be a tion to raise the quarantine under fourteen days or more, though this may be declared a clean port before that time. President C. B. Wood reports that the total number of deaths from bubonic plague during the prevalence of the dis- ease bere was forty-six. Three deaths not previously reported were the follow- ng: Man, Chinese, male, aged 35, died 2; from Wylie and Lilihi streets, Honols Eomily Bisling, Hawaifan, femsle, aged 43, died January 26; from Kaimuki, Honolulu. Assagura, Japanese, male, aged 31, died Jan- uary 28; from Kalth! detention camp. The Pactfc Mail | Steamship Company nces tha resume ng pas- l.nnw" from Honolulu to San l-‘rlnc&‘c:. Quon Fat ng the plague epidemic this company du;lLlned to tfi. passengers from this poAnotMr fire occurred in China- | of Fcena n. The s steamer Kinau has been chartered by Alexander & Baldwin to load sugar at Makaweli, Kaual, for San Fran- cisco. This vessel has been plying be- tween Honolulu and Hilo for a number of years. ble ship Nero arrived on January | B.T:‘:t: a lm‘::mlu in the Pacific. After | taking on coal she departed the next d for San Francisco. s Orchard Changes Hands. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. WOODLAND, Feb. 9.—The heirs of the late W. G. Hunt have executed a deed to Com; of ey DeSpects in the Valley. FLOATING MORGUE IS THE MISSOURI Sixteen Deaths Aboard the Hos- pital Ship on the Voyage From Manila to Honolulu. HONOLULU, Feb. 2—The conditions on ) certa board the hospital ship Missour! show | that the soldier who is struck by a Fili- pino bullet is luckier than the man whose system becomes inoculated with the dis- or life. be fit They will Uncle woul to mon has sent , for ease germs of the Philippine cumate. Nearly all of the 272 soldiers on board the Vessel are sick and the mo: them are suffering with dysentery. The sixteen who died between here and Manik not the only ones of the I the scene of war who wi again. Three or four ot certain to succumb before San Francisco is reached. “The wounded at Manila generally do very well said Captain V Kneedler, executive officer of “and most of them recover 1t home on the trar n_most of Dysentery and c at are est ravages. Con Manila. 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