The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 2, 1900, Page 2

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MANILA’S DEATH RATE IS REMARKABLY HIGH PRI S A Infectious Diseases of All Kinds Preva- lent in the City. | [nsp s Are Doing Good Work, but They Find It! Almost Impossible to Impress the Necessity of Sanitary Measures on the Natives. | MAN I h ’ Lad arrived, e Orfent : ecautions being | trom infected i por ' ¢ e expected that | N i e coessy 4 . b ; o B¢ g b m = priests | eny o ! cican. This is the - ¥ th Filipinos and : v me s d ess driven | | oL . Wi ple escaped = o i & rtue on the part | z 7\ t . Manila w i system on mod- W prohibitive. As e r uarters ar vere dead before sy e been in y or in water front. | die, the | of in- meas- gue work Brown. It | who could ! ry and and and impartial- | ipino inspectors r countrymen onably clean. »pines are or- ized int o h socie has t with Palanka at its namen know th m rience that | their power combat their | umen and The best of good goods— lipinos an . . 1 a_soldier 1o boss t the purest food the world s hey do their work 3 | kmaliling. Major F produces—groceries of de- rs of the Health Depa g s s and the inspe pendabi every- ; « plague vietm is dis <% ) = or the ino hospi- wvhere In ("\.'(‘Y\'thflz to move him. The b, / disinfec . a bonfire & hing movals Oysters 12Y%c Spuboni Baltimore—Eastern— tin Away two or e casy Wrongs. — KANSAS CT April 1.—Harboring imaginary wrongs John W. McKimm, | street is barred | aged 29 vears, this afternoon shot and | killed Dr. B. Shaw, his brother-in- 1 s the latter sat reading the Sun- d chool lesson to his five-year-old daughter. Dr. Shaw died instantly. Mc- are buried in a deep in the Chinese ceme- Sugar Corn 12%c ; 3 with lime. The bodies lionare Club” as can burned when the rela- " Cremation is desirable as the name—you com for 8% we won't s d—this is safe 3 day’s sale nese superstitions are against burning their dead that empt to en.orce it would result in In of the and possibly The estimate of 200 deaths includes »able number of cases which have the knowledge of the Toos c s beer d to induce ! Egg 15¢ o o ey oo Frech from the farm— oz is kept for « 3 day’s sale—a new lot Al ¢ ‘erv mormin 2ad every morning the Chinamen to take e ns. Without the co-opera- utter 20¢ read_men” it would have ) pe ible. Chinamen even appear Sweet and fresh — square ¥ against their neighbors and Chi- Sweet and fresh their neight gt gl romn 45 nese inspectors swear against their own choice dairy—3 day’s sale countrymen, which is without precedent in the courts of M A or Brown Sryap 6c | says: “We can make Chinamen un- it means to clean up their understand that “Queen Lily”—you know the brand — for hat they must re- dry —7%4c regular | every da 3 day’s sale | FAVORABLE TO LONG FOR VICE PRESIDENCY Boston Republicans Enthusiastic and Promise Their Support to the Navy Secretary. ’ | Special Dispatch to The Cal BOSTON, mention of Baking Powder Sh ns—3 day’s sale Jam and Jelly s—nothing t—pure as pure be 15c jar tor Hanna's | ¥ Long for the Vice | aroused the greatest en- ng Republican politictans in | tiser to-night can- in the Metropolitan inent Republi- | ressed themselves unreservedly in fa the plan to place | c“g,"—?:‘o'nt | Long’s name in the secend place on | Republican ticket. Congressman MeCq ition ta the Philadelphia con- cans interview r 0= telegraphs to the Advertiser to- “1 think Secretary Long would be | e for Vice President, it night an ideal candida he would accept.” | | Walter Clifford of New Bedford, another rospective member of the delegaiion, tele- | raphs to the same paper: ‘Would sup- | | port Long cheerfully and gladl sston said: *H ugh the West like - H s name | hot- nplin _of Cambridge tele- “Great strength to the ticket.” S Y Rain at Woodland. Special Dispatch to The Call. WOODLAND, April 1.—There were some light showers to-day and the indications | seem to be good for more. Generous April showers are n ary in order to insure Sxa % Sooui oy graphed: Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. CREREC perfect digestion, complete absorption and s beaithful regular: A 3 2 Frost in the South. e cur sords mact AT Tiver, Do By mfi;d“_‘h;.m':h . | JACKSON, Miss., April 1.—Heavy frosts ties, Billousness, Con- phave done considerable damage to the fruit and vegetable crop in Central Southern Mississippi, in some !ns(a.uac%g amounting to 35 per cent regu! ck H stipation, Piles and all derangements of the Internal Viscers. 2%ec a box. At Druggists, or by mail RADWAY & CO., New York S RTINS O-+0--0-03-o-0@ R B3 o [5THE CounTESS OoF CADOGAN . . -0 Accordi laid ou to the programme Queen will upon her landing at K 3 ve at once to the Viceregal Lodge, Phoenix Park, the seht of her Lord d for Ireland, Earl Cadogan, and there for the time take up her itenar D e S S UBLIN, ‘Bedad, and it's mad you'r ¢ I'll be think- | ing, n o ot Irish- | man walking in College Green this afte Indeed, dirty old Dub- lin, as it I cen lov called, was to-day bri with excitement and | bright with thousands upon thousands of | tering fi Good Catholics as Dub- | are, carefully avoid working | 1day to-day was an excep- | tional occasion, when all scruples were waived in view of the urgency of ge | ting ready the most extensive prepara- 1 Dublin has ever attempted. ns t * MURDER DONE BY A KANSHS CITY MANIAC Dr. B. F. Shaw Slain by John W. McKimm, His Brother-in-Law. { S Assassin Attempts to Kill an En- | tire Family in Order to Avenge Imaginary sani- | Kimm, w ad been an inmate of tariu is believed to be insane, threatened to kill the other five mem- be the family and was restrained | only after a struggle. | Dr. Shaw was a widower. His mother- E = had cared for his | child since his wife d was his | he spent Sunday at the McKimm 1617 Forest enue. The family Shaw seated himself in r in the parlor and with his child be- im on the floor was readng the & day-school le: to her. McKimm, as it developed later, had gone directly to | his room from the table and written a | rambling statement, in which he stated 1 treated rightly, and | the entire i wiping out ng of Dr. Shaw and his | i« mother, two brothers and a sis- | L. Then descending to the parlor he | slipped up behind Shaw and placing the | revolver against tne latter's temple fired. | | Dr. Bhaw r moved and died before | n the family Id reach his side. As the other members of the f. came run ning to the scene McKimm raised his re- | ver to fire at the first that should en- | the room, but before he could fire he was overpowered by his two brothers and taken .to the station. He has been con- sidered of unsound mind for several years and was discharged from a local sanitar- | jum two vears ago as cured. Recently, | however, he had acted queerly. | BLOW OPEN A SAFE. Bold Robbers Operate Very Success- fully at St. Louis. | ST. LOUIS, Mo., April 1.—Three masked men looted Star Brewery of Belle- | ville, TIl., to-day, after first capturing and | confining the watchman and night fireman of the plant in ar As the open mpty refrigerator car. obbers were preparing to blow | fe in_ the office Hubert | v of the brewery, ac s brother Hans, entered | were promptly covered | with three revolvers and before either | of them realized the situation were rched to the same car in which the and watchman were confined. ing the safe the robbers ap- of powder and the outer | doors were completely | is not known t how much | but the amount is thought | besides some jewelry | the big s: secre the room. They m charge: It secured to not be over $100, open. they and valuabl Blinded Her Rival. LOS ANGELES, April 1—Miss Lulie Mucker dashed carbolic acid into the face of Pearl Harris while the latter was leav- ing church to-night with her escort. Her vietim was horribly burned and will prob- ably lose her eyesight. The act was prompted by jealousy. The trio are col- ored. The Mucker woman has not yet been apprehended. —_—————— To Cure a Cold in One Day the money It It falls to. signature is on each box. Al cure, e, | pended from Venetian m: VICEREGAL LODGE. PHOENIX PARK, DUBLIN. jot £0od Irishmen as Messrs. Redmond, Healy | and O'Connor as traitors his words fall flat. He denounces the Queen for all wrongs to Ireland, forgetting that the 8409040-90-00+6+4-9841-09-0-0 | for the stes | on the way It may seem over early, yet this after-| noon the whole route of many miles which the Queen will follow has been trans- | { formed into one archway of fl us- while wher- ever space admits stands have been built up. Trinity College stand holds 1000 and students will wear their full academicals | and their band will play ““God Save the | Queen.” There is no truth in the report sent out | by correspondents of vellow journals that | the Queen’s visit is unpopular. There | may be a few who will suix, but there i no one here to-day who has 'any substan- tial interest in Ireland who does not re- jolce heartil ppreciate highly the Queen’s visit. The only volce ralsed to- day against the visit i= that of the editor | B S SCRP S t for her visit to Treland, her Majesty ingstown on Wednesday morning next B R O R o O R rabid journal, United ame time he denounces such that but as at the her from any interfer- al affairs, either in sba internati gland or his country constitution 'he Sunday .hron on the contrary, 3 is a happy augury that on ical differences have been sunk in astic desire to offer the Queen “Cead Mille Failthe.” What impressed one ple were out in thousand: that her Maj enormous entht all hanc the unmis THE CLEVELHD NORIFT WITH A BADKEN SHAFT History of the Steamer Is One Long Chapter of Accidents. | Was Bound From Hawaii for This Port With a Cargo of Sugar and Her Location Is a Matter of Conjecture. T HONOLULU, March 21.—The Cleveland, Captain Klitgard, with a broken shaft several hundred miles from Maui. She was bound for San Francisco. with a full cargo of sugar from Kahului when she was ren- dered helpless by the breaking of the shaft. One of her boats, with three men, started for Maui to get assistance, and at last reports was forty miles away from Maul, south by east. Where the steamer is not easy to say, and it will be no v matter to find her. The news of the Cleveland's plight was brought here by the steamer Eric, which arrived Wednesday off the harbor, stop- steamer s adrift | ping here on her way to Japan on account of the fllness of the captain's wife. Tues- day the Eric spoke a small boat forty miles from Maui. There were three men in it. They informed Captain Roos bf the Eric that they were from the Cleveland and were going to Maui to get a mer, which had bro shaft and was practically helpless in the open sea. The men Clev in the hoat stated that the nd when they left her was 320 miles the Island the journey have required several days, so that the Cleveland must have moved a good deal to Maul, ‘a trip that must since she was last located. She has two yards and can put up a little sail, but not enough to control her movements. If she lost her propeller, as she would if her shaft broke near the end, she could be more easily controlled with sails than with the propeller dragging astern. The Cleveland left Kahului on the 12th, it is thought. She had 19,100 bags of sugar on board. She was about two days’ dis- tant from port when the small hoat left her, so thai it would seem that the acci- ent must have occured on thelith, and the little boat must have been six days when it was spoken by the Eric. If this is the case the Cleveland had time to drift a long way before any as- sistance could go to.her, and her plight is very serious. If she was directly in line on the San Francisco route she might be icked up by the Australia. Captain Saunders of the pilot-house thinks it likely, in view of the weather that has prevalled, that the Cleveland is northwest of Maui instead of northeast. The news of her difficulty was communi- cated to him by the captain of the Eric. The Cleveland has something of a repu- tation as a hoodoo. She has been in a number of scrapes and has been the sub- ject of much controversy as to her fitness Tor sea. During the Civil War the Cleveland ‘was a blockade runner and was captured on one of her trips to Charleston. built in 1861, and has seen ser kinds all over the world. Her name has been changed many times, Lately she was used as a transport for the Philip- pines, after a lot of controversy as to whether she was seaworthy. Alexander & Baldwin began to look for a steamer to send after the Cleveland as soon as they received news of her plight. The search for her may be a long job, and only the largest of the island steamers are fit for the work. The Kinau or Claud- ine are best fitted for the contract. The Claudine has been at Maui and may pos- sibly have gone on the search already. though she very likely left for Honoluiu ‘4 of Maui. | led 280 miles of | | searc +b e b e betb et et e eiee Irishman, , -0 able women } red, w badg 1 Queen, Lord Roberts, Lord Kitchene Colonel Baden-Poweli. If women are thu inclined men are sure follow. The Irish cardriver in Dublin is always the man from. whom one may be sure of drawing a reply clothed in candor,reflect- ing the ideas of the man in the street is afternoon 1 one: “Will there | Faith, and what would “Is the Queen's visit was _“Certainly; but if it it would be more popular.’ -0 made oftenc worth over $100.000, 8g th up. The Au a would pr 1o tiw . a tow would be a | and her mail contraet. | of - CONDITIONS DUBLIN DONS GAY GARB | IN'HONOR OF THE QUEEN Special Cable to The Call and the Ne w York Herald. Copyrighted, 1900, by the New York Herald Company. TIED ON A BARREN ROCK AND LEFT TO DIE —_— Punishment Meted Out by Chinese to a Suspected §py : —_— After Two Days of Terrible Suffering the Man Is Discovered and Rescued by Constable Agnew. . George ap! ended ppre L summary rmers that t with $ . SATISFACTORY - : + |Statement Issued by the| i Tarear poseivine cant 1e Sub-Committee of the oyt gL " o Senate. tioa stnce the dectaration of 7 i nan Plott Tells of the WOTK |t fave as mu Aa v complished During the Tour i - Mg of Inv igation On B e e % e cnd the Islands. BRINGS INSANE SOLDIERS. United States Transport Sherman 1s From Manila. New Cases of Plague. The Spring Medicine The wisest men on earth devote them. | selves to keeping and saving lives of others, Man’s sublimest study is man. The greatest wisdom of experienced men, The most valuable vegetable remedies, The best skill of modern times, The most approved methods of the present day—are all, ALL combined in Hood’s Sarsaparilla. These facts should prove sufficient,yet more can truly be said: It has stood the severest tests of any med- icine ever made by mortal man. It has been more largely sold, more widely used, and has accomplished more wonderful cures of scrofula, catarrh, etc., than any other. Therefore it is the plain truth—Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the best that money can buy. Try it this Spring—get it TODAY.

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