The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 30, 1900, Page 3

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1 e S e MEMORIAL EXERCISES. ¢ 4 | g‘ ) A TA DA IADAIA AR TA AT ATA AR A @ Dimite: heavy art A arade starts from New Montgomery and Market 10 o’clock sharp. e of march will be from starting point to Kearny, fornia; countermarch to Market, to Golden Gate ave- d Jones street, and form again at the Lombard-street nce to the Presidio. ' cercises at the Presidio to follow the decoration of yes. I L eague of the Cross Cadets will attend a requiem mass at St. Mary’s Cathedral at 10:30 o’clock, Young Men's Institute will attend requiem mass-at St. ’ at 10 o’clock. Veteran Firemen will decorate graves of departed heroes in Laurel Hill Cemetery at noon. Special exercises. n " 4 States army band; four batteries of ry, U. 8. A; one Nght battery, Corps, N. @. C.; band; First Regi- ofantry, N. G. G} Neval Militta, N. military band; Garrison No. 101, y and Navy Union; Sons of Amer Mexican Veterans; lumbia Club; Army and Navy Parlor, N. PBand: Veteran Guard of Caltfornte, yo. L G. A. R.: George 5 _: Garfield Post el Cass Post No. 48, . 48, G. A. R.; Liberty R.; carriages. programme will be ren- | 1 Cemetery upon the | n: resting places A THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1900. ’ G . es: music by ks by President of the past department com- by A - poem by Hon. Henry | League of The Lea Y) A A eSSl AT AT T AT AT AT AT AT R TR TR T AT RS @ SPORTING EVENTS. * * 0 X 3 BASEBALL—Oakland and San Francisco teams at X% Recreation Park. * 3 COURSING—Union Park and Ingleside Coursing ’ Park. ) % RACING—Golden Gate Park Driving Association, * Oakland. * % TENNIS—California Club Courts, Bush and Pierce streets. 0 TRAP SHOOTING—The Edward Donohoe trophy ‘; Q match, Ingleside. $ GOLF—Presidio, San Rafael and Sausalito. Q0 il i YACHT—Corinthian Club regatta and California Club 3 e regatta. * 3 O THTHATI AT AT AT AT A THA TS A TA T AT AT AT H OO @ eon. In the afternoon two companies will | will be held at the Presid roceed to Calvary Cemetery, the two | Sausalite. akland companies wiil visit St. Mary’'s | gattas on the b Cemetery in that city, an@ the remainder of the regiment wiil' proceed to Holy Cross. At each of the cemeteries the graves of those whose names have been stricken from, the League’s roil call by | death will be decorated, and at Holy | Cross a special programme of exercises San Rafael be two Picnics to Be Hel Inmumerable 1 | ganizations will day and hold outings in nei ties. The local freight office emplo; Sou ™ Company wil d. societt private or- . a 's Institute will also ob- Members of the local tend the solemn requiem to be celebrated at at 10 o'clock. Rev. seventh annua Frieden, oy pr nt The affair is stri college,” will be' celebrant. The parish of | ments have been ie for an el picnic at El Campo | orate musical programme to be ren-| Wil dered by an augmer hoir under the | of Dr. M. O'Connell, the or. i sermon appropriate fo the oc. | n will be preached by ome of the 2 | Jesuit Fathers. Veterans Will Decorate Graves. Invitations have been issued by the Vet- eran s Association to firemen, ex- firemen and friends to be present at the exercises to be held at the Iiremen's Plat in Laurel Hill Cemetery noon hour the grave officers and comrad | with flowers. Rob PRO e s sl be “hede GRAMME PREPARED on the heroes of the past; Captain Sam- 61 MeDowell Sl tall whe Memtal FOR MEMORIAL DAY should be perpetuated fef Sullivan of - - il s the local d vitation t he will exc a member of h bt Fire Compa 1 be pre: T an in- | - 1 2 OAKLAND, May he s of Exempts will take advantage of the going out of town, a the picnics to be held at different ks or watching the various spo | be_presented in the city pre y There will 11 game Rec- hth and Harrison | Ak and San here w e coursing | Ingleside Park. The { Golden Gate Park Driving Association | will hold its annual trotting m Oakland track. Exciting games nis will be played at the California courts, Bush and Steiner st et Hall by ot an easy one for the Chi- B8 k. and coast champions. The trap-shooters | literary ™ 1 el r- | avenuc > vl | will contest for the Edward Donohoe |the evening at the First | 1 be had - | trophy at Ingleside. Golf tournaments | Church ST isters at Pek: : inclined dmit th | \ ‘ i - % I isters at Peking are inc! t | S T eav lative MASSACRE OF ALl s, ot Eiug aro tnclioed 19 admit gt [LAID AWAY IN HIS horse. The deceased leaves o relatives 4 AL | EUROPEANS FEARED ese Rebels Massing Around| Peking After Defeating the Imperial Forces. 1 i 11 ! Foreign Envoys Take Measures to Protect Life, | but Many Missionaries Are in Extreme Peril. ¥ Express |and the gunboat from Shang-| A dred rise have left Taku. n marines from ti es to grow in in- i, he Russion Min- | phed, asking | unboats be sent | y 20 —The rellef party h ng-Hsin-Tien, bri including sev PROMPT ACTION BY STATE DEPARTMENT WASHINGTON, May 20.—Such advices S icate that the med a very | one calculated to tax s of the Chinese Gov- been the counte: Dowager and of Prince Minister, with a s Mir up the s the T , which is £t point to P that the ship 1 reach. The operations of the Box- increasing in magnitude. Their no lon local and > be governed in their move- 1 settled design. Methodist miss , at the town of Pa- d in on Peking. e army s suspect- disloyalty, this belief being ned by wholesale desertions of doing ip Newark th families, h g the rebels at Chang-Hsin- of the missionaries is one 1 ess aid s speedily | is feared that they will fate as their unfortunate | oxers’ are rut o ndent of the Times “The foreign Chi “the French engi- | soldiers to the Boxers. are reported | Minisier Conger has appealed to the | state Department for th tec Land Troops. | marine guard for hi | z from Shanghal says | Hartme au- 1 i a land | thoriza: nearest United is for assist- yvet whether he 1t is not known | availed himself of the permission. | | The ship he would naturally look to ! € » | would be the Newa d it is umed & | that he has alre: communicated with | “\l" al Kempff on board that flagship. | | The embarrassing feature of the situa- r om the Dow- | tjon is the cutting of the communication r gs, F < Kiang Y1 and|py rail between Taku and Teintsin and " T n he Manchuria ital, for the Boxers have burned e h the Boxers oad bridges and there are prob- ? desperadoes. They ¢ only two courses open to the ma- 1§ everything | rines who wish to reach Peking—a long overiand march through a hostile country, A detachment of | away from supports, or a tedious voy- cleared the rail- | age up the swift and shallow Peiho in ing, and the | shore boats in tow of the steam iaunches. at noon. | According to report the Chinese Gov- from the | ernment has done everything in its power the con-|to meet the demands of the diplomatie body at Peking for the dispersion of the Boxers, but it appears that the upris- ing is far more serious than was at first apprehended, and even the resident min. cl Pek um received d in Hne. arrived from the | hip d'Entres Cuunux] | | American | twe | Bouth Dakota, iment. measures taken by the tment look to the simplé pro- the American legation at Pe- an consulates in the im- nd the lives of such be obliged to take ref- the event of general riot- , in u it has srference and it Is val forc contest betw it actice al in t p squadre force a in ETHODIST CONFERENCE ports. AT AN END Most Important Council in Recent History of the Church. CHICAGO, May 20.—The twenty-third delegnted quadrennial conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church came to an end to-day after a session of four weeks. The conference is considered to have been of the most noteworthy since the days when Methodism was divided over the slavery question and has resulted in many radical changes In the laws and polity of the church, which will enter upon the tieth century a different body from at it was before the conhference met. Principal among the important actions #f the conference were the abolition of the time limit on pastorates; the ratifica- tion of the equal representation amend- ment as proposed by the Rock River con- ference, together with the seating of the provisional lay delegates: the adoption of a new constitution, subject to the ap- roval of the various annual conferences, ncluding substitution of the words ‘“lay members” for the term “laymen,” thus mitting the seating of women in the eral conferenc and the election of additioral missionary bishops. e report of the committee on educa- which was under discussion at last night's sesslon of the conference, tion, i was taken up for final action to-day. An amendment offered by Dr. Jordan of | requiring the " university senate of the church to recognize certifi- cates from students from other than Methodist colleges presenting themselves for examination for the mimistry, caused considerable discussion. The report as amended was finally adopted. The con- ference also approved the authorization of unordained ministers to perform the marriage ceremony. Debate on proposed changes in the ratio of representation to general conferences consumed much time. Arguments were made in favor of the majority report rec- ommending a ratio of one delegate to ev. ery sixty preachers instead of one dele- gate to every forty-five preachers, as now prevails. It was contended that the pres- ent body was unwieldy. This statement was vigorously comoated by several speakers and the conference by an over- whelming vote decided to make no change. Trustees of the American University at Washington were named and approved. At 12 o'clock all business was lald on the table and the usual complimentary resolutions were adopted. The venerable Bishop Bowman, now superannuated, ite Department is closely adher- | | ters of General Callles, was surrounded MANILA, May 2.—Major Henry T. Allen of the Forty-third Infantry while | scouting from Catbalogan, island of Sa-| mar, on May 9 drove a party of insurgents | from the valleys. Four Americans were | killed, including Lieutenant John H. Ev- ans, who was slain while gallantly leading | a charge against the intrenchments. Eleven of the enemy were kilied and four | were wounded. The town of Caterman, island of Samar, was attacked at midnight April 30 by a thousand rebels, who intrenched them- celves near the town over night. Captain John Colle of the Forty-third Regiment fought the Filipinos for over six hours and afterward burled 150 of the enemy. One American was killed and one was | vounded. Mo s i, 1 the. prvias of Laguna, island of Luzon, the headquar- on May 2 by three detachments of the | Fort; »:e(‘ond Regiment, Thirty-seventh Regiment and Eleventh Cavalry. Only a | 'ew of the enemy were encountered, llles having departed the day before, Pawin{ which was manifestly a rebel stronghold, was burned to the ground. Captain Norton's scouts and two com- | panies of the Elghteenth Regiment while fcouting on May 12 in Western Panay sur- prised a number of the enemy near Val- derama and killed thirty-five of them. There were no casualties among the Americans, but some of them suffered from sunstroke. v The officlal reports announce scoutin; | and small engagements in Panay an | Cebu islands _and Tayabas, Zambales, uet and Pangasin provinces, result. i Fourteen of the enemy being killed Ben; ing GALLANT FIGHTING ON 'SAMAR ISLAND Lieutenant John H. Evans and Three Men Killed While Charg- ing the Filipinos. ‘ Troops of the Forty-Third Bury a Hundred| [ and Fifty Insurgents on One Battlefield. | besides his brother in LAST LONG SLEEP| | | | — For Improvement of Biggs. the busi- BIGGS, May X —Last even ness men of this town m the Biggs Simple Services at the Bier of the Late Charles B. Stone at San Mateo. The funeral of the late Charles B. Stone, manager of the breweries syndicate, took Board of Trad T m A. Walker, preside editor of the Biggs Beard of the S elopment nce and th, | place on Monday from the family resi- | dence at San Mateo. a simple a | fair, although those - ne 1 improvement | who wished to respects to | 21 T W A aken up and push | the dead large.. Early in the morning | " %1008 the line. the Call Board of the San Francisco Pro- =rs | duce Exchange adjourned in respect to| House to Take Up Trust Question. ‘hls memory, and many of the members WASHINGTON, May 29.—The Committee of the House to-d th went to the saddened home down the country and remained until the interment. Bishop Moreland of the Episcopal & Programme by which the c church came down from Reno especially | amendment increas the power of Con~ to officiate. Services were heid at the | ETess to deal with t will be debated Stone home at 3:30 o'clock and the re- morrow and next day, with a flnal vote mains were placed In a funeral car and |af 5 P. m. on Thursd The discussion taken to Cypress Lawn Cemetery for in- | Of the anti-trust bill, by which the pres- terment. Many beautiful floral pleces | ent powers of Congress are directed | were gent by friends. The pall bearers against trusts, will follow on Friday, with | were Thomas R. Bishop, A. S. Baldwin, | & VOte at 4 p. m. on that day. J. H. McDonald, Frank Daiton, Thomas s and ma(r’x, 1woundml, The\An‘;erl{t‘nl;s also | Alton and Charles Green. Train Robber Identified. captured sixty r a Nordenfeldt gun | —_— PHOENIX, Arlz, May 2 - Mo . May 29.—“Bob 8 S t S| 3 ?xndn;zlggye&\:-‘z‘oe;{l e rdte "D’e‘li Killed by a Kick. Brown, arrested in Texas and taken to rebel major who surrendered at Lis- | Special Dispatch to The Call. Tombstone vesterday under suspicion of cum last week has been persuading others | MONTEREY, May 2).—News has been | being implicated in the Fairbanks traim to follow his example. To-day he effected | received here of the death, in Oregon. of | robbery, has been identif by D. the surrender of forty-six men with forty- | Frank Dodge, a former resident of Mon- | Milton, the wounded mes: as his five rifles at Tarlac, and hopes to influence | tercy and brother of Holly E. Dodge of | assailant, and as the d o, who more of his countrymen to do the same. | this city. Death was caused by injuries | traveled under va alia. and wha - MINDANAC OPERATIONS AS REPORTED BY BATES VVAEE;L\'GTON. May 29.—The War De- partment has made public tie report of Major General J. C. Bates, U. 8. V., upon an expedition led by him into Northern Mindanao, P. L, during the latter part of March last. The report in brief says: Starting out from Manila, on March 20, Gen- eral Bates and his staff, on the U, S. S, Ma- nila, met a transport fleet near the entrance to the Guif of Albay, with the Fortieth Vol- | unteer Infantry aboard, and the expedition then proceeded to and occupled successively the towns of Surigao, Cagayan, lIligan, Misamis and Dapitanon, on the north; Baganga, on the east, and Zamhoanga, Cottabato, Pollok, Har- ang, Davao and Mati, on the south coast of | Mindanao, without the firlng of a single shot. No resistance of any kind was encountered. Some of the towns were garrisoned and In others the local police force was deemed cap- able of preserving order. During the expedition 241 rifies of various | makes and ninety-seven bronze and iron can. non were captured, fifty-one of the latter be- ing left in charge of the commanding officers at_the occupled points. The remainder were taken to the arsenal at Manila. to the head received by being kicked by a | is wanted for several robberfes in Texas. The index of human beauty is the face. A clear complexion is greatly desiresd by every woman and admired by every man. Good looks disappear when blemished by disease. the faco is Eruptions, pimples and similar blemishes are the direct result of impure blood. Constitutional treatment is necessary—cosmet! will only temporarily benefit the trouble. By the use of ELECTRC ZONE all blemishes disappear. ELECTROZONE acts on the blood and removes all impuritles, giving the blood purity and nourishing power. No woman need be embarrassed by faclal blemishes i cs delegates. The minutes of to-day's meet- ing were read, the roll was called, Bishop Warren offered prayer and shortly before 1 o'clock the general conference passed into history. SUES FOR A DIVISION. Carlos Arguello Seeks to Recover Property From His Erother. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, May 20.—Another suit in the pending contest between Carlos and James Arguello over the estate of thelir father, Luls Antonio Arguello, was filed to-day. The actlon I8 brought by Carlos Arguallo to compel his brother James to make a division of a plece of property consisting of a two-story brick block on South First street near San Fernando. The father gave James Arguello an abso- lute deed to the property, reserving a life interest for himself, but Carlos contends this was merely a deed of trust, and the property was to be divided ually be- tween the two on the father's death. Sl At Lake Lebarge. VICTORIA, B. C., May 2).—News has been recelved here that the steamer Flora, with the first crowd of Klondlkers of the season, reached Lake Lebarge on May 24 on her way from Dawson. Ice blocked ! her there, but it is expected that the river made a brief address of parting to thalls clear by now. she will take proper treatmert. ELECTROZONE is generally known as the best remedy. ELECTROZONE Makes Women Beaufifué It acts on the blood ard effects a cure quickly and permanently. ELECTROZONE is to-day taken by women in all portions of the civilized world. ELECTROZONE enriches the corpuscles of the blood, destroys disease germs, prevents sickness, tones up the system, wards off lassitvde and fatigue incident to changs of seasons. Thoughtful women prefer ELECTROZONE to all other blood puri~ flers. At druggists $1 a bottle. Bend for pamphlet to ELECTROZONE MFG, CO., San Fran- FALL OF RAIN IN PORTIONS OF INDIA Cholera Causing Much Mortality and Impeding the Work of ° Relief. LONDON, May 20.—The Viceroy of In- dla, Lord Curzon of Keddleston, tele- graphs that good rain has fallen in My- sore and that scattered showers have fallen elsewhere. The_cholera in many parts of Bombay and Rajputana has not abated and fs causing much _mortality and impedes the rellef work. There are now 5,730,000 per- sons in receipt of relief. ———— DUE TO ACCIDENT. Coroner’s Jury Decides Myron H. Jones Did Not Commit Suicide. Speclal Dispatch to The Call. SAN RAFAEL, ‘May 29.—At the Coro- ner’s lnfixut held to-day over the body of Myron H. Jones the jury returned a ver- dict of death by accidental drowning. Jones is_the man who fell from the steamer Ukiah at midnight last Saturday at Tiburon. It was thought at the time that he had committed suicide, but the testimony showed that his death was ace cidental. i

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