The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 12, 1900, Page 2

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1900 ARRAIGNS THE PLUTOCRACY PREPARATORY WORK FOR STOCKTON FAIR BEGINS THE COUNTRY Interest in the Balloting Continues and the Contest tius Donnelly Sends His tter of Acceptance to | the Populists. e P edom No Longer | ¢ sverything Is j ard a Despot- - § ism of Wealth. Py - S AGC i T llowing is & _ 1z 1 1 ACCePLILE & s party for a navy o authorize p Now Lies Between the Misses Sievers and Peters. T e e R e o e i o o . ARt S SRCR SRR SOR SRS S 1 R B O RO AR SECEE 3 : g 5% Preparing for the Street Fair at Stockton. 34 il eh et et et et ehetebed e edetei et e ed : Special Dispatch to The Call. of the enterprise. Tons of advertising . matter are being sent broadcast all over @ i ? TOCKTON June I1lL—Preliminary the State, while all the papers, in recog- 4 ® r p ns for the Free Street Fair, Dition of the public nature of the under- .\ 3 a nict ree orreet Falr, taking, are making liberal mention of the Az - which begins on the 26th inst., have LioBiime " “Tre all-important finance ¢ ® . given way to actual preparatory commiitee, at the head of which is Mar- . . t =q work. immense grand nd tin P. Stein, has done its work well. e 3 Esling 1o secur ng on Hunter Plaza will be finished President Fred M. West of the Chamber ¢ morrow evening. It will seat 300 0f Commerce and Orrin . Henderson of [ . In front of it the fantastic fea- the Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ Asso- 5 » h as the crowning of the queen, clation have been tireless in their efforts 4 ¢ [ works and gambols of the horri- to Insure the undertaking. Such promi- = Wil be given. The building of the nent capitalists as W. W. Westbay and @ n ths was also begun during the d D. A. Guernsey have become enthused to | % « sa from now on a small army of carpen- the extent of devoting most of their time [ b “ will be at work along the blocks to the work. “ t the exhibits are to be located. In _The leading candidate for queen is now ¢ Ps v u o vicinity of the main thoroughfares Miss. Mamic Severs, a_ bopular young 1 ¢ £ho' el e sect g lo- la ss Peters is a_close & y e, sideshow men are secuslnk lo- 0% 0 ta: tinugh' fhe Gontest Tiea $ SO o is no question as to the success between these two. ® i S R S 2 r y the » Ty riek : Ketcham in bushels of Loss about = ric_was resumed eel Company Three reported n re William Fitz- epded by " w wport. R. L, for the flax Rudolf re- ecast coast of Africa - - jured in surteen hom Ty-fifth street wagon was demol- There was talk in 2 . gold exports on the ot Ao : & port on Thursday 14 have | mext. The amount of these shipments was va 3 at from $1,000,000 to $2,500,000 s - every es of probable shippers were not neral harles H here, has Sternberg v for the taking \ earnest lutocrat single West Prus: ia, A bat- we m is as much infantry has been Konitz + ay s slavery was miles northwest of th wher. bate owing to the mystericus murder ¢ bo n There have been for meveral wee antl a. i e on: | Semitic disturbances, which culminated yes. the man Is in. | terday in sericus excesses and destruction of . a £ynagogue o LONDC The Russell 1% of the world nst the troglodyte Bailey of Philadelph ected one of ieg-bones of his the vice presidents. paper on *““The arrow for his can United States and South America,” by the Rev. J. B. Dunn THAMPTON, June 11.—The cruiser which was_placed n-Tyne, May he Maditerranean, Tnited - A ) ailed from - in the Me sod on & new jdea— Owing to diffi- t ’ ple. Europe n the Master s Association and local as- . : . Unitec 1000 m Garment girls Wo Ameri idle. The men claim it is a lockout, ordered to force the settle @ strike at Samuel Binders' workers were -union work- leged, uni laced by gradually di rut ST, PAUL, M June 11.—The Police Com- 3 mission provided for under the recently adopted hut w city charter to-day organized and elected _ Petter i1 , J. O'Connor Chief of ‘Police, but when the -y new Chie tried to take possession Chief e Getchell refused to yield the place, insisting . at he could only be removed for cause. The case will be settled in the courts, and for the present two Chiefs of Police are stationed at beadquarters. TWO MINERS XILLED. JEROME, Ariz., June 11.—This morning bout 1 o'clock there was a serious cav on the 50 level of the United Verde mine, in which John Gray of Salt Lake City, Utah, and Jed Torreno lost omething | their lives and Robert Northers of Lon- | don was a ightly injured. Janso Meikle, wborer, had his arm and thigh broken \d recefved internal injuries which are likely to prove fatal. The two men did not meet Iastant death, but were slowly crushed by the settling mass of ore. Their cries piteous. but when the rescue force reached them life was extinet. The accldent oc- curred in what was supposed to be the safest place in the mine. FWS IN CONDENSED FORM TELEGRAPHIC N THOUSAND JSLAND PARK, N. Y., June 11, | The conference of the Y, M. C. A. seeretaries has adsourned to meet in 1901 in Boston. NTON, Ohin, June 1..—The section men | — Cincinoat! and Hisien division of the | Famous Spy Dead. Chesar 4‘:?\;“ 4 Ohlo RBailroad struck for | w1y pOURNE, Wik, June 1L—Belle | Boyd, the famous spy of Confederate fame, wied suddenly of heart disease here to-night, where she had come to lecture. Soe was 57 years of age. June 1L—Collis P. Huntington, cific Mail Steamship Com. reports to the effect that issue bopds 1o meet Certain W YORK dent X I S o expedition ta’ Abys- | or help were | D s ol T PP SO PSS NP IS S | ¢ A | at large. He is discredited and a @ issue. | Asked as to whether in the event of | more acute complications in China troops could be sp, from the Philippines for B th 1 Otis replied: - ibly, possibly. | _General Otis left to-night for We: Po where he will report in pe son to Secretary Root. He is entirely in the dark to his future assignment remain at West Point | to duty. He | with t cretary until after the gradu- | ating exercises are over and will return to | Washington with the Secretary, arriving e a— s i h / morning. when he will President and make a ail of the operations of | report in det the rmy under his command. and submit Warmly Congratulated Upon |25y ndet i (o™ simnmenditions hall seem to him proper. He will a leave h 1 Thursday night for his oid home at Rochester, where extensive preparations are being made to celebrate his homecoming on , HORRORS OF THE INDIAN FAMINE INDESCRIBABLE | | So Devastating Has Been the Cholera the Work Accomplished in the Orient. | Next Thursday He Will Again Cal at the White House and Pre- | sent His Report in Detail. o o Outbreak That Relief Camps WASHI TON, J! 1 r Gen Are Powerless. VAS STON, June 1L—Major Gen- e e e = '"| LONDON, June 12—The famine in India SERICEE £ Oeyan B prea ,"fl ',’: “:"* grows worse. The Standard's Simla cor- Captain Slayden and Lieutenant Stan <“\ TesmORdent. il miat). 1kthen saye: reached Washington this morning. He | " o8 0" ach to assume from the was met at th ion by it Gen- relief fi almost stationary that the and eral Corbin Feneral Schwann. and | orner will soon be turned. So devastating the party were driven directly to the Ar-|p.q heen the cholera outbreak, So numer- lington Hotel. After b kfasting Gen-| ;¢ the mortality and so blind the terror | eral Otis repaired to the War Depart- |y pired by this black death that the fam- ent, where he formally reported 10| i,e rolief camps in Bombay presidency, Mr. Meiklejohn, as acting Secretary. | which contained thousands of worker Thence General Corbin escorted him and | jon d are left empty in the his alds to the White Hou: P course of a counle of day dent was in his priv “Starving though they be, they prefer consultation with Senator to fly to their own home and to die in tor Cullom and Justice Harlan when the | qufet, rather than to remain in the famine party arrived. General Otis and General | pelief camns, where the cholera is strik- Corbin were immediately ushered into the | ing down a hundred workers daily. Presidential library, where Mr. McKin-| “Porrible stories ecome from Dohad. dey . met neral .tis with the utmost | There the famine is at its worst and now cordiality, congratulating him upon h | the cholera has arrived to compiete the apparent good health, and thanking him y: | work. An eyewitness says: through these quiet several times for ..s signal services to| ‘' 'As we walked pridediell, strects we saw deserted homes and dead Ginacal Gits mnds eport to. the | Podles. One of the brave: ‘ts wiinessed AASTARE HE -mado rng. tepor '€ | was a little girl about seven attempting to President in detail, After a few min- | care for two little brothers after the utes the President invited General Otis | mother had given up all hope and lain | into his office and presented him to Sen- | down near them- to ale. She was feeding rs All n and Cuillom and Justice | & fire which burned beneath a broken pot, | | in which simmered the almost rotten feet | and bones of some dead animal. The scene | eannot be painted too blac arlan, and for over half an hour Gen- eral Otis remained talking over the situ- ation in the Phiuppines. | “'The President and his visitors were in- | We have ever read of any famine would tensely terested in what the general | Picture the state of affairs at Dohad.’ | had to say and with his opinion of the | The Standard’s correspondent says the mortality estimates are inaccurate, as unnumbered dead bodies are polluting the streams and spreading contagion. ASKS THAT MACHIAS BE KEPT AT COLON In View of Un;u:t;ed Condition of Affairs Consul General Asks for Protection to Citizens. Special Cable to The Call and New York Herald. Copyright, 1500, by the Herald Publishing Company. PANAMA, June 1L.—In view of the un- settled condition of affairs in the interior departments Consul General Gudger has asked that the Unpited States gunboat Machias be kept at Colon for the present to protect American interests. An ecngagement between Government troops and revolutionists took place on existing situation in the archipelago. Af- ter General Otis left the White House he was naturally reticent concerning the subject of his interview with the Presi- dent, but he aid not hesitate to reiterate | | his ‘statement, made repeatedly since | landing at San Francisco, that the Fili- pino rebellion as an organization was dead. When his attention was called to | the views of Judge Taft, president of the | Philippine Commission,” in the Manila | dispatches printed this'morning, he ex- | | pressed the opinion that they were satis- | factory. The United States would be | compelled to maintain in the Philippines | for a considerable period as large an army ‘KH.\ was there at present. | “The army,” said he, “will be needed | a8 a measure of repression until the rob- | bers and guerrillas are stamped out. The | maintenance of this large force is neces- | sary owing to the vast extent of terri- | tory which we must cover. We have es- | | tablished ourselves in Negros, Cebu, Sa- | mar and many of the other islands, in | mddition to Luzon, and are to-day actually exercising effective authority | over more territory than Spain ever did.” General Otis said practically all the thirty miles from here. General Lozida | leaders of the insurgents were cither | commanded the Government forces and dead, captured or pacified. The recent | General Herrera led the rebels. The bat- capture of General Pilar del Rio. he | tle lasted several hours, but resulted in no | thought, had probably been effected with | the consent of that general. So far as | Aguinaldo himself was eoncerned, Gen- ‘Pra! Otis was not inclined to credit the | report of his death. 1In_his opinion it mattered little, however, whether Aguin- aldo was dead or alive, as his influence had been com'iletely destroyed. “‘Aguinaldo,”” he sald, ‘‘is probably in definite advantage to either side. A it Sullivan Defeated SAN DIEGO, June 11.—Billy Decourcey of this city and Joe Sullivan of Montane, met to-night at the San Diego Athletic Club for what was scheduled to be a twenty-round bout. The affair was rather g o more influence than any other individual ou;.m Hore Aihe bloe fnd iy oo No account | Saturday near Chame, a village about | 0 DT 5 HTTENPTED T ST, LU | Police and Deputies Succeed in Maintaining Tempo- rary Order. i { —_— i Governor Stephens Scores Mayor Zei- | genheim, Who, He Says, Is Neglecting His Duty for Political Purposes. —_— The Sabbath's bloodshed were comparative quiet | ST. LOUIS, June scenes of disorder followed to-day by throughout the city. Last night's riot | was the all-absorbing topic, especially among the police force and the officers | and men of the Sheriff's posse comitatus They discussed it in all its bearings, the | opinion being expressed that the posse | men had done their full duty and no more. | The strikers and their sympathizers, | naturaily, viewed the occurrence in a | light diametrically opposite to that of the Sheriff's posse, the offictals of the fnrmpr‘ making the claim that the men were shot | down in cold blood. | | | 11. and Cars were operated until midnight to- night on the following lines: avenue, Marke street, Olive street, Washington avenue, Compton Heights | and Park avenue. Up to a late hour n reports of dlsorders had been received b; the board of police. The survelllance of | the Police Department was not relaxed in the least as compared with the preced- | _ Profe m. e ey | Ing days of the strike. It an)!!’:lng. their | H:“"fl ‘*Tf ‘“ Buren' street, Chicago, efforts were redoubled in maintaining | a1l 17 East Fan FUred S | peace and order, as in some quarters u‘ H Bave noal vour medioe st eannot was feared the lawless element of the|say too much for it. I will recommend community might possibly take measures | it to anybody. I keep it in my school Laclede Professor Wm. C. Webster, prineipal of | to even up vesterday's score, when three | in case of need.” striking employes were killed and nine | A New Man. persons injured by the posse. In the same | =, oo # degree the two regiments of the posse | May, Oak Ridge Station, Pa., were on thelr metile. | writes In answer to a letter directed by Chief | ) h of Police Campbell this evening to Mayor Mr. L. P. Bailey, whose hsalt Zelgenhein, the following proclamation | was impaired and who always felt | was issued by the latier: | O . Whereas, During the pendercy of the present | tired and haggard, by my persuasion, | raflway strike and the crisis throurh which | The 'cliv 18 now. passing, it Is of the utmost | 08gan to use Feruna about a month | o ey Wind be. dome which | ag0, and now he looks like a difforent r create excitement In may tend to produce public. places, such e assembiing ot | man. - He says he feels 100 per cent | erowds or groups of persons upon the streets, | ” < the discussion of the situation in boisterous | betfer. K. C. May. | 1anguage or the discharge of firearms or fire- | Thoge desiring a free hook on the ADVERTISEMENTS. SUBSTITUTE FOR A VAGATION. Build Up the Nerves at Home. Mr. Charles Newman, 174 Loomis street, ago, Il writes the following in runa. Mr took ene bottle of y e and have 8o Impr ew person. I am vman say r wondertul ed that I feel hankful 10ld of your w 1| remedy. I cannot say too much in your behalf. I had ) doctored for two years until I felt there was no relief. My wife has taken ome bottle of your nd medicine and it has helped her so If has improved her health T will recommend it to any | Ye gratefully CHARLES NEWMAN. Nervous Depression. The month of July peculiarly the month of nervous diseases, especially ner- on and oth lepressad em. F ple who or suf- is mont! 1 ele 5 vor of the | Of nerve weakness. anaemia and oth T or” the powsr and | devitallsing diseases should address The Suthority in me vested by law, do hereby | Peruna Medicine Company, Columbt proclaim and direct that all j s in the | Ohic | city of Louls refrain from gathering in 8 Tumbers on ihe public streets or in public | == — places; that all persons, particularly women 3 i and children, remain indoors as much as POP[ ]l A YOUI\G ( OUP E possible until the present situation is re- I ileved: that Jeer or abusive language or language calculat to provoke a breach of the | : r peace be not indulged in And all persons especially warned against | £ the disch, within the eity limits, of fire- | arms description, and aguinst the i | ing or exploding of bombs, torpedoes, fire- O All minors are warned to Keep within doors 00 S an ISS BP nfl U@ is V 1 Auring the raxt three days, and parents are f ' 11 notified th minors found out of doors : between Jur after sunset and one hour Snment under the provisions of section 2139 | of the revised M ri of 1899 g HE: 7 . ZIN, Mayor. | H h N President He . Hawes of the police lg 0on. | board d to-ni inat the Mayorfls R RSO Hres ”‘“";Sé‘e‘%’f{“; Poieieteieieieieiesieieieieieisieisie® Governor Stephens ay gave out the| & followins statement. which he had wired | + | to the New York World, regarding the St. | ¥ b - Louis strike: | : . Repiying to your telegram, just received, I| p 4 w.ll say vigorous action has heen taken by the State government and St. Louis Police Depart- 3 ot %o enforce respect for law in_St. Louls 8 And respect for property. The Republican | o Mayor, however, who is a candidate for renomi- | natlor. not d to offend, positively re- | ee 1o co-operate with us, which lends en- | aement Jawless element and fm- | pedes our Prog ward restoration of normal | conditle president of the Board of Po- | & lice C: loners writes me under date of the | follows fgenhein, Mayor of St. Louis, has | & re‘used to attend the meetings of | or wersistently the Dolice Board, of which he is a member, to give 1s assistance of any kind at this criti- | cal period. His Honor, In spite of sundry re- quests, has persistently refused to assist the Board in any way and it Is the belief that the | fanire to do so has worked harm to us in this orisis. Especlally do I deplore the fact, | as president of the Police Board, that he re- fused to issue the proper proclamation to keep the peace and for the dispersing of mobs.’ A= Governor. 1 have conscientiously and fear- lessly dome my duty as my jndgment directed. 1 have requested that 200 urgency policemen be sworn in and that the Sheriff summon a posse of able-bodied and law-abiding citi- e ‘under the direction of the Police | It has not been deemed neces- | v the commissioners to | order out the m ., the commissioners be- lieving that they are equal to the emergency. There are only spasmodic outbreaks, which the police and deputy sheriffs have béen able to munage. The s ing of the women to which you refer was done®by three girls between the B o e A o S o g o A o 2 R e e I I S I S I S A O S { amme ot a4 and 16 A-splouiekesns, was, aiag | PRINCIPALS IN A PRETTY WEDDING TO OCCUR AT WOODLAND s mot thought best to order out the militia TO-DAY. & Sirls Tave been tried and sentenced 10| @ o & 600D+ OISO+ Oe D> esesed et sP | terms in the Industrial hames for girls. Most { of 4he newspapers in St. Louls endeavor to | Stand in with the lawless elcment as well | Special Dispatch to The Call. wi he bett ement and think it popular . iRt 2 (n”\‘n:hhnld support from State officers and OODLAND. Jur ‘:\ m constantly eriticize any act of the police au- row at high noon W Woods thopitex and Miss Bertha ( will be A similar strike upon the street railways was | merried at the residence of ¢ | the ucational matters of the bride-to-be and social position of both. Mr term Addis influential sister crdero < ity abo e same time 2 e S vuriite was oracred: but proved & mother of the bride, s Aflure because the Mavor, the newspapers and, Barnes, on College strect. The wedd couple will leave in the Sheriff all co-operated with the Police De- | i3 of more than ordinary interest on 0 oneymoon trip which partment, count of the pc al prominen f the | will inc San Francisco nd other We have four regiments in Missourl, consist- | |,/ qpective groom, the prominence in ed- | points of Interest. ing altogether of about M me The f ®ith two hours' notice, will be ready The other three regiments can be s St. Louis within ten hours. Camp- | ing sites have been selected in the eity and | detatls all arranged and as soon as 1 am ‘n- | formed by the proper anthoritic that a tumult existe In the eitv and that a condition of law- lereness and disorder prevails with which the eivil authorities are ynable to cope, then the Natlonal Guard will be called out to breserv r order and prevent further disorder and acts | | of_viatence without delay | t Conditions are indeed bad enoush, but ex- aggerated reports have reached the Fast. I feal the worst is over. It was Cemonstrated | _I_fi _l_HE HU“SE PR of the militia until St. Loufs admits. even with . | her nolice force and unlimited number of dep- | Ma]ne Mul‘derer Attempts in £t. Louis when four or five strikers were | shet and killed that our authorities mean b | uty gheriffs, she cannot at this time take care 2 S | to Conceal a Terrible Crime. ne; T believe that iaw and ordsr will soon | be restored and the good name of St. Louls and | the State will be preserved. Ninety per cent of the good people indorse my action since the | | strike was declared and oppose the calling out | IRELAND DENIES HAVING CRITICIZED PAPAL DOCTRINE | Suspicion Rests on a Farm Hand Who | Has Been Loitering in the Neigh- borhood and Robbery Is As- signed as the Motive. | » | Characterizes as Rubbish the State- ment Recently Published in the Journal de Geneve. ROME, June 11.—The Osservatore Ro-| mano publishes a letter from Archbishop p A2 R, Ireland to Cardinal Rampolla, Papal Sec- | & ks retary of State, warmly protesting| WEST NEWFIELD. Me., June 11— against a recent statement by the Jour- | George W. Goodwin and three members nal de Geneve, which he characterizes as | Of his household were murdered last night “rubbish”—that he wrote to the Duke of and the house in which they lived set on Norfolk denouncing the doctrine of the | fire by the murderer, whose motive was } temporal power of the Pope and the meth- | presumably robbery. The dead are: | &8 of the congregations and the Roman | George W. Goodwin, his mother, Mrs. Mgr. Treland _declares _that he speaks | Elste R. Horne, 76 years of age: his and 'thinks with the Pope on such | adopted son, Scott Goodwin, 20 years, and & sorious mateer, and B seaceves to Mu- | hired man. Fred Nertech. 2 sel e o H 2 tions by word of mouth to Cardinal Ram- et OF. AP Jour. NErY. Recovere polla when next he visits Rome, in oraer | to_avail himself of his Grace’s jubilee and to receive the Papal benediction. Killed by a Harvester. Special Dispatch to The Call. WOODLAND, June 1l.—Late Saturday afternoon Samuel Wallace, a separator tender employed on the Hayes harvester near M lTon. in some unaccountable manner fell feet first into the cylinde and his legs were mangled as far and two of them. those of Mrs. Horne and’ Bertsch, gave every indication that they had been foully murdered. The Goodwin home is two miles out of town. Early this morning neighbors found the house in embers and no trace of the occupants. sulted in the finding of the bodies. bodles of Mr. Goodwin and his son were hardly recognizable, that of the latter be- by ln'; headless. the he medical examination disclosed that knees in a horrible manner. You: al- | the head of Mrs. Horne had been crushed lace never rallied from the shocl in by some blunt instrument and that after lingering for three hours, died. death probably ensued before the fire | anly this morning from the ruins of the house, | tsch, not n-a simi- Horne, but other parts reached it. In was the skull ¢ manner 7 a farmhand named o T > neighbor- hood. woodland recently ¥ he did not put t n and they think this Inc | MOB WREAKS VENGEANCE | ON A FIENDISH NEGRO | Prisoner Is Taken From the Jail, Hanged to » Tree and Riddled With Bullets. | | THOMASVILLE, Ga., June I.—Senny | 0. twenty-two years of ear Metea . | miles sville, by unknown | parties t Jefferson had been | ng Stringer a white night attempted to ult ger's daughters. | Sunday r was caught and con- fined in the jail at Metcalf. Soon after midnight he ‘was to the outskirts of th to a tree and riddled w Of Interest to Vthe Coast. Spacial teh to The € WASHINGTON, D. ¢ June 11.—The following persions have been granted: | Califorma—Restoration and reissue— snry 8. Pixley (dead), Lodl, $3. Increase orge W. Sweetzer, San Francisco, $8: Edward F. Beck. Bakersfield, 38; Daniel Harrington, Callahan, §$10: Mary M. Pix- Lodi. $; Alice M. Meyer, San 0, $8. Vashington—Charles Breedlove, Yaki- City, $6. Renev —Charles Russell Stevenso: 35. Increase—Burton Packard, Lyndon, $50. A postoffice has bheen established at Alamo, Fred Me- | Coy. Pe . Kes ick. SI discontin- ued and mail will be sent to Tay The following Postmasters have n commis- | sioned and appointed respectively: Cali- fornfa—Lancha Plana, Arthur F. Adams. Washington—Wahl, Whatcom__ County, Richard Kobler, vice John Wahl, res | signed,

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