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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JUNE 1900, LLOSS TO THE RAILROAD BY THE FIRE AT KERN Two Engines Must Be Relegated to the Scrap Heap and Others Are Badly W arped. Roundhouse to Be Rebuilt. B09690900090060000000000000006s0000s> O S-0-0-+0+ T e e e S S § Q8400046456840 0800 04600000000 0002 00000 D080 00 ¢ 1 1§ * SALL THAT SLEFTOFT“ERDUND'NOUSEg b ¢ @ N s e g T i . KERSFIE ¢ o © 1 - ¢ € s + f — 7 T 4 1 P ‘ WHERE THE EXPLOSION OCCURED. The < YE OF THE DISASTROUS FIRE AT KERN, IN WHICH THREE ¢ = < LIVES WERE LOST. 5 a S A there i or in speed victims, were shipped to Chicago. the | rk nvenier \gines have been hojlermakers' organization paying the ex- » to pense. The ren e of young Imore | were shipped to Cordelia, Cal. At the Coroner's inguest the jury decided th a the cause of the accident was unknown pulle w hav to the jury. Nobody was blamed. No de- ¥ ered much lay in train service has been occa- s s one of the sioned the fire. ALLEGED ABDUCTGRS OF TEMPERANCE WOMEN MEET N EDINBURGH : World's Union Opens An- nual Session With Many |: Americans Present. ‘ —— Mrs. Eyster of California Among Those Who Will Occupy Pulpits in the Scotch City on the | W. E. Dent Is Placed on the Stand, but His Memory Proves Sadly Defective. to The June can. of the The first of the I K it per- t Palo Alto ameron Lorigan i s the de s de- as this is st Justice o and Dep- : Harris of Palo Alto will be taker S up. ss Donaldina C: Chir mission i rom w Kim Quey w witne he reg me st he toid at the preliminary he said Constable Harris P 3 herin Boole and Mrs A The L S o ] : HAM'LTON;S CDLUMNO KIM QUEY ON TRIAL | an ROBERTS WILL T FORCES T (ALSH STEYN Buller Severs the Trans- vaal and the Orange Free State. —_—— BRISK FIGHTING EXPECTED President Kruger’s Sons Who Sur- rendered tp Baden-Fowell Are Now Back on Their Farms Working Peacefully. ———— ONDON, June 23, 3:3) a. m.—General Steyn’s forces in the Orange River w colony are for the time drawing most of the attentlon of Lord Rob- erts, rather to the neglect of Com- mandant General Louis Botha and Presi- dent Kruger. The severance between the Transvaal and the Orange River colony was completed yesterday as Lord Roberts said it would be‘by the arrival of Gen- eral Buller's advance guard under Lord Dundonald at Standerton. The net around the 6000 or 8000 men under Generai Steyn will now contract. Adroit maneuvering and brisk fighting are likely to take place, because until all resistance south of the Vaal is g an end the British line of com- munications will not be safe. President . Kruger's sons, who sur- rendered to General Baden-Powell, are back on their farms and working peace- fully, General Baden-Powell rode with only 300 men from Mafeking and he made the last section of his ride to Pretoria with only thirty-five. Lord Roberts met bim in the ouiskirts of town and escorted General Dewet's farm houses have been burned the British. General Buller has issued a special order | eulogizing the services of Strathcona's | Horse. Captain Joyce's brigade from her Maj- esty’s ship Forte has been ordered back | to the ship at the admiral's request. | KRUGER DESHES T0 | STAY IN THE TRANSVAAL | LOURENZO MARQUES, June 22.—Pres- | } | 1dgent Kruger's principal condition for im- mediate peace is that he be allowed to | stay In the country. There are 5000 British sick and wounded at Pretoria. Mr: Reitz, wife of the Transvaal State | Secretary, and her family, who arrived | here en route for Europe, had so little | money that the Dutch Consul purchased | second-class steamship tickets for them. | TO JOIN BULLER’S ARMY LONDON, June 22—The War Depart- ment has received the following dispatch from Lord Roberts: “PRETORIA, June Tan Hamiiton's | column reached the springs yvesterday en | route to Heldelburg, where they will join hands with Buller's troops, who reached | Paardekop yesterday, and will be at Stan- derton to-morrow, thus opening up com- munication between Pretoria and Natal 1 preventing any joint action between the Transvaalers and ‘the people of the Orange River Colo “Baden-Powell reports 2. from Rusten- burg that he found the ieading Boers very | pacific and cordial on his return journey henc Commandant Steyn and two act- hostile field cornets had been cap- 1 during his absence. “Lord Edward Cecil, the Administrator of the Rustenberg district, has to date collected 2000 rifl The Commissioner at Kroonstad reports that 341 rifles have been handed in at Wolmarnstad.” I e A T 2 BRITISHE OCCUPY STANDERTON. KAATSCHABOSH, Juane 22 — General Dundonald, with the Third Cavalry Bri- gade, occupied Standerion to-day without | opposition. T burghers left yesterday after Kaving blown up the railroad bridge | ¢ WORLD, REPORTED TO HAVE BEEN DESTROYED BY AN EARTH- and doing other damage. The infantry QUAK GREAT BLOCKS OF THE BROKEN GLACIER ARE FLOAT- marched twenty-two miles to-day and ING OUT TO SEA AND MENACING NAVIGATION. camped at Kaatschabosh Spruit to-night. | Sabbath. le an {0 the pla i c of whom he i not Expelled From Transvaal. ne United King, T heD went out and returned | AMSTERDAM, Junc 22.—The Nether- COMMENCEMENT AT Mias Gordon, Sy ne The o o ari. om | lands Raflway Compaay of South Africa told of her trip to Palo Alto to save the | has received official notification of the ex- SAN JOSE HIGH SCHOOL :;!m (;.m'! n.yg-h\\.‘; g i‘lvvn)): jolned lhrm‘un pulsion from the Transvaal of 1400 of its T he ain, § elate e story ves W q 4 3 e e AL res M Shetdor | o train, She related the story of belng ¢mployes with thelr families. The Dutch | Mixed Class of Twenty-Nine Bright 2 general reception -gates Lord Provost of to the de flicers broke down the door of the jall nburgh. nd dragged the Chinese girl out, of the — the road at mid s he turning of the girl over t HONOLULU'S PLIGHT. Ding and Wong Fong, - Hee 5, RS treatment at the hands of the officy v s- | Hawaiian City Through a Peculiar | aiso gone into, s ort S o] = — Error Has Mo Postmaster. W. E. Dent, who took the ride to Palo Alto with Attorney Herrington and two WASHINGTON, June It has been ADVERTISEMENTS. | z | young " adtes “on’ the night' in qu . ~~n~nmnn~e | discovered that through an error commit- | was the next witness, His memor in the State Department there is now | defect and no material evidence was stmaster at Honolulu. Several weeks | ©Pfained from him. S Preataent named Jormnsl Weeks | "An adjournment of court was then sident named John M. Oate ken, It 11d that Kim Quey, who is nomination was confirmed by the ext wit- 1iting deportation, will be the 1t is fow learned that th. »ointed is the brot was intended shy eet in life - old song They man r of the one whom flil the position. Jo- | MINE MANAGER ATTACKED. ‘ ne reamer ght by Justice | effect that the company’s officlals who re- | The exercise | . DES_MOI Consul at Lourenzo Marques telegraphs Graduates Sent Out Into the that a proclamation has been issued to the World. Special Dispatch to The Call. fuse to do British military transport work | wiil be sent to Europe via East Lond. SAN JOSE, June The graduating Cape Colony. o0, | exercises of the San Jose High School were held this morning, when twenty- nine young ladies and gentlemen received rhe hall prettily decor- diploi : ated and an excellent musical and literary programme v rendered. opened with a selection bl)' the High School orchestra. Rev. Burr M. Weeden of the Episcopal church offered an invocation. The class address was de- The bal- TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES, | S, Ia.. June 22 _Congres A. T. Hull was renominated to-day Republicans of the Seventh District MiLWAUKEE, Wis., June 22.—The Interna. | .l¥¢Ted by John E. Richar |"tio >rint >ressme; ¥ ;| ance of the programme furnished by the [ ot adfaorney aine mmen and Assistants’ | SUEG.0" wo Oration, ‘“Liberty ~_and nion,” Lester D. Frink; vocal soio, Miss LONDON, June 22.—The House of Lords m-! Alice Gussefeld; essay, “Education Apart il S shiich # | Oates was formerly Postmaste sy work] in w ich they of Hawail, and the intention wey | Four Shots Fired at Joseph MacDon- {ay passed the colonial marriage bill introduced | From Stu Miss Lillie S, Muscio; se- e il him the office at Honolulu, but | ald From Ambush. x i sk i e e ) jection, High School Mandolin Club: ora~ s . 3 e 5| 8 . | . NGTON, June 22.—Charles 2} 3 3 , " Walter J. et fe et o e et | s AL A S TEzam ArpbRah | WASHI arles W. Lich- | tion, "The Monroe Doctrine, Nt b he Benate. doba 5 | JLACE, daho, June 22—Joseph | man of New Jernay has been appointed a mem- | Edmans; vocal sole, Bertrand R. Cocks s at San Francisco and no [ MacDonald, manager of the Frisco'mine, | bef 96 1 lafisttinl commisslon, ‘vice M. D. | essay. “Woman Through Man's Eves’ to go to Honolulu, The commis- | fired on from ambush this morning | Fatenford, resigned. | Miss Nettie Doud; violin solo, Miss Grace i appointed mill to the oflice when four shots were | ciosed. fhis afternoon. - Itienmond, Vo i ion | selection, £ Bhumate made & short R fired in quick succession, hen the whe e striking at his feet. dissolves John H. Butler Passes Away. on. the bullets all | only candidate for next vear's conv MacDonald saw the | the matter was left undecided. Prineipal address to the students. after which he presented the diplomas to the graduates, ention, but | = AN AP 2 nen ru down the mountain side, but | ¢ | | Eomon e INDIANAPOLIS, June 22.—John H. But- | [1e0 runnir e, but | \WwASHINGTON, June 22.—Se. Gage | ) were: B s , Oli ey find that the ler, ex-Judge of the Floyd Counts cours | 104 quid, N0t fecognize them. Tho STerlt | pax mearly rocovered. fram be Fessry, 1085 | Ny o, ‘Olfve Kt Beckingion, Bva doctor's el e ok e g s 1 es soldiers - | position, but he has decided to go to Atlantie | At . Cropley, Nina Claire and f the most prominent lawyers | diately started in pursuit-of the Bty i e L ic | Buller, Marshall F. Cropley. Nina Cla thing they of the torUs Orad. aacd ol Ha s ; | t of the men. The | City for a few days before returning to duty, | T, Nettie Tucson Doud, Lillle M. y k ate. is dead. aged §7 e was a | Frisco mill was blown up with dynamite | He leaves for there to-day and jRavenpoxt, e Blia. didn’t count on, pariner of Walter Q. Gresham. I by strikers i 15 VRATIES Dot e untl after Juiy £ 1ore? Wi | Draver, Walter J Eomabs Hilla M. frner. now ‘n. one = 5J\u§u‘_1xg"'x;<‘;xr, J||r:n'cm”::l.xouunlum Cotone! | Hmma J Gale, Fred 'V, Gilchrist, Henry ay 1 as! —— oseph P. er, ‘Inspector general, hi e Fletehes - By el Zetalled as & Member of the' board of fcers | Mona Hathaway, IHiged A o Moaeio, PUGILISTIC PREACHER PUMMELS @ LAWYER Rev. Barbee and C. F. Hathaway .~ Settie Their Disputes in Good Old-Fashioned Style. Special Dispatch to The Call. g - g Prescrip- | do fona her ills, every- on and female weakness. rth easy, and thousands wthers have testified to its | @ LAKEPORT, June 22.—Rev, Mr. Barbee, a Methodist minister, and’ C. F. strength giving properties. | , Hathaway, a prominent lawyer, both of Kelseyville, had an altercation in that no alcohol, meither opium, | g, town this afternoon in the latter's offide. There was a rattling exchange of narcotie. |*® blows, resulting in victory for the preacher, who proved himself a fighter of er, of 629 Catherine Street, | $ no mean caliber. + es: “¥our medicines have | &2 Adjourning to the street ofter the fracas, the preacher proclaimed to the §8 ’“rk!;r’;?r:at;xg‘h;a“l:hfl:z; | # crowd assembled that he was perfectly willing that the community should un- vorige’ Sunsiciotion aud | B dv-rs:.’md that he was a fighter as well as a preacher, and that he intended to & covery ' 1 have much better | ¢ CONtinue his work in Kelseyville and prove the truthof either proposition when. vea fine. healthy baby.” | 5 ever occasion demanded ; Pierce’s Common Sense *° The troutle arose over the personal remarks of Barbee from the pulpit viser, in paper covers, is sent | ¢ and Hathaway's reply thereto through the public press. Both men show con- free on receipt of 21 one-cent. Stamps, |2 Siderable facial disfigurement as a result of the mill. Lawyer Hathaway was to pay expense of mailing only, Address | % Bipectty Pl ¢ Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. BOIP IO I P00 0000400 040900+0+00@ | | Bertha McWilliams, Lillian Susan Muscio, iandesto Nicewonger, Arthur W. Nicholls, Georgia Irene Park, Naom! Purcell, Viclet L. Shepard, Helen Azalia Staples, Edwin Thomas, Mollie G. Tyman, Mamie Alice Walsh, Alice Ma- bel Wehrl MISS SAGE LEADS. Contest for Goddess of Liberty at San Jose. Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, June 22.—The contest appointed by the Secretary of War to con-“ sider regulations with a view to the estab- | lishment of a war college for the army. | AKRON, Ohio, June 22.—The jobbers em- ployed in'the local stonewarc plants resumed Tork to-day after a strike of five weeks. A1} of the local plants were clcsad down during the strike, several hundred being out of ems ployment. A settlement of the difficultios was Feached with the manufacturers. SARATOGA. N. Y., June 22.—At the of the thirty:third annual convention wf iam | American Rallway Master Mechanics' asar | lation there were discussions on the reiasice | terits of castiron and_steel-tired wheels:. o the advantage of ton-mile basis for motive | power statistics on flanged tires and on com. Pound locomotives. John E. Newman, for o July celebration closes to-morrow at WASHINGTON, June 22—At the. sesson of Midnight. Great interest centers in the fcan Institute of H v | contest, and a very heavy vote will w Hanchett, o he commitiee h 15 | doubtedly be polled just before the con- Hanchett, chairman of the committee - terstate Work, offered a_resolution which was | test closes. The candidates all have a adopted creating a _committee of five on na- host of friends and they are working tional smedical legislation to co-operate with hard for their favorites. Miss Harrietta like committees of the Natlonal Medical As- Sage of Saratoga is still in the lead. sociation and the National Eclectic Soclety in securing national or interstate legislation af- fecting the practice of medicine. The com. mittee offered resolutions urging advanced standards of medical education, favoring State Tegistering and examining boards and approv- | ing medical teaching and. State universities. o-day's vote showed: Miss Harrietta Sage, 15,577; Mrs. Otto Ziegler, 6575; Miss Sybil Morehouse, 6630; Miss Gene Veuve, 2077; Mrs. A. C. McKinney, 1684 Terrill Jury Disagrees. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. ) MOTHER'S AWFUL CRIME. 'SAN JOSE, June 22—The jury in the case of Attorney Samuel B. Terrill, on a Throws Four Children From Fourth- | e of embezzling $260 from Eddie Story Window and Leaps [ SharEs O atter: being out over Mirts After Them. | hours, reported this afternoon it could not agree and was discharged. It is un- BERLIN, June 22.—The wife of a Berlin dgrstlosod the vote was nine for conviction mechanic named Heinrich Sokloweck to- and three for acquittal. This was Tor- day threw her four children from a fourth rill's eighth trial, growing out of a long story window and then leaped after them. list of Grand Jury indictments for for- The children are dead and the mother will ge y and embezzlement. In the list there _ ha die. been but one cenviction. Goddess of Liberty for the Elks' Fourth | MUIR GLACIER, ONE OF THE GREAT SCENIC WONDERS OF THE | | | Is Blockaded. - « ot Lo e e e e L S S ) R R R B S S e e N QUIGG REPLIES TO GROSVENOR’S CHARGES Denies That Any Portion of the Re- publican Platform Was Sur- reptitiously Altered. NEW YORK, June 2.—Lemuel E. Quigg, the New York member of the com- mittee on resolutions of the fonal Re- publican Convention at Philadelphia, in reference to a statement of General C. H. Grosvenor of Ohio, which was called to his attention, in effect that certain lan- guage had been agreed upon by a sub- committee, on retary, to-night General Grosv thing was surr omitted from the platform which was “‘understood by the e mittee to be a part of the platform fs untrue. He states he makes that statement upon the authority of Senator Foraker, but that is im- possible. The platform was the work of the sub-committee of the committee on reselutions and every member of that sub-committee con- tributed to the work of making the platform and on every point and every plank the sub- committee was unanimous. It was aiso unani- mous on all matters suggested but omitted. 1t is true that a docunient was read to the sub-committee by Senator Foraker that con- tained the language General Grosvemor quotes. That document had been prepared in Washing- ton, but the committee considered, that it was much too long and that it too mich resembled a political eas The points made in that document, however, were fully discussed dur- ing a session of nearly five hours’ dura the end of the session I was elected y of the sub-committee and required to put to- gether the planks upon which the agreement had been reached. I did this and the committee met again at 1 o'clock on Wednesday morning and went over what I had writtem, word for word. My araft altered In many detalls and every such_alteration recelved the approval of every member of the sub-committee. We then took planks of minor importance. and after ussion, conclusions were reached as to each of them and I was requested to make a draft of the minor planss. I worked on that the rest of“the night and at 7 o'clock Senator Fairbanks came to my room. Together we went out the following: that some- ave over the comvleted platform from the first | word to the last, The sub-committee met again at 9 o'clock, and the document. with such changes as Mr. Fairbanks had suggested, was read in full. The language of the two planks to whitn General Grosveror referred was then precisely Jn the form in which it was read to the con- vention In the afterncon. The sub-committes had considered just how far it would go in giving countenance to subsidies to the shipping interests and_the language adopteg was its deliberate and final judzment. H As to the statement ‘‘that Congress has full legislative power over the territory belonging to the United States, subject only to the funda- mental safeguards of liberty, justice and pe: sonal rights,”” the committee "considered that | Inasmuch as this question was now before the United States Supreme Court it was neither advisable nor necessary to ryn the risk of getting our platform into a controversy with the Supreme Court. But we did say that it was the duty of the Government to put down armed Insurrection in the Philippines and that | as to the people of all the territories acquired | by war, “the largest measure of self-govern- | ment consistent with their welfare and our duties ghall be secured to them by law. This plank was fully debated and deliberated d unanimously agreed upon, and no man has any authority to say that one word was put § or left out surreptitiously. The platform a: prepared by the sub-commiitee was read to the | full committee, was there debated for two hours, and, with a few alterations, one of ing grand is still unmarred, al- though thousands of tons of ice have sloughed off its face. This information comes from Captain David Wallace, mas- ter of the turned Wedn tom for the ps sought to line up his ship across the face nearly two decades he scored a failure, He was unable, owing to a great fleld of float ice, to get the vessel closer than five miles from Alaska’'s wondrous attraction, whose enic beauties have been gazed upon and admired by tourists from the length and breadth of the land. “I never saw so much ice,” Captain ‘Wallace sald last night, discussing the range phenomenon. “Fort miles from tr red stray * chunks of float 3 y grew thicker and thicker until closer approach to the glacier was impossible. We got within five miles of and could go no further. The ice was packed so soild that one could not jam a stick of stovewood between the cakes, which in some In- stances rose 100 feet above the surface of the water. “To te!l the truth, when we were there it seemed so jammed that one ¢ make a prediction when t and permit close approach | ich Mr. Quigg was sec- | IMUIR GLACIER RETAINS ITS IMPOSING GRANDEUR Thousands of Tons of Ice Have Been Sloughed From Its Face and the Sea for Miles i tb e b et eied @ EATTLE, Wash., June 22—Accord- ing to the latest detalls received re- garding the injury to Muir Glacier Dby the recent earthquake, its impos— which re- excursion steamship Queen, day from an ge to Al “aptain Wa ace, as has been his cus- t sixteen or eighteen years, the glacier, but for the first time In Yot even e bay will ci to the great R e e B B B L B T S S S % B S W S S S SUA AN SN N SO S glacier. I think, however, that o still retains its beauty. We took glasses and viewed it as best we c B at such a distance. The sea front seem . to stand out in bold perpendicular form 4 as of vore, but the jagged float ice rose up, obstructing the view.™ 00 teteseoedeseiet Grosvenor, was unanimously r. Grosvenor says that “it was agreed and understood that the planks,” as he states | them, “should be a part of the piatform There was such agreement or underst: In the committes on resolutions: or | committee. In writing the plasfos | ed the language of the document te wub- 1 empioy- enator F aker had read to us in so far as it was con- sistent with the decisions at which the sub- committee had arrived, but when Mr. - | nor says that anything. no matter what, was agreed upon by the sub-committee and afte:r- ward omitted, he says that which is abso- | lutely false. P R ALPHA TO BE SEIZED. WASHINGTON, June 22.—Assistant Sec- retary Spalding, in speaking to-day of the | report that the British steamer Alpha had | landed freight and passengers at Cape | Nome on May 25 in violation of law and had since escaped capture by the United States steamer Albatross, sald that he | had telegraphed for a r?un on the doings of the Alpha. and if it developed that she had landed a cargo and passengers at Nome as reported she would be seized at once upon her reappearance in American waters. ADVERTISEMENTS. Cures Weak Men Free INSURES LOVE AND A HAPPY HOME FOR ALL. How any man may quickly cure himself after years of suffering from sexual weakness. lost vitality, night losses, varicocele, etc., and en larye small weak organs to full size and vigor. L. W. KNAPP, M.D. Simply send your name and address to Dr. L. W. Knapp. 1639 Hull bldg.. Detroit, Mich.. and he will gladly send the free receipt with full directions so that any man may easily cure himself at home. This is certainly a most gen- erous ofter and the following extracts taken from his daily mall show what men think of his generosity: “Dear Sir:—Please accept my sincere thanks for yours of recent date. 1 have given your treatment a thorough test and the bemefit has been extraordinary. It bas completely braced me up. 1am just as vigorous as when a boy and you eannot realize how happy 1 am." “Dear Sir:—Your method worked beautifully. Results were exactly what I needed. Strengta and vigor have completely returned and en- largement is entirely satisfactory.” ““Dear Str:—Yours was received and I had ne trouble In making use of the recelpt as directed and can truthfully say it is a boon to weak men. I am greatly improved in size, strengsh and vigor. All correspondence is strictly _confidential, mafled in olain sealed envelope. The receiot is free for the asking and he Wants every man tc which related to the two planks referred to have it