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THE SAN FRAN 'y BOERS AGAIN BATTLE | WITH BULLER'S FORCES, Lord Roberts Sends New Lists of British, Casualties and the Usual Reports | of Victories. wing | mander, Comma onde re of General Oli ceived the follow- Rot *“The tu Oliv d the at- from 1 ment of the rns and even are now urg and damages of Says Boers Lost Heavily. tment and the loss la recent proc ears to have been land.” er Roberts most | VESSEL HOW AT TANGIER IS ONLY | ) SCHOOLSHP Alarming Reports Circulated | by the Arrival of the | Enterprise. A e Department Will Be Well Satisfled, However, if It Has the Effect of ; 450 Causing the Mooxish Govern- General Chaffee ment to Come to Terms. sBage B oy — Srecial Discateh to The Call. FRENCH OPERATIONS CALL HE ARTERS, WELLING- TON HOTEL, WASHINGTON, Aug. 2. st at th's moment the Sultan of Moroc: irmed at the appearance o1 AS REPORTED BY FREY ILLINOIS RIOTERS BURN AN ACCUSED WOMAN'S HOME During a Lively Battle Two Men Are Killed and Several Persons, Including the Object of —Two men two of them | one I, Aug. three wounc perhaps ratally nee burned, | wounded and her reside! are the results o nd ar Mrs. Dr. d of the mu ear-old daughte The d emp! between a mob . who was Salter ace ad: wed by . RYAN, deputy constable. wounded: wrence Ryan, & wounded in abdomen. . Willoughhy f the dead shot through | Dr. C. shoulder, W. Wright builet takir unded: riously w ber of citize through s Mrs. Dr is st Gilmar First Act of the Tragedy. About 10 act of the tr evening the first It was pre- died in the hospital Fri to her home in Leonard und ness early Satur red. § et and er | ng. No | was wrapped | a piece of car-| i heard the evidence | After the jury hi the | t of Clarence Salter, father of the girl, to ‘the conclusion th; es out by the P« Constable the house to w for e, went to | t about 10! @ woman | ¢ | then | Suddenly, it | dred to one, and the fire was qu CHINESE EMPEROR'S REPRESENTATIVE HERE Leong Kai Tinn, Who Is Organizing| the Chinese Reform Association,. Talks Interestingly. o'clock last night. Mre. Wright barred | the entrance. The constable broke the | r door open and entered the darkened | oom. Michael Ryan was about to enter the | door rang out he inner nd he nade i . when a shot ) dies formed a shby, a focal dard Oil C in the joft Peter Haue memt of the attacking V. casnaltles 50 angered the crowd that they | volleved the house as fast as they could load ‘and fire Contrary to expectations, no screams followed the progress of the flames, and the mob began to think that th of the burning house had been from a bunch of timt everal shots came in the direction of the mob. They were, however, a hun- | and in the dim light of th hn M ers, a blacksmith, who had been employed | by Mrs. Wright, stretched out in the death the Mob’s Wrath, Are Wounded. He was shot the hcad and e had hee enemies w agouy. about that at his n a dozen places oulders, showing on his face ng : met his de Woman Again Threatened. i ¥ wit mol Wright, s = T ately disperse It had been reporte in the _saken 10 the Cl ong guard pl mbled : were utt auiet and per: ¥ o'clock this forencon tration, s Adows rated i aow the woman. Verdicts at the Inqu At the Coron case of John M ury broug verdict of y bullet wou ichael ry wa m Mrs, W Ryan the ver- th by leaden the bod this e of B ening. The ht to the Grand Jur ail Mrs. Wright was taken to Watseka t i i | 5 | ! | ight's house by | | noon as a measure of precaution from ible mob violence. During the morn- i when sh ed in great danger | from the crowd, the Mayor ordered the saloons closed. The town is quiet to- night. State Troops Withdrawn. AKRON, Ohio, Aug. 27.—As a result of the peaceful existing in this city, all the S had been on’ duty he last were withdrawn e % With the dismis f the soldiers, the aioons were reopened and thg city has it | civilization there would have he Emperor Kwang Su h oned on ac ount of his advanced ideas of rious trouble. as the Boxers would have been kept in bounds. —_— MESSAGES SENT BY M’KINLEY AND CONGER WASHINGTON, Aug. 27.—-On August %, 1900, upon receipt of the dispatch from Minister Conger stating among other things that all connected with the Am can legation was safe, but that efforts were being made to induce the legation. practically resumed its usual appearance. | ad not been impris- | | | sen no se- | MUST MK MEDITATED GIVING UP ROME TO THE HIERARCHY Story That the Late King Humbert Was Willing to Make Concessions to Receive the Sacrament. ‘As the result of the outery against eays th A’ meait structed Humbert hbishop confession would agres some months of N wrote to trustworthy absolut P on - was he rights of only as Kine ‘of ‘Sardhs the powers pe trom an s condition of inder [talian it steadiiy ASSASSIN OF - KING HUMBERT REFUSES FOOD PR Tk - EOOD LARGE DISCREPANCY Nebr ska O jicial Are Starvation to Publie Badly Tangled. Condemnation. Investigation Shéws That the Super- Michael Guido, Who Has Been De- intendent of the Institution for tained by Immigration Officers, the Feeble Minded Has Mis- ‘Will Probably Be Permitted applied Funds. to Land at New York. e A LONDON, Aug. 28.—Bress Epecial Dispatch to The Call. )2 of King Humbert, i 1al LINCOLN, Nebr., A personal | to commit suicic accordi v debt to the State of $397 one of the dispatch from the Daily results of the administration of Benja- He now refus ying that min F. Lang as superintendent of the | no intention io give the beourgeolse th 3 stitute for the Feeble Minded sfacticn of seeing him condemned. H | Youth at Beatrice. This condition of the | shows no g [ aberra intellect finances of the instituti indicating t WASHINGTON, Aus. —Michacl misapplication of nearly $#000 of State | Guido, 2 young It who has been de- r ance, the expert ac-| * countant wko recently examinated Lang's With ers to leave Peking, to do which he (Con- | ger) regarded as certain death, the Presi- dent sent Mr. Conger the foliowing dis- patch: “Conger, American Minister, Peking, | | August 8 'night: T rejoice, and with me the whole American people, to receive your cipher telegram reporting ur safety and that of the other legations Everything is being done and will be done man-of-war in the harbor oy ials of the State and Navy Depart- that the report published this n American warship had put in at Morocco to pay an indemnity for tained by an American citizen L origin in a gullty con- aqui was a mob murdered two in the town of was immediately reported Department by Mr. Gum- neral at Tangier, and he by cable to request the t Fez to make an investi- ort of the French Consm received, Gum- ~d that during the inves- demand upon the for. the apprehension those guilty of the 1l ctec ul \nst T of ) report of the arrival of an American warship reached the Navy Department to- E day, and it is presumed fhat the vessel to R which reference is made is the Massachu- sett nautical school ship Enterpris - e . The of this vessel calls for hi counted for | ATFIval at Tangler on August 24 and her 2 e pun T | departure on Augus If her presence n the | has stirred up the rish authorities to - compliznce with the demands of Mr. Gum- - | mere the Staiz Department will be well DECORATED BY THE EMPEROR. | pleased with the visit of the Enterprise, n twithstanding the fact that the depart- o peror William | Ment had no hand in arranging the ftin- »unsodon, com- | : —_— ‘ Eota tesatione. cn | LITTLE ACCOMPLISHED Tat . i the 4| BY TROOPS IN PHILIPPINES Anxiety Felt Regarding the Trans- port Californian, Which Is Now a Week Overdue. MANILA, Aug. 27.—The officlal reports shows the t fortnight's scouting to e had insignificant results. Typhold fever is delaving shipping. The United States transport Californian, | which salled from San Francisco July 17, via Honolulu. July 27, for Manila, is now a week overaue. CHAFFEE YET AT PEKING. WABHINGTON, Aug. 27.—Secretary Root and Adjutant General Corbin were The United States Phiiippine Commis- among t President’s callers at the | Sion, in order to explain the new condi- White House to-night. They came late | 1008, their _power and their attitude in the evening and remained witn the | 1OWArd the Filipinos resulting from their President almost an hour, They were | a portion of ‘,:f;:}g;gzm,;;;uv;-b'.uh',ns both uncommunicative when leaving the | structions to themselves. The Facil, of Comm Taft and &'hc h jne ioners arrived here A ayuava WASHINGTON, Aug. 27.—The trans- port Californian, reporied from Manila to be a week overdue, carried 8500 tons of | Quartermaster’s and commissary stores. | THREE NEGROES DEAD AS RE§ULT OF A ROW White House, but the impression was conveyed that some dispatches have been received from General Chaffee which, while not of great importance, establish the fact that he is still in Peking. CHINESE EMPEROR LOCATED. PARIS, Aug. 27.—The French Consul at | Shanghal wi at Emperor K and Prince Tuan are :gier for the purpose of com- | raturalized citizen named | AN FRANCISCO is domiciling an accredited representative of the de- posed Emperor of China, Kwang Su, in the person of Leong Kal Tinn, who is traveling through the civilized world for the purpose of securing the nec- essary power to restore the Emperor to his throne. The Emperor's representative arrived in this city vesterday afternoon and is staying at the Occidental. He is a delicate and highly intellectual man in appearanceand travels in European attire, accompanied by a secretary and a promi- nent Chinese, who represent the Mongo- lians on this coast who are in sympathy with the cause which Leong Kai Tinn is vocating. & s mission of Leong] Kat Tinn to this country is to enlist the Chinese of the United States in the effort to restore the deposed monarch to his throne, to the end that modern civilization may be intro- duced into China. Leong Kai Tinn speaks no English, but through an interpreter he d: “-"1 am in this country seeking the sup- port of my countrymen to restore the Bm- peror, Kwang Su, to the throne from which he was deposed at the behest of the Dowager Empress, because he was an advocate of progress and of the abandon- ing of the Chinese customs and methods for those of the modern Western civilizas tion. My labors are purely in the line of ot W iz . LITTLE ROCK, Ark, Aug 2.—A o 11 “.'n'fi.iif renee Lo she mission- | spectal from Pine Bluff, Atk., Shya: Poroe Sl 4. Peling. tha ‘,;,‘lu’l“"’;‘\': negroes dead as the result of trouble that they are as yet uninjured bt ra; | that started Sunday at Coopers Isiand, & | plantation in Jefferson County forty-five | miles from this city. Berry Johnson and | Harry Wimberley fought with Wincnes- ke | ters over a negro woman named M: TO OUT OFF COMMUNICATIONS. | {7 OV ° neg Overby. enother negs their position Is critical. o, - b | teok a hand in the fight, and all three LONDON, Aug. 21.—A dispatch from | were badly used up. — Johnson finally Tokio sfys General Yamaguiche reports| killed Overby and Wimberley. that the Chinese have not abandoned hope of retaking Peking and that %00smen with fifteen guns were advancing toward Peking from Shantung, probably intend- ing to cut the alifes’ communications. ! i Baspiararss FOR CONVOY TO TIENTSIN. ROME, Aug. 21.—A dispatch received here from Taku, under date of Sunday. August 26, confirms previous reports that | a convoy was being formed at Peking to conduct, under a strong escort, the allies’ | 1'nired States bou, ght 200 mules in Wood- wounded and the women and children 0| jand last week, and late Saturday after- Tientsin. noon the agent of the German Govern- | meiit purchased a drove of 115 work and pack mules. Heavy detnands on account of the war have made great inroads upon Yoio County mules. ———— A Coroner's jury, of which a ne; | named McKinney was foreman, held an | inquest over the remains of the twn dead | men, and a verdict against Johnson was rendered. Johnson fled before he could be arrested. This morning McKinney, the foreman of the Coroncr’s jury, was found dead in bed with 2 bullet fn his brain. He was assassinated some time Sunday nigh®. — e Muleg for German Army in China. pecial Dispatch to The Cail. WOODLAND, Aug. 27.—Agents of the CASTINE ORDERED TO AMOY. WASHINGTON, Aug. 27.—The gunboat Castine, Commander Bowman command- | ing, has been ordered to Amoy, China, to| The number of stars dlstlncug visible report on conditions there. The Castine is W'llhom "i: -}d of a glass is put by Gould |at B rofessor at Shangha R —— Newcomb savs their number is near 7647. These are up to the sixth magaitude. Professor Newcomb es. patriotism which looks to the best inter- ts of my country. es"My mission thus far has been highly guccessful and I look for satisfactory re- sults in the near future. I am the ac- credited representative of the Emperor and my field is the entire civilized world. ‘Wherever there are countrymen of mine in any considerable number there will 1 be found eventually to advocate the cause of my Prince, whose motto is advance- LEONG KAI TINN, REFORM- ER, WHO CLAIMS TO REPRE- SENT THE FLEEING EMPE- for your relief. The acting Secretary of State has to-day sent you a telegram of inquiry and informatio; “WILLIAM McKINLEY. Again, on August 19, upon receipt of of- ficial information of the relief of tne le. gations, the President sent the following | teh: “Fowler, Chefu, for Conger, :American Minister: 'The whole American people re- Jjoice over your deliverance, over the safety of your companions, of our own and other nations who have shared your | shows that the perils and privations, the fortitude ana | courage which you Have all and the heroism of y fenders. We all mourn have fallen and acknowledge the good- ness of God. which has preserved you and guided the brave army that set you free. WILLIAM McKINLE This evening the B of this message from Minister Conger: “The President, Washington: All Americans here thank you for, congratu- lations and successful efforts for our re- lief and bless God for final d(’l{i)\'f anc N maintained iER. EXPULSION—-OF.BULGARIANS ur little band of de- | for those who resident is in receipt | | | | CONTINUES IN ROUMANIA Relations Between the Two Countries Still Strained and War Is Ap- parently Imminent. LONDON, Aug. 28.—Referring to the tension between Roumania and Bulgaria, recently accentuated by the unsatisfac- tory character of the reply of the Sofi Government to the Roumanian dem: for the suppression of the Macedonian revolutionary committee, which has its headquarters at the Bulgarian capital, the Bucharest correspondent of the Daily Mail, wiring vesterday, says: “The outlook becomes more and more serious. The opinion of the general pub- lic here fs that Bulgaria must be taught a lesson by arms. if necessary. Many public meetings were held vesterday (Sun- day) throughout Roumania. All were characterized by a very warlike tone. The expulsion of Bulgarians from Roumania continues.” FROGS’ LEGS. The Best From Canada and the De- mand Is Increasing Rapidly. There is money in frog culture. What is more astonishing, competition m demand. Jersey furnishes a small art of the supply, but over there the indus- try is as a rule followed upon desultory and primitive lines. Small boys and men with nothing better to do hunt the wild frog to his lair and beat the swamps. For a short time the catch is satisfactory and then, just when the frog hunters see colosgal fortunes looming up before them, {he frogs give out and the business col- ey do_the thlni better In Canada and Western New York. The finest frogs' ]eghi: the market come from the Do- m , and up there frog culture is a deeply 'serious and scientific affair, and its profits are surprisingly large. = The Canadian frogs’ legs are much larger than any others and are always in great demand In New York: but comparatively few of them are to be found in market now, although the season for them has been on for several months. The Cana- dian frog raisers are holding back their supply until July, when the opening of the summer hotels increases the demand tnnaenduusly and sends the prices sky- ‘ward. The wholeale dealers charge from 3 to 60 cents a pound for the legs, the hind- quarters of about four frogs making = pound. At the uptown retail dealers’ one pays from 50 to 75 cents and even $1: while at times, even during the season, the legs cannot be procured at any price. The demand for the d!llcnci' has always been fair, but it has steadily increased, the | business is not great and the market sup- | ply of frogs' legs often does not equal the |- ment. I also represent the Chinese Em- ire Association of Reformers, whose Bend juarters are at Macao, China. I am and the prejudice against frog-eating that once was strong among Americans has practically disappeared save in coun- ROR OF CHINA. @ establishing agencies throughout the werld for the promotion of the movement and wherever I Ev I deliver addresses on the subject which is so dear to my heart. “In this city we have an organization of 5000, and I expect to double it before we leave. There are branches in all the prin. cipal cities of the coast and the North- western cities of this country, and before 1 leave the United States there will be an organization in every city. It is not known in this country that the organization 1 am promoting extends into the interjor of China_and_into the heart of the Boxer country. Prior to this movement I was rincipal professor of the college in Yoko- gu‘m& established by the reformers. My brothef is Kang Yu Wai, personal adviser of Kwang Su, and who gave the secret advice to Kong Yu Wei to leave Peking before the Boxer outhreak. He asked his Central Dining-rooms, 24 and 26 Elils, re- timates the number up to the 14.5 magni- opened by J. Bertz, well-known restaurateur. * > . . - tude at 200,000,000, countrymen to restore him to power ana L ern civilization. “I consider that this is the only move- ment that can save China, and if the Western powers will recognize it and re- store the rightful Emperor to his throne all will be weil. Tf they will take cogniz- ance of the fact that the fifteen provinces of Southern Chira are fully in accord with this movement, in fact that 200,000,000 ot the pnrulatinn of China are reformers, they will have no hesitation in placng the -deposed Emperor on the throne. His res- toration to power will mean the advance- ment of civilization and the thorough sup- pression of the Boxers.” Leong Kai Tinn will Jecture at the Washington-street Grand Theater on Sun- day at noon. The representative of the Emperor further said that his addresses try districts. ““Our orders for frogs' legs are fifty times as numerous as they were ten years ago,” said the head waliter of a Broad- way restaurant, when asked about the matter. “You Americans have such quesr prejudices about what vou eat. If you can swallow softshell crabs and .ousters and eels and pate de foie gras what's tha sense in drawing the line at frogs? You'll get around the snails after a while, but that's where the average American sticks fast now.” An Atchison woman is keeping count. So far ghe has fed nine canary birds dur- ing the absence of their owners on sum- mer vacations, and has watched the un- packing of siX tourists’ trunts, but ail that was brought her was one souvenir spoon and a Chinese arrangement for were well received by the Chinese gener- seratching one's own back.—Ate ally, and he expressed the opinion that if . AT s help him to reform China—to adopt West- | Globe. i % e of the Secret rmitted to land. ilkie cabled to Italy for the rec- ords of the two men. He has received ir formation that convinces him that Guid is neither an anarchist nor a eriminal this afternoon he notified Commissioner General of Immigration Powderly tnat he n that would justify official records. : X De France was detailed by Governor Poynter to conduct the investigation, and his findings were made pu this after noon. The report hela s eral days by Governor Poynter, and it is quietly rumored m?t lfinnz was given an opportunity to settle the account. B brevent political jon against ., he Governor Poynter and his chances for re- election, the announcement was made in the executive department this afternoon s expected to straighten the Hunt. The report of De France does not show d no infor; i « v longer was sc More: hel that he had come to kill Presider i w! on suspicion Me- Kinley, will be det Chief Wilkie is sat archist and did m »me to this count that Lang Is short in his accounts,” pro- tested Secre Jewell “It merely sum of $3979 78, money de- rived from the sale of produce, has not | been turned over to the State, and I un- derstand that Lang does not dispute the assertion. Most of the money, I under- tand, was received from the sale of truck grown on the grounds surrounding the in- stitution. It may be that Lang is hold. ing it back pending the settlement of his claim for salary.” h the intent cne, but he is u inal record. of assassinating any rstood to have a erim Beaten to Death. ST. JOSEPH, Mo., Aug. 27.—Nicholas Aylward, aged 7, an inmate of the coun infirmary, died to-day from the effects a beating administered by Jack Han an attendant. Hanlon cannot be f From War to Peace. Two large cannon from the Civil War ar be melted and cast into a statue repres peace, to be placed in the Capitol contrase between the two conditic 13 a way as the change Hostetter's Bitters will bring about in' the health | one who uses The Bitters strengthens t digestive ¢ s all disorders such . torpid lver or weak .06000¢'0v0000090000§2 s + 3 ~ * t Jhe Day’s Dead ! 3 3 B4444 4444449450 444+4+0 C. P. Nance. SALINAS, Aug. 21.—C. P. Nance, one of California's earliest pioneers and one of Monterey County's eldest and most . is dead ame to California in 1852 . Ind., and spent abos fourteen the mines of Butte | County. 69 he came to Salinas and ducted a general mer- , but later went to San his son, he has car- | He was ch Lucas, where, w ried_on an extensive business. an Odd Fellow. He leaves a widow, one . a brother and two sisters. Mr. ance’s estate is valued at $300,000. H | “ay \ Edward Maynard. | | N Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, Aug. 27.—Edward Maynard, a prominent citizen of this city, died last evening after a lingering illness. He was | a native of Illinois and 5 years of age. | Deceased had resided here for twenty- | five years. A widow and two sons sur- | vive him. —_—— | The Rev. A. M. Hough. } | : Meren ot GETTING IT THROUGH 1.08 ANGELES, Aug. 27.—The Rev. A. M. Hough, brother-in-law to Jay Gould, died to-day at the age of 0 years, from L paralysis. He leave a large estate and a | HIS HEAD. widow survives him. He was well known u | a= a_philanthropist in the Methodist com- | munity of this ci | Alanson W. Beard. BOSTON, Aug. 21.—Alanson W. Beard prominent for years in Republican poli- | tics, ex-Collector of Port of Boston and ex-State Treasurer, died at his home in this city to-night, agfl 75 years. Tt {s hard to convince a man when sees the beautiful gloss we lay immaculately clean shirt bosoms and cuffs of his friends that t ew, as he always supposed “done up” by the first-class methods in use at our laundry. Our domestic fi is the correct thing for full dress UNITED STATES LAUNDRY Office 1004 Market Street, Near Powell. Telephone—South 420, Oakland Office—62 San Pablo Ave. are James McWilliams. SAN JOSE, Aug. 2l.—James McWil- liame, aged 64, a pioneer resident of Sara- toga and well known throughout the county, dropped dead this afternoon from heart disease. ST Returns to Pineknot Lodge. SARATOGA, N. Y., Aug. 27.—Mrs. Collis P. Huntington returned to-day to Pine- knot Lodge, Racquet Lake, Adirondacks. R. JORDAN’S ansav WUSEUM OF ARATONY 1051 MARZET 5T bat. Anatomical Museum in fle feaknezsow of ay contactd 77777 The Word. disease pesitivel7 cured by the oldist Specmlisten the Cotse. Lt 36 years. OR. 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