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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1900. 'COLOMBIA IS GETTING READY TO WAGE WAR UPO WILL CUARD BALLOT BOXES N KENTUCKY @ | | [ United States Deputy Mar- shals to Be Stationed at || Polling Places. l CONFIDENT| | 3 State Positively That | Fair Count Is Made | Will Be Elected Governor. L LT, WEL ASHINGTON, ntulky returns of | ment | £ GOULD'S FAMOUS YACHT ATI TA, WHICH HAS BEEN a: \VERTED INTO AN ARMED CRUIS FOR THE COLOMBIAN PRETORIA, Sept. 3.—General Baden | Urges That Immediate Steps Be | No Definite Conclusion Reached in l P?Ywn’a?\{l? 'l""""“l‘f‘f‘d'g;‘“;i"atz“:,‘f‘"}sflél | Taken to Preserve the Giants of Regard to the Handling | 2 ) N, Sept. 3.— % | i3 i & | fast, th-plemme 5, Lora Hoberts reports: | the Forest From the of United States ave to-day issued under her Mai- 4 - I EW YORK, Sept. 3.—Ceorge Gould's | the fizhting that ensued 500 Government | esty's warrant of July 4 proclamations Woodsman’s Ax. Treops. o famous yacht Atlanta, converted | (Foops were killed by the {nvaders. The | announcing that the Transvaal will hence- % ey 4 Siiko B scmel Foulser oripronided :fv 4 losses durirg the war are placed at | fn‘n‘h form a part of her Majesty's do- 2 p S s Cibiay - minions,” W NGTON, Sept. The Depart-| DENVER, Sept. 3.—A e! 1 with rapid-fire guns of the latest| “{Vhen Colombia is ready it is sald that| CAPETOWN, Sept. 3.—The communic miufsfin,\gm”“"n, T s el HrGhlian e i Sveetal (o e | 2 pattern, will leave this port at an |she will ask indemnity from Venezuela of | tion to the Assembly of Lord Roberts | s ot (ne bi fbreca/of Cikbsuys: . Accocal s : | = early date bound upon a mission about | 3300 for cach of the 500 soldiers killed. or | proclamation anpouneing the annexation | on Investigations of the big t e T A ng to all repor the £ Blackburn, who ar-| which the representatives of the Colom- | #2.500.000 in all. Additional claims may be | of the South African Republic, which will | ifornia, that brings out some interesting | Transcontinental Passenger A@sociation Is | says he has be to which Bhe belongs, main- | = de for property destroyed and also for | hercafter be known as the Transvaal, was | new conclusions. It shows that the di-|now an assured fact. The general pas- : me, and to which sk ’ . e the cost of suppressing the rebels whom | greeted by the Opposition with silence and | mensions of the larger trees are unequai- | senger agents who have been in session n 1 e Information \m]yufm oy | Vene mitted (o cross her horder. | by the “Ministerialists with prolonged | ¢3; that their age makes them the oldest | here since last Thursday morning con. | a ors retu: from Central America o Le asked to surren- | cheering. S E 2 scribed by the e o . 3 es that the United States of Colom- | General Sar; to and his followers, Boers at St. Helena. "“"fl (,m"i“fl;‘c “:,:;,;:\r:‘ dT:,rg‘:;:] N acat :-}17\“1 d_their labors this afternoon, and ] el A SR b " with two gunboats captured in 8| NEW YORK, Sept. 3.—The British| oy & e - she results thereof go to the presidents | T S at zuelar General Sarmiento and 2 X | and most majestically graceful of trees,|and managers of the respective lin who | a . sually nary character, is de ! steamship Masconomo, which has just * gt ith the | will meet Row X Mty 1 . f the crews of the two vessels | arrived from. Bouth Africa. touched at | and the scarcest of known trees, with the | Will meet in New York City September termined to call Venezuela to account for | a into prison in Caracas and | i, Helena for repairs. Captain Mann was | extreme scientific value of being the best | 1% There appears to be no doubt in the mitting rebels to organize there | confiscated, as the rebellion ) permitted to visit the Boer prisoners on | hving iVes“ot & tormer geo- | minds of the agents that their work will | - Eross the fine nto Colombia. d been suppressed in’ Colombia. Thosc | the island. He rode up_the five-mile | logical age.’ ; ©patified by their superior officers t The Atlanta, noted for her speed, was | tHomics of Colombla are. it Is said, about | winding road to the top of Rupert Hill. | whe report says thebark of the big trees Sone af e T devery oB w it i w days . a1 to be set free by President Castro, i 4 Pl vhe ound the | thick and aimost nol affic west of the Missouri g X purchased u special instructions from | 411 {hese incidents have combined to an-| 1ot omood, Blaln, e . 5005 o, | oldest specimens fell- :d_to California points only .723 Market Street, the Colombian Government on July 20. | ger the Colombian Government and popu- | 'The Boer captives are confined within a | ill souna at heart and to the northern coast points | N . ce that time the ht. which was built | lace against Venezuela. Besides heavy | barbed-wire inclosure a quarter of a mile unknown to it. Yet be covered by the association, | SAN FRANCISCO. " i Bl , the | for Jay Gould, has been undergoing a |money indemnity an apology and guaran- | square. Twelve feet from the fence on s apparently have t in-| although it is believed that the railroad | MAIN OFFICE PORTLAND, OR. ats Virginia, Maryland | quiet sformation in the Erie B tee for the future will probably be asked. | all sides is a_second trocha like the first. | crea their range since the glacial |lines leading to the north will later come | BRANCH L SEATTLE. WA end M ave a similar condi- | From a luxurious pleasure craft Venezuelans say that these demands wili [ It is death for a Boer private to cross | epoch. They have only just managed to|into the organtzation. None of these lines | - = = e t < to the fact that | been changed into a war vess be refused if they are insisted | the line of the inner pen. One Boer was | hold their own on the little slip of country | were represented at’this meeting. d inci- | armame: onsists of six mac guns | upon war robably result b shot by sentinel for doing this. The | Where the climate iz locally The question of the handling of troops L > & which | 2 o -fire 4.7-inch rifle mounted for- | t two countries. S British soldier was then tried and ac-| Continuing the repc will remain in statu quo for a time at DR. ’V\i:Y ER.\. & CU' man- | W . The day of the nta's departure | both countries have recently purcha quitted by a court-martial. grove now thoroughly safe ( least. No definite conclusion was arrived Demo- r destination are diplomatic secrets. | arms and ammunition in large quantities| ‘‘While the Briti sldiers sleep thir- | tion is the Maripo: nd this is far from | at concerning this point, which has occu- Specialists ¥ last ordi to trustworthy advi from | in this countr Colombia has just or-| teen men in a tent 1id Captain Mann, | being tne me inte ost of the | pied more time and attention than all the Diseases and Colombia_there is a Strong pc eling | dere 000 w Remington rifles, firing | ‘‘the Boers sleep only ten men in a tent. | othe oves eit of or L" others combined. The leaving of the mili- Weakness f 1 against Vene a as the result of the re- | small bulle similar to the Spanish | In order to afford them all the room pos- | di of being I > very finest | tary matter in this shape is due to the akness of o t internal struggle. Cha s are openly | Mauser. he guns are light and carry | sible the British have allowed the Boers of all, the Calaver: , with the big- continued and persistent opposition of th Men. Estab- [ 9] St made that Venezuela instigate sword bayonets. | to cut bamboos for s These bam- | Sest and tallest trees, thé most uncon-| Santa F | Beie? 188:. B lion and gave comfort to th Although the fevolution In Colombia has | boo frames the Boer: e ingeniousiy | taminated surroundings and practicaily | “The next meeting of the passenger pobstiod] Colombia. It is ted tha beer wn the standing army, said to | covered with canvas with slabs of | all thc literary and scientific assoc | agents will be held in Chicago some time ol PR the rebels c d the lin mber @000, is kept up, and there is no | tin. The tin they obtained in a curious | of the could with it be purchased | during October. Meanwhile the execu- most £ K at the com- | zuela into Colombian territory and that in | talk of disbanding it. way. There were on the island a great | easily of a lumberman who came into tull | tive committee, consisting of E. . ®e- tensive prac- § . ot Songiot | many paraffine cans, which the Boers | possession on April 1. ~The Sequoia and | Cormick of the Southers® bactne. By, e. Canst Stat should appear s - carefully flattened out for tin sides and | General Grant national parks, which are| Lomax of the Union Pactfic, John Sebas- iy Lt field ; e o | : art o lig trees, are i epih o r i > [T VAVARII IS AR NN RS A ain, who is dying in | Prisoners Well Treated. ! eaten into by a sawmill each, and the pri- | \y¢ [vv;;\‘][ shbigins ¥ h‘}','.’,‘f - ,i'rh”"' Hours, 810 5, A s 4 ¢ e Bethieliem. Some of the prisoners are permitted to Vate timber clalms amount to a total| charge of such work as can be qumn e 7 to 8; Sun- | ¥ 1t The Day’s Dead 3| siionsiammes,ener, Sagman, at | work for the furmers, on the eland. and | oI 88 1, wcanty patcnen or v | 220Finion wil ot “uecome Sy by S ter. ) : derton station, the n passed | therehy F le money. There were st of the scanty patches o til afte eet t E Erancis . & y that station on time and followed the rule | ey sacn 70 ents old, and Just as many laveras, Tuolumne and Tulare | Moibetior (8 meeting in October. - The | 731 Market St.. San Francisco. = - in order | % 3 | ot the company, which requires any train | nipess 15 16 and 1 now ' disappearing—by = the | anq the officers thereof Will be chosen ot _—g . 084 Eht | @eeesstts0tttsttotsisd |COmMINE ¢ another within five minutes |~ “The officers with whom I conversed rief, the majority of big trees of | tho Chicago meeting Do nertss I0fen at 2 Hopnd o e A ((.; 1,“.\\”1.;.(\1":;.' ylurd a red n;.;lg between | spoke both Dutch and Y-Inglli‘h.‘ 'l’he_r{:r' ifornia are owned by people “'"‘Lfi"fi‘,;“ committee the vote Vi '1”:"\." ST e S S e o 2 A | he tracks. In three minutes the excur- | vates seemed rathe stupid lot. y r and in many case very in- cad . i & % returned 4s cast. LORENZO D. LEWELLING, |LS,'facks In throe minutes the excur. | vates seomed rather a stupld lot. & it theim Tat i pont, jheadavarters—Deaver, | MANHOOD RESTORED “gumrosne. Davis at the throttle and making forty | | conversed with Colonel Schiel, the most recent investigs accord- e | Vitalizer, T N REPUBLICANS IN EX-GOVERNOR OF KANSAS mi in hour. Davis made no effort to| man officer who fought with the Boers. | ing to the report, confirms the estimates T famous i stop and waved Benner to one side. The | He was very cantankerous still. that these giant trees have probably lived ARTHUR SEWALL IS ’ quickly SESSION AT SARATOGA o ter had only time to secure his flag | “Commandant Roose, the Boer officer '5000 years or more, though few of even the | WICHITA, Kans., Sept. 3.—Ex-Governor | und_sp out of danger the train | who captured Winston Churchill, told me | larger trees are more than half as old. DYING IN MA | — Lewelling died very suddenly and unex- | Jrebt Py XL pward, on may that [ that he dhoushictle game massup andi The R eh of Ciameiae tr oxs e aed INE | P 3 X, pt. 3.<The me ctedly ” 2 P ansg Sty signs - E er, | his people ou 0 sto) % at one inc iameter S | A. X. X, Sept. 3.~The meet- | pectedly of heart fallure at Arkansas, | Shn qucs Said he had received no | Poer aleere are allowed to do- pretty | years. The report also corroborates the T | a : tee of the Republi- | Kans., at 10 o'clock to-night. orders to stop the train. This would seem | much as they please and their names are | Statements of one authority who says that | BATH, Me., Sept. 3—Arthur Sewall, | stops. all loswes - rt ught forth no de- | — 3 to conflict with a _statement made by | posted at the St. Helena Club, The Brit- ' one tree on which he counted 4000 rings [ Democratic candidate for Vice President | night. € + n. The selec- | Iorenzo D. Lewelling was born in S: General Super ent Sweigard that ail | {sh officers entertain them at afternoon was undoubtedly in its prime, ‘“‘swaying 5, is in a critical condition at his | liver, the kidneys and t rman was a mere | lem, Henry County lowa, December 21, | agents stop o train, orders or no | teas and General Cronje is practically the | in the Sierra winds when Christ walked | summer home at Small Point n | impurities. Cupide res n ssions of the | 1846. His father, who was a minister of | orders, re is five minutes time or less | steady guest of the Governor. the earth. miles from this city. s | s r Wednesday will | the Society of Friends, and his mother | belween them. | eA Cable now runs to the island from = The revort states among other things, | Miles from this eity, Sy ason suffe - e e roed oonsent of | dted when ho was quite voung and he i Sweigard also indicated that the | South Africa and the bulletins from the as the result of official Investigations: | JEFC0, With 4 sttack of apoplexy at 10| 1 pecause B Hichoqpdrsiutondes g Mrntgin Focpi it t Groves made some effort | seat of war are frequently struck off and | *“The only ce in the world where the | SSIock last night and has been uncon- | wratitis. Cu > K s Ty e to hold the train up before it reached | sold to the prisoners at a penny aplece. big trees exists is in ten isolated groves | SGpUS JA0R, OF the time since then. T . e o e fup S Souderton, but said that it was vet to be | A Dutch ship anchored while I was there, | on the west slove of the Sierra Nevada | , 't Sewall's condition was unchanged | A w oagh's i Prig Bgfmiadonler el ot learned whether it was because of his | but was requested to leave and did so.| Mountains. The s b, Howeveriverme= | S0, 0 QSIS Ho IS Dot Tegained: con- { fatu » el o dl he went witn | neglect or bad wires due to a heavy fog | The British were afraid some of the Boers | sent a surviving orical ‘genus of | Sicting that there was sbeorutaly oo Bive | “Sena or 3 o United States quartermasters depart. | Prevaiied atthe tme that the train was | would get away on thelr cousins’ ship.” | trees once growing widely over the globe. | for ‘Ris ‘recovery. 'His death is ot . o e ennessecy ‘He | nOt stoppec ¥ he sroy ow some reproduc- i kit - ERpacted t - S b T Sl HOTEL ARRIVALS. In that year he mustered out in 186 HER NEIGHBOR, VENEZUELA N IVESTING | BRI " ARROH Four Boer Commandos Are Boldly Closing In on - Ladybrand. RELIEF IS BEING HURRIED BT Although Lord Roberts Has Annexed the South African Republic, the Fighting Is Not Ended. gl AZERU, Basutoland, Sept. 3.— Commandos under Foureil, Gro- belaar, Bemmer and Hassebrock, together ith 200 of Theron's scouts, are investing the British garrison at Ladybrand. 1t is rumored that the troops have al- ready burned their stores, and it is feared that they wiil be compelled to surrender. General Hunter is hastening to their | reltet. SPREAD OF BUBONIC TS, Tlllllllll—ll—.—.l——l— ADVEETISENEN NEARLY 8000 DEATHS FROM CHOLERA IN INDIA DURING CNE WEEK BOMBAY. Sept. 3.—Official returns show that there were 7969 deaths from cholera in the native and British states during the week ending August 25. The number of relief works are de- creasing and the numberreceiving gratuitous relief are increasing. EE-E-B5EEEEE R STRONG PLEA FOR Bl TREES - CALIFORN Report Issued by the Department of Agri- culinre. Al = I—I—m | - 3B eEEan CONFERENCE OF RAILWAY M 18, SUCCESSFUL Transcontinental Passenger | Association Now an Aszured Fact. Sositively cured Uy (hese Littie Pills. They also refieve Distress from Dyspepeia, | fndigestion ana Too Hearty Eating. A per fiect cemady tor Dizziness, Nausea, Drov ik ness, Bad Tasten the Mouth, Coatea Tonr | Pam in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Reguiaie ihe Bowels, Purely Vegetable. S:nall Pil, Small Doses Small Brira. alChair LED re Dread of the Dent a come out of the stupor in which he has | pet lain since stricken. The family is about iting these groves. In the northern : regro school criied | sroves the specles hardly holds its own. | the' pedside maring he dop i o bim for £k 1ed @ bus GRAND HOTEL. PLAGUE AT GLASGOW | —_— xS e vis= DR. JORDAN’S gasav ¢ N. . i M M s . B X SR S e 3 e e CRIMINAL KILLED BY Pl clrks o meet. SHUSEGM OF ANATOMY . - college he Grove a team on the ‘alo Alto | W W Brentivl S5 ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Sept. 3—The g : : i for a time and later worked Alo’ | 8 Curtis. Seattie :Germ::s Say It S;w\:s frli;;-;itlil:; Neg | A PARTY OF FARMERS | frst national convention of the reunited 100 ¥ASTETCY. et SRATD. S5CL 4 e nd o the railioad. Retarming 3 WnieSTos Angeles | g’““A"“th“.t."s | S Postoffice Clerks' Association. embracing o W p— E i he -worked as a bridge builder A S G J Kennedy, N Y uthorities. | < = its membership 10,000 of the total of sitively carad by the oldest DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN and soon after entered Whittier College, | pnain; Vallaty 1D Fiain, Chg | GLASGOW, Sept. .—The area infected | FTanci8 Frohm Found in the Moun-| 1,0 cierks in the postoflice service of the pecmisten the Comst. Bt Hyears 9 OPENED IN KENTUCKY | Fhere, be studied and tiugnt « INVietor, & Ban ¢ 1 Seaeisalln 1 | with bubonic plague has spread to Go-| tains and His Body Riddled United States and its possessions. met 0R. JORDAM—PRIVATE DISEASES | Effn‘iugf‘rifinl ';:],«1‘ :\”5‘3';1.'.’1 t C Carmen, Palo Alto|C R Sawver, Boston | van, on the left bank of the Clyde. A boy | With Bullets. present. The question of supporting a P e g b L gy 3 gy P e | perintendent. in 260 he e 0| MT Hardon & niece, i 8 Johneon. Omaha | dled there Saturday, and to-day the medi-| HARRISBURG, Pa.. Sept. S—Francis|law classifying clerks as in other divic | Pos.ries Cursin cvery oot wadertabane } K ~There was] 20 Earmine and: s woris Salem | ¢ ¥on Manta Creer Cee% | cal authoritles certified that he was & Frohm, St. - Rohm, alias Joseph, s of the service will be one of the PHLOSOPEY or | to-day to hear | Register. Th \ married and DA Porter. Salinas | Victim of the disease. Three additional | known as “Shorty.” a desperate cttminal. | features for discussion by the convention. | L 5 [l e ol | e |Bfiee B Hee | Teported in this | was shot to d party of farmers —— |9 o JGRDAN & €O, 1051 Marxerse 8. 5. k. | Be continued for Afteen yoars. o o oore] T iy IE B | "BERLI The presence of the | to-day in the v of Elizabeihville, 2 ba district | He took a ding parl in the nationa dakland L Du Pon . Berk | bubonic plague gow is commented | Pa. Frohm and two companions, Frank el i < e - | T nal } and a | conference of charitie: for some | Ventura Mrs L C Coe. Palo Alt | upon here indignantly, as going to show | Winiski and “Whity" Strusser, an Fri- | 5 e or | Fessy was s siematwer G KresRent ot b ngeles | D Pattin. M criminal negligence on the part of the |day night shot a man named Straver at ’ of | Towa State al School Board. In 1880 5 B Thomas, Delano British_authoritie lizabethville, while trying to rob his G cessor. Mec- | he started the Des Moines Capital, a Re g T M e olema ol | . VIENNA, Sept. 3.—On account of the | houvse. < ¢ the Demo- | publican paper, which he cdited for two & 3 Jarun, Seoastol | preaking out of the bubonic plague at| The next morning Winiski was arrested | 8 L] ‘ ¢ a candid y . when he returned to the charge of | Visalla * | Glasgow the Austro-Hungarian Govern- | at Elizabethvilic and is now in jail. After | - . for 1 also well | form L 5 - Hansen, Pt Arena | ment has ordered a medical examination | the affair at Strayer's house, Frohm tried { ¥ e | e to Wichita, Kans., and N ‘Wellock, Fortina | of all ships arriving from English ports. | to rob other houses and held up a farmer. A Af vernor Beck- | engaged in commercial pursuits. He | R P Winters, Riversde | NEW YORK, Sept. 3. ulth ~Officer | Who escaped. commitied other depre- e r ¢ in the | gained much reputation as a public speak. \ rv. L Ang | Doty, who boarded the City of Rome, |dations and the entire neighb i 3 ¢ n to the | er and a reformer in politics and in 1 8 Barbara | from’ Glasgow. to-day, found no traces of | nood turned to hunt him. He S Gow one of unsuccessful candidate for the o oo haoman, L ADE | hubonfc plague. Dr. Doty said: We | disce in mountains. Frohm shot | ) fons ever nomination as Sec v of State. B hapman, T A% | found no sickness on board amd I am sat- | at his pursuers, who returned the fire and | : In this Over 1an e r"v L8 r“:mx;u;te‘n;“uxfll elected X Henderson, Mercd | Isfied that no one on the ship is infected. JETasIng e Il T | € ne. sovernor o ansas by the Democrats 3 Kendall, § Brdno | The ship's passenger list is made un al- | = o ! o 30 2ot and Populists and was again nominat ndall, & Brang | most exclusively of Americans, who have | CORPSE SHIPPED AS i YERKES 7O MAKE A I ey e ;',“i‘;,fd.‘,'{ x‘e"hr":’fioir' the | 3 W Ryan, ho R y, N Haven | been traveling in Europe for the past i i own, McNamee w, Redlands v TOUR OF Morrill, the Repubucan candigate | _Humboldt B | eator Am “HOUSEHOLD” GOODS | KENTUCKY cted in the tidal wave that carried | Mrs T H Teale, KansC|J C Ing. Sacramento | the State for that party. After that time Mr. Lewelling took but little active part in politics. J D Ludwig, Orecon G W Watkins, Stocktr. G_§ Pierce, Fresno W § H Depue, Petaluma Franme Jr, Sisso 3 E Moore, Denver F E Bradley, Texas F,_Ashe & w, Soled C § Burgess, S Barl BOWLING GREEN, Ky . Sept. 3.—Hon. John W. Yerkes Republican candi- od to-day, accom- — - Leonard Hill. rn_Kentucky. mak- health, died this morning. He was 53 from the rear M vears of age and a native of England. The rs Chavanne, London |[E J Fowler, Cai g at Lewis- | body will be shipped to Newman for in-| T S White, Pa J F Parks, Jackson | terment. W A Brewer, Cal AH Vinton, Worcester O cwmls e 5o ihe — - S e cal o |R S Vinton, Worcester of 2 | . P. i Miss Livingston, Oak |G Arn f, C: : litical meeting held . Mrs. P. H. Leslie. Friedlander & wf, OaklMeredith, Cal ~ 3 xpoie £oF the D | HELENA, Mont., Sept. 3—Mrs. P. H.| G Michey, Berlin J E Marble, Los Ang cr Court room. Severgl | Leslle died to-day at an advanced age. | e e Al 2 reAAwRI s Hose s n _Several | o - S Mrs ircen,Aberdn' A Bul wf, Cal housand e col ated at Fountain | She was the wife of Governor Leslic, who | js'\v Runvon, R BIuff| Walter Magee &wf,Cal Park to toar the address by Mr. Yerkes | had the unique distinction of being Gov- | 1t Koch Tiambare |8 b amangce &wi.Ca B }m—m..— of two States, Kentucky and Mon- | F § Foote, Michigan | C E Hill, ] v DEMOCRATS THE | tana, and who survives his wife at the | CE Pearsoll&wf,Eurka L L Bailéy, d Al age of §3 years. W G Goslin, Oregon | E C Thibandier, Yokoha, > 5 H W Keller, Ang Von Kroster, VICTORS IN ARKANSAS | Cornwall of Alexandria Bay, who with his | € | partner, J. F. Walton, founded the Thou- | | Andrew Cornwall. | M ri‘\m |h'§ ‘h{,c»\gh l‘i h(-;‘ 3 ?n cow - N, N. Y. ! Voodcock, Chgo | Wm Harding, China | WATERTOWN, N. Y., Sept. 3.—Andr o AT - ambers, Los Ang | Mrs Marsh, Japan J C White, E Florence Neale, H Lindlay, Klamath R HF | Mrs A Glllmour, Ja |3 Freiberg&wr,Tol nd Isiands as a_summer resort, is dead, i cears. He was a candidate for ay. | Congress in 1562, il ——— vole wi | — ,f); | Mrs. Aaron Wi owing and his | PORT 'TOWNSEND, Sept. 3.—Mrs. - cars ago will | Aaron Wood, for many years a mission- | usually large Demo- | ary in South Africa, died here to-day | ere Was 10 opposition | aged 53 years. ™ HATFIELD WRECK DUE TO CARELESSNESS Sl | Railway Officials as Yet Unable to Decide Which of Their Em- R J Planter, New York G T Gay, Los Ang Miss Planter, N ¥ T Fint Jr. San Ju NEW WESTERN HOTEL. ‘Wm Cholker, Suisun L Probst & wf, N Y F Gay, San Jose H B Allison, Toledo W Chinn, Stockton Percy Herndon L. Ang S O Goucher, Iowa J E Hall, Santa Cruz ————— ‘L C Rudd, Naples, | Bié Bléit in VSpo-k;ne. | NE. Wash., S | i es, agri- lements and harness, was ¢ fire this afternoon, causing a | mice set fires by gnawing matches. resume business. LATE SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. ARRIVED. Monday, September 3. the wreck yesterday on the Philadelpnia |and cotton waste. and Reading Railway at Hatfield, twenty- | ven miles from this city, which resulted | | in the loss of thirteen lives and more or | | less serious injuries to fifty-three persons, | was due to negligence or direct disregard strument. e — h % '}’fr\rr‘:i’j::rfl(]_,\;a?‘: Special Dispatch to The Call. H B Wood, alnA.vlc:e wg?urg"r Gay, Los Ang United States Marshal of | SANTA CRUZ, Sept. 3—Leonard Hill of | ¥r3,JL B Wood, § Jose Fdk Gay, Los Ang Senator Kirk. Wednesday | Newman, Stanislaus County, who has | Spes mmnth v |§ 5 Bexier, S Monica 1 begin a tour of the min- | been in Santa Cruz for a year past for his | Miss A Kohlmon, N Y|C F Scott,’ New York Fremire, London |P A H Franklin,S Lake J B Alexander, L Ang O D Hampson, Japan npson, Japan Mrs W E Gritfin,Reno, Miss E Waring, Oak A L Rudd, Naples,N Y Mrs 1] Sears, Sacto Mrs S R Kay, Chicago Paul J May, Ds Molnes R T Twombly, Iowa A Boston fire insurance company recent- Iy made an Interesting investigation to dis. cover if possible whether there is any rea- son for the popular beiief that rats ana The The mice, no matter how hungry they were, never gnawed the matches, but the rats set several fires, the | sulphur matches being in each case the in- ns CAPTAIN WILDE ON THE GROUNDING OF OREGON | Accident Not Due to the Fault of the qpmmander or Any Officer of the Vessel. WASHINGTON, Sept. 3.—The Navy De- bra battleship Oregon of the circumstances attending the grounding of that ship in cessful salvage. firm the department’s previously express- ed conviction that the grounding was not in any respect attributable to fault on the part of Captain Wilde, who, in fact, ap- pears to have exercised eéxtraordinary precautions to guard against the acci- | dent. Nor was any other officer to blame. Oregon arrived yesterday at Woosung where she is to form one of the interna tional fleet to guard the transport servic NATIONAL COMMANDERY. pan ledo at New York. NY mittee and officers were elected as fol- lows: National Commander, W. A. E. Morris, New York: vice commander, H. : R. Slater; national adjutant, William imated at $30.0% to stock and Was Re: experiment covered a period of three alers e & the building. The loss is fully Bloyes Was Siesponiinls. | months. Rats and mice, singly or several | Sanati national auartermaster, Gegree neurance. The company wil] | PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 3—It seems to | 5i°a time, werc confinéd In large iron | nafional” judge | advocate, B. B. Hyd on arrival of the new | be the gencrally accepted conclusion that cages containing matches of various kinds Graff; 1 national chaplain, Marks Graff; national «Valda,” the sensational t partment has just received by mail the official report of Captain Wilde of the the Gulf of Pechili last June and her suc- The report goes to con- | The repairs have been completed and the (li)tu'ing the existence of the Chinese trou- Officers Chosen at the Encampment NEW YORK, Sept. 3.—The fifteenth an- nual encampment of the National Com- DR. PIERCE'S MAC | has CURED thousands ¢ ! like 1t. Best retainer Investigate for your: let No. 1" or send 2 ¢ dress: MAGNETIC ELASTIC T 620 Market Or 1143 Broa Box Containing the Body of a Woman Found in a Carload of Furni- ture at Chicago. CHICAGO, Sept. 3.—The body of a wo- man shipped by freight in a carload of furniture arrived here to-day over the Chicago and Northwestern from Randall, Ja. The health authorities took charge of tne car. The body was that of the wife of J. R. Johnson of Randall, Ia. W* ing to remove to Chicago at the smallest cost and bring his wife's body with him. Mr. Johnson had the body disinterred and boxed, and then shipped it under the head ‘But a Square Ilea- Is what you are affer. Odds and e are all right, but i€ you cannot fet yaos feet into them, what good are they ow, We are selling cheaper than any store in this city. We have regular lines, neat and nobby styles, but we sell y of “‘household goeds.” Six days were oc- ;P&:m cheap. 1;.‘;.u is ‘l‘h; secret of our > cupied in transit. uccess. this week LADIES' VICI T A . SO KID LACE SHOES. embroidered vest. || | KIONEY 'S LIVER Battleships at Bar Harbor. BAR HARBOR, Me., Sept. 35.—The United States battleships Texas, Indiana, Massachusetts, Kearsarge and Kentucky arrived here at 1 o'clock tc-day and anchored in two columns west of the flagship New York. During the forencon a body of Sclectmen and the Board of Trade paid an official visit to Rear Ad- miral N. H. Far The visit was im- mediately returned by Admiral Farqubar, who also visited Lieutenant General Scho- field, U. §. A., retired; Rear Admiral Up- chur and President Johnstone Livingstcne at the Bar Harbor Reading-room. TELEGRAPUIC BREVITIES. new coin toes and kid ti be reduced to $1.43 a pair. Sizes 315 to 8, widths C, D and E. SN BAJA CALIFORNIA amiana Bitters RESTOEATIVE, INVIGORA D trustees—Joseph B. Baldwin, Thomas Shelly and Julius Beyer. y t+4+t ettt ettt et M@UNT STERLING, Ky.. Sept. 3.—Fire to- day destroyed the Onconta Lumber Company's sawmill and lumber yards at Scranton. Loss, $60,000. CHICAGO, Sept. 3.—The fourteenth annual convention of the National Manufacturers’ and Dealers’ Protective Association began here with seventy-five delegates present. RICHMOND, Ky., Sept. 3.—Judge French Tipton, who was shot by Clarence Woods last Saturday, dled to-day. Both men are among the mest prominent in Madison County. LONDON, Sept. 3.—At a meeting of the Liy- erpool Steamship Owners’ Association to-day v it wi greed that 1 in th L Simr Alcazar, Gunderson, 31 bours from Port | of stenete’ While the company will not | CERTUSS RIS PMANE BRSNS | T story of court life at Peking, <+ | tral necienitaced an ai-around s ngeles prepared to make any formal state- 3 - 3 i * A ocpan sTEAMERS. merit until to-morrow, the principal line | Greece. and generally throughout Europe. begins in next Sunday’s Call, +| " i\Chreren Engiand, sept.a—The s NEW YORK-Arrived Sept 3—Stmr State of | Of investigation is being drawn ut W. September 9. e ners using American cotton are, it is np\:?(:‘i Nebraska, from Glasgow and Londonderry. 8. Groves, the train dispatcher at Phila- | A return shows that during 1809 41,232 pte % + t SOUTHAMPTON—Salled Sept 4—Stmr delphia; D. B. Breidier, the operator at burossa, from Bremen, for New York Souderton, two and a half miles from 800 more than the p: year, natives emigrated from Ireland, nearl; P S S S S e 22T ) on the exchange, considering the closi thetr ‘mifls for fourteen 4ays, OWing $o° the scarcty of cotton, . R | mandery of the United States Regular 2 | 2 o Army ayma Navy Veterans was held to- pdfiie I\ A Tek NI AT b A | The ‘ost “wondertul, sphrodistac and Speciai ay in this city. i , | ]| Tonte for the $ o Following a short address from Nation-| WINNIPEG, Manitoba, Sept. 3.—Hon. Colonel ,‘,:,‘,‘vh ;{}";‘ embroidered vesting tops, nar: The Mexican remedy (or Diseases al mmander Colonel N. N. Hyde of [ McMillan has been appointed to succeed Pat- Wl Ane me'?he;ns tios, hand turned seys and BledOer ALFS & BRU Pottsville, Tenn., reports were read of the | terson as Lieutenant Governor of the province. to ® g Sll'::l.ch‘ r:ec . re@:::i - S general commanders and a standing com- 3 0 i, widths 22 Mark » B to PR, HALL'S REINVIGORATOGR Five hupdred reward for any case we cannot cure. This secret | remedy stops all losses in 24 hours, cures Emisstons, Impotency, Vari- cocele, Gonorrhcea. Gleet, Fits, Strictures, Lost Manhood and all ing effects self-abuse or sses. Sent sealed. 32 dottle: 3 Giloria Shoes $3.50 For ladies. All styles, in kid, patent leather or box calf, turned o Welted B. KATCHINSKI, PHILADELPHIA SHOE CO. 10 Third St., San Francisco. bottles, $5; guaranteed to cure any case. dress HALL'S MEDICAL INSTITUT Broadway, Oakland, Cat ale at ket st. Also for al | \ i i DR, CROSSMAN'S sPeciFc kxR For the cure of GONORRHOEN\. GLEET g'rmc'ru‘ngf -::l“:nnhgoux complaints uf rgarw of Generation. Frice § & bottis. For sale by druggias