The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 21, 1900, Page 2

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© INSURGENTS HOPEFUL OF BRYAN'S SELECTION Resumption of Activity by Followers of Aguinaldo Due to the Im- pending Elections. Desperate Attack by Captain Mitchell Routs the Enemy, but With a Terrible Loss. Special Dispatch to The Call. ovince (Luz: LINGTON HO-|1 tivity has 20.—The Ais- | \ion in letters egram received | Ay 2 August At day. when | (cay h ry e rej of the Taft | b& h Infantr ich in th attacked ~insurgent ¢ much in the re- | ¢ e e gagement at Mavitac in he | lac Desperate fight 7 guna, which comes within | Whick ed from the front with great Mitchell walst across causeway and deep. Attack under with forty men Com- ntry, and ten men Com- he hirty-ninth Volunteer Infantry, could 1 enemy’s position because of high arm of la which could not be entire country was afloat in cons: of recent rains: this very much offensive action nd twenty minutes of fighting 2 naloa. Upon renewal 3 that insurgents had es- ious doutt going back Into contigy disappear for time being or until called & 1 lia province ¢ s peaceful amigos. - from which | | okl 2 - t band 1le and Lieutenant m dward St cup. Alfre -3 v unded—Captai MACARTHUR. — - CORRECTED LIST. | Further Details of the Severe Fight- ing Had at Siniloan. MANTLA. 20.—A corrected list of e casualties sustained by the American € Monday last in the engagement Sept ween the tachme: Thiriy-seventh United States s giments, show that twenty- T are including two who from of their wounds o fight missin and ] nded. including Morgan of Co i The ¢ been reported. RENCH ARMY REVIEWED is now T BY PRESIDENT LOUBET Grand Demonstration Takes Place Near the Suburbs of Chartres. the long line and d f e charge to the foot of the trib- ¢ gt nding the proceedings was given to the generals by the h i the review. During th imaking ( wral Andre t k w rece eulogize havior of the troops, | A dre. A | tharked President Loubet for the interest d Presi- | he 1 taken in the army and dwelt upon precision with which eat army. which greatest tests of the ma- been carried out. He con- arking feel myself justified in = you that the army you had o fiag rewiewed is solid, well trained ped and ripe for success, and g hose value the country can abs. = to General Andre, “President Dkos . stowed the highest praise on rmy, saying it had proved that France mig! & implicit confiden i it. Then. raising his voice. the Presiden E e canily: “Its respect for the in stitu nd Jaws of the country demon- strates highly how vain are the attempts made to separate them from the dembc. acy. The solicitude of the chiefs for the troops and the confidence of the troops in their chiefs aesure the army’s strengih and are guarantees that the honor and in- tereste of France are well guarded and that the maintenance of peace is more certain than ever. UPON A MUSTACHE HANGS HOWARD’'S FATE Peculiar Point Involved in the Iden- tification of the Suspected Murderer. FRANKFORT. Ky.. Sept. 20.—DIid Jin Howard have a mustache on January 202 On that question in a great measure B liberty, perhaps his life. The ~ DEWEY SPEAKS ANENT 1 THE HOBSON INTERVIEW Assumes a Patronizing Air and Says He Believes the “Young Man Meant Nothing Unkind.” X —A NEW 1 hardly 1t A perhaps he did * thing unk T s said the S - the defense, including the what & ,(1‘}' H.”!. h']\' :‘: all state that lvng-'nll 2 n and Don Juan -de (e 5, 000 Gags before s, Lote g gy O e g K shave: owman Gaines, o) I were the least injured of | Rake and James F. Dailey, who have . . | identified Howard as the man they saw on January 3 mustache. swear that he had with me Hongkon The Bnanish shipe acd da. | “There goes Jim Howard, clean shaven ; Shanish whips and Je-land better dressed than any man i « a dozen. They were ! 19WN; if he keeps on that w we will never be able te prove that he is a fool.” According to this testimony to-day. ex State Senator Ea Parker made that re mark in London on January 2, where he repairs were ma proceeded unde: Hongkong and had time, undergoing re- | saw Howard. on the streefs. pairs, before Hobson saw them. R streets. “As a mater of fact I mever claimed ‘vf' rier explained that the reason ha that we sunk the ships. I reported that | had sald this was that Howard was then e ‘aestroved them. 1 aid sce with my | ! London to appear for trial for the mur- own eyes an eight-inch sheli strike the “r]" 4 "“"{Ke auer and his plea was to stern of the Reina Christina, Admiral | 6 nsanity. tejo's flagship, and that destroyed e defense is resting its case on the alibi claimed for Howard and is not pay- |ing any attention to the claim of the prosecution that the shot came from the iSw-ro(‘:xry of State's office and other col- ateral matters, which figured larg the trial of Caleb Powers. Wty An FORTY PERSONS DROWNED FROM STEAJAER CHARKIEH Further Details Given of the Loss of the Egyptian Mail Ship. The statement that the vessels were not ioh injured below the water line was | ably true. Every one knows that it i= impossible for shells to do much exe- cution below the water line, or anything | but torpedoes to do much damage there. | A few inches of water Is a great protec- | | fion. Armored ships are mnot armored much below the water line, the water be- protection enough from a shell. hardly think it worth our while to pay much attention to this. You know it je human nature to deprecate what oth- ers have done. and Mr. Hobson may not have been quoted correctly or in fuil."” Cash Sloan Wins. LONDON, Sept. #).—A dispatch from * hens to Lioy PARIE. Sept. 20.~At Maisons Lafitte :t'vm doyd's Stricg further, detafls vesterday Cash Sloan, the American | steamer Charkieh, now ashore on the Sockey: won the Prix de Saliuets, 3000 |isiand of Andres,’ one of the Cyclades, franes, over a course of 1200 on M, |says that forty of the passengers and J. de Bremond's Crane’s Bi crew were drowned., . | L im- | T | and to travel ~ ANOTHER PARAMOUNT THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1900 CREEETINNRE ISSUE. ’ —Harper's Weekly. {ISTORY OF AMERICA | IS ONE OF EXPANSION Roosevelt Explains Why This Country Has Grown and Urges Republican Support. Utah, Sept. 20.—Governor Roosevelt limited the number of his speeches to-day to five, including the night meeting at t place. The special train ‘1. t Pocatello at 6 o'clock- this morning ‘:‘nr‘. arrived at Ogden at § o'clock in the | evening, where a stop was made for the | night. | At Logan the first stop of the day was | made, and there the meeting was held in the Mormon Tabernacle, a mile from the station. Mrs. J. Ellen Foster made the | opening address, introducing Governor | Ronsevelt. The local band plaved “Amer- { tea”™ and Mrs. Foster called the attention | of the audience to the fact that this was | also the national air of England, “God s ueen,” and it was significant, Save the Q | as it might be inferred that England and { an- | { the United States with one national them and one destiny would one day dom- inate the world. Many women were in the tabernacle, and as they are voters here to them Mrs. Foster made a speclal appeal. She sald in part: | 1 am here on this great occasion only for a e Temd T xpeak o you because I am sent moment A0 I mioublican | National , [ 1550 What T can to induce the Soters of Utah and those of you in this State who are; women as well a8 men to stand, in this next election, 2 bliean party and which have been incor- rated into the legislation of that party be- Cause the legisiation of that party has been construetive legislation which has made ‘the country what it is to-day. I am not here to X to you of doctrines and principles, I am here to congratulate you upon the’ pleas- “tore for you this morning. | The tabernacle was well filled and Gov- | ernor Roosevelt spoke in part as follows: more glad than T can well express to T oEtunity Of Speaking to 30u. tha { men and women or the sons and daughters of | the men and women who stretched out into | this land and conquered the wilderness for the | nation. 1 come to speak to on party is- | Miea and upon issues that are far more than party. T appeal not merely to Republicans, but T 'appeal to every man and woman proud of the nd by the country mnow. snge the right of any of you here Westerner than I am. It has fortune béfore to get into your never been my 5 wonderful State, but Idaho, Mentana and the | 1 have worked yakotas ew well for vears Dakotas 1 knew % porked with the people: 1 saw them close u What thes comla do, what they were capable of, ar:‘d'h‘v‘: us “l know the West 1 feel that I [ know this country. "I feel that T know the | American people. T feel sure that when our | peopie have once started to do a piece of work that they wili see it through without fail. This morning, through my good fortuge, I have been able to drive about your beautiful town through your wonderful —and | bemutiful valley., More and more, as 1 look at it, as T.=ee what you and your forefathers have acpe, more and more has it made me feel | proud as an American, to think what you, my | Tellow-Americans, have done. More and more we can yet do. We | conleflm ‘obres(lh on | the memor of what has been done by 080 | an'fiun gone before us. We are not a people who have to take refuge in pride of ancestry, | and admit that we of this day are not able | 1 feel confident as to what | are not a worn out race, o deeds ourselves. On the contrary, while : dllkl‘ the greatest pride in the deeds of the e et atore wis. I feel that the very fact that those deeds were done must spur us | on to do deeds also. | "1t is a great thing to have material great- ness: it 1s @ great thing to be able to point to the hardships, sacrifices and brutality nec- tocary to develop the resources of a great | Gountry; but there is something that lles back of and eyen above material development. It is a greater thing to have the men and women themeelves, 1 admire the way you have come into the wilderness and have made it blossom like the rose. 1 admire what you have done here In building up the country—the farms, ranches and the cities you have built. T like to look at your crops and to look at the output of your mines and everything else that you have here. but what I think vou have the most_cause to be proud of are your children. | 1 helieve with all my soul in the old doctrine that blessed are they who build for the future; | who bring up citizens to rule the land; citizens | 16 %:read our mame and our blood ‘and our principles throughout the »world’s universal Enace, to make the name of America Supreme in this continent as the elder among you did, and who now go forth in the face of the world to make our country in the century that is to come stand toward the Old World as it has tood toward this continent in the century that is closing. Each generation has its allotted task and as we do that task so do we or do we not | leave a heritage of honor to those who come | after us. Now, why are we here to-day? Why am 1 able to speak to' you? Because your fathers were not timid weaklings; be- cause the men and women of the middle of | the nineteenth century came out into this Western eountry, driving their white-topped prairie schooners with the slow ox teams or mules or horses, the men walking beside th wagon. Bt you have all seen the women and the smaller children in the wagon and the larger tow-headed lot walking alongside and the big boys driving the cattle. But you know {4t all. You came out here with your cattle and household goods ;}’m’:‘n homes and build up t commonwea In the words of Lowell, to -pitch new States as- the old worid men pitchs tents. Now how did you do {17 Dia vou do it by serking hrhnl\"e an easy me, by making up. your minds.if you.ocam| | ta. any difficulties you- would :shirk them -and Committee | the doctrines which are taught by the Re- | past and confident of the country’s | ad who {8 resolved fo attain that fu: | the reward that is to be got in the end. that the way the West has been built up No, It is not. The West has been built by the men and women who have been willing (o | face the rougtusrials involved in the situation and to_overcome them. The West has hhen built up by men who belleved in expansion: men who were indeed éxpansionists. We have nevee had a movemert for ex pansion in this country where there were nof a large number of excellent people who held up thefr hands In horror and predicted the death of the country. RIght after the revo- lutionary war some people of -the seaboard Atlantic Swites objected strongly to taking in } the Ohio Valley. One of the foremost states men of my own State predicted what would | happen 1f the white savages wers golng to i'nl(a possession of the Ohio Valley when un | der the control of the national government 1, a New Yorker, am now running that has at its head a representative of one | of the States which that excellent > York gentieman thought would be peopled by white | savages—Ohio. | Theén we came to the Mississipp, and a lot of excellent people said it meant ruin to the land 2nd the dissolution of the Government if we stretched over the Mississt When Presi- a ticket dent Jefferson in 1803 acquired by treaty and | purchase the land beyond the Missis region beyond the Rocky Mountains. | that | acquired it just exactly a | acquired the Philippines, a ellent gentlemen said that meant the fin | ruin ot the country. A Senator from Colonel | Guild’s own State ‘of Massachusetts said that if the worst should come to pass and we should ever have States erected beyond the Mississippi no man could imagine the horror _that would come and the confusion that would fol- low when we Senators and Representatives from the 'banks of the Missourl and the Red rivers, Now the Missouri and the Red River countfics are pretty well in the East, That was i 1811 You will find the speech in the Congressional Globe of that day, but we went on. Then came the Mexican war, and any num- her of peopie sald that if we stretched on fo the Pacific, of course, our country would come to an end. The Idea of taking in what are now the States of Idaho. Oregon and Cali- fornia was sufficient to make them despair of 1 then a number their country. 1 have just passed through Idaho, of which as great a man as Daniel Webster said that the land was only fit for cactus and jackrabbits. We gee what it ig to- day. For the last forty years, through a com- bination of events, the Democratic party has been forced into position of the party that hung back. We have to take it alonz. You #ea it is in the same nation and it has come. It does not want to come. but it had to |con¥. Bach time it has got forward it has found it was not nearly as badly off as it expected to be. Six or seven vears ago Hawaii under President Harrison wished to he annexed to the American nation and the American flag was hoisted. Then came in President Cleveland, with a Democratic administration, and, to use their own language, they hauled down the flag. We have hoisted it again since, gentlemen, and for keeps this time. The Democrats in justi- fying In Congress the action of the President used precisely the arguments they have used against our keeping the Philippines at the present moment. In the firet place they ob- jected because, being a republic, we were not fitted to do the work that other great natlons do: that we are not fitted to do what empires and kingdoms can do; that we could not ven- [ture outside the limits of the continent. In the next place to bring in the islands would be in bring in an oligarchy. At Brigham City an open alr meeting was held and the speaking was done from the bandstand in the center of the village, a mile from the station. Speeches were made by John Henry Smith and Governor Roocsevel In_ concluding his remarks here Governor Roosevelt said: 1 ask you to support the man whom we have nominated because the prom:ees we have made have squared with our performances: because the prophecies of evil to which our opponents have given utterance have been absolutely fal- sified by the events; because you desire the maintaining of the material conditions which bave so well secured our well-being in the past four years, and above and beyond all for ihe sake of the destiny of the greatest republic upon which the sun has ever shown; for the sake of proving at the beginning of a new cen- tury that America intends to be what she boasts she is. the leader among the peoples of mankind, and that the nations of the world shall know that we take no backward step. P U5 HANNA REPLIES TO BRYAN. Says That He Is Going to Tell ths Truth and Sound the Alarm. CHICAGO, Sept. 20.—Senator Hanna de- livered an address to-night to an immense audience of German-American Republi- cans at Central Music Hall. Senator Han- na's speech dealt principally with the prosperity of the country under Republi- can rule and the danger that he charged would follow the election of Mr. Bryan. He referred to the defection of Carl Schurz and Bourke Cockran, saying that they had forgoiten the financlal question and were urging their cause ‘“under the flimsy guise of imperialism. ‘With reference to Mr. Bryan's refusal to engage in a joint debate with him, the Senator said: Mr. Bryan says that he would.not discuss a sea if you could nof get something softer than | the standpoint of a business man T o to sound the note 'of alarm and. warn ¥or ol that this is your campaign. 7 The Congress of the United States passed a urrency bill and it was the intention on t | part of members of both. houses of Congre: that they should settle this question. But th | Democratic-Populistic-Sacialist party ew trial. They have retained some other |lawyers in the cause. From this rostrum I heard one of the m eloquent speeches in 1806 delivered by Carl Schurz. They have got him | They have got Bourke €ockran. They have got a few others that were with us in 1396 to | plead their cause before the people under the fiimsy guise of imperialism got to A8 with finance? No my friends. [Ing into the faces of the pecple that 1 cee by ore me, 1 feel more confident than ever tha | they have got ®0 learn some other, excuse to | Bet away from the issue which the people have settled in their own minds for themselves. There is not much in this question that a peals to the patriotism of the American peopl The war with Spain was not brought on e tirely by the Republican party. The people of the United States rose in their indignation at the horrors committed In Cuba. and by the sheer force of thelr will, through their Repre- sentatives in Congress and the executive of the nation, they demanded that those atrocities should cease. There was n ment when that question came by | Ple for settiement. As & conseq | War the archipelagn of the Philippines came | Into our hends. You know who r there, BRYAN IS AT HOME. on Another Tour. TINCOLN, Nebr., Sept. 20.—W. J. Bryan spent the greater part of the day in going through correspondence which has accu- mulated during his absence. He also re- ceived a.large number of callers. The only formal event of the day was a visit from a committee of twenty-fite members of the Bryan Bimetallle Club of this (Lan- caster) county. who called to assure him of_thelr support. Mr. Bryan has fixed the date for de parture on his next tour for next Wedne: { day. He will speak Wednesday night at | Nebraska City, Nebr., and théen proceed northward to South Dakota, making se eral speeches en route. S Declines the Nomination. DALLAS, Tex., Sept. 20.—Judge N. K. | Homan of Dallas has declined the Prohi | bitton nomination for Governor. Personal interests are given as the reason. B4444 2223+ 434+ +4+440 Jhe Day's Dead Q44444 444444444444440 James Clark. PETALUMA, Sept. 20.—James Clark, a ploneer and one of the oldest and best known citizens of this county, died at his home in the Sonoma mountains :his morning. He came to California in 1849, and almost immediately settled in the So- noma mountains, where he has since re- sided. The hospitality of the Clark ranch is widely known, and the mineral spring located there has made it a sort of a r sort where many people from the metro- polls go each summer for recreation, P i William W. Kennedy. CHICAGO. Sept. 20.—William W. Ken- nedy, who was Chief of Police of Chicago several years prior to that time, was found dead in_hiz bed to-night of heart disease, aged 75 vears. i i Rev. Henry Cooke. Speefal Dispatch to The Call. SEATTLE, Sept. 20.—Rev. Henry Cooke, fatlfer of Jack Cooke, the boy preacher, died here to-day. EMMA ABBOTT'S FATHER HELD FOR INSANITY CHICAGO, Sept. 20.—Seth Abbott, father of the late Emma Abbott, the singer, is at the Detention Hospital. He was ar- rested at Lowell, Mass., several days ago because of his queer conduct. Frederick Abbott, son of the old man, and who lives in this city, brmfiht his father here from Lowell. ien Mr. Abbott reached Chi- cago he was violent and it was found nec- essary to take him to the Detention Hos- tal. He will be taken before the County ourt to-morrow and given a special trial blie question with E?.“'::x.,u l;; ‘“‘fi‘“:‘;,%':""'.?‘“dfih""l‘i as to his sanity. make any Oiferencs - whether from -the: smme |’ - - Stops. the. Cough . .. e e R o G 1 At 8 S o e e i ‘pleT-am-going to-tell-then the truth, ‘and front 'no pay. - Price % cents, - - - PoRSAS has | | taken an appeal and they are going to have a | What has that | Returns to Lincoln Prior to Starting | during the days of the big fire and for | T|CITIZENS IMPRESSED TO CLEAN GALVESTON Warrants Served Forcing All Able-Bodied Males to Aid in the Herculean Task. So Many Bodies Yet Remain Uncovered That to Save the Living Harsh Steps Are Imperative. GALVESTON, Tex., Sept. evening Mayor Jones proclaimed martial law would cease at noon to-mor- row and the civil authorities would as-| 20.—This | tices from the naval training station on that | Goat Island turned over to Mayor Phelan 314875 yesterday as their contribut the func The following additional subscriptions sume direction of municipal affairs. ThiS | were reported to the California State Re- was done at the suggestion of General | lief Committee: Scurry, who expressed the bellef that con- | By committee on real estate dealers ditions had reached such a stage that the | O Baldwin & Son........ = 25 00 civil authorities were able to cope with Haldwin & Howell the situation. This, however, does not | ;. . mean the immediate withdrawal of the | Madison & Burke ¥ military. They are to co-operate with the | Bovee. Toy & Sonntag........coco-oee city officials in the enforcement of order | McAfee gy P and will continue on duty as a part of the | G 5. Umbsen & Co. government. Since martial law has pre- | B. M. Gumn vailed in Galveston good order has re- | Willlam Sharp ........... sulted. It was feared in some quarters Sanderson & Co. that when it became known that the mili- & H 5 tia had given way to civil authoritv the dman, Hooper & Co looting and robbery which began after the :lha‘\‘nwa‘}]”‘h} storm and continued until the declaration of martial law might recommence. The military forces will be used as a check on this character of crime, however, and will in all probability remain here for the next twenty da The shooting of n groes by military men for looting has had a most salutary effect and has in a measure terrorized the offenders; still there are cases of robbery reported daily, which are being dealt with severely. Labor in Gafi‘eswn is at a premium. There is not an idle man in the cl Regardless of station or position, ‘must work. The merchant and his are working side by side along with the subscription, Byron Jack: Murch "& Grey. . . The-Compressed Air Machinery Co Total R _By_committee on jewelers san isco Diamond Houw Max Shirpser Jewelry Co Flgin W, tch Co, man who has known nothing but hard 0 work sinte the time of his childhood. 1t| [ FRRR oo : is a cosmopolitan force now at work on | yasiell & Mue . the city avenues. White men and black | - & B e working in gangs under one head is a | o ™ daily scene. It is all done for the good of Galveston. The health ufl th_lghlnl‘rg Total . D %5 00 must be preserved at any cost. < By committes on taflors’ n must be cleaned and the dead burned that |, gg nd trim I'the survivors may continue to live. It IS |J Faumgarten & Co... 25 00 | imperative that the wreckage about the €. W. R. Fora & Co. 2 0 | city be cleared immediately. The stench | P Rl 5 | arising from the bodies beneath the ruins | P. H. Gallagher & £ - | is becoming unbearable. Samuel Solomon ... 1% To-day warrants were issued to impress el — | every able-bodied man for street-cleaning a e 7 | service. Over 500 men were secured to-day | F;"'Bapk of Californt under this order and fully 2000 men are % W. T Maxweil 50 | engaged in the work. Still this force is | Anspacher Bros 20 00 | not sufficient and more men must be ew| Total . 325 00 | cured. Men for this service are to be fm-| W& - - | i the interior of the State. By Chairman Heliman: | ported from the Siorontug of den Gate Compressed Yeast Co. s 00 The prevailing method of disp O DS < ccbrsi voaivoioncs 25 00 | the dead is cremation. As each corpse is | v 50 | taken out it is thoroughly saturated With| mqoey 4 SR coal oil and thrown into a blazing fire. |y o0 Byl 0 0 oo | This plan of incineration has been entirely | g i TRERD ¥ 5 330 | successful and the bodies are quickly de- . crew, marine porenti stroyed. Funeral pyres are bIazing | “of general storekeeper's office, United throughout the city. States Naval Tralning Station....... u8 7 Captain William Hutchins, superintend- | ; | ent ‘of the Ninth United States Light- " ommerce reported: tealegre & Co. Everett T. Jon house District, embracing ail stations on the gulf coast, has received reports of damage to stations in (ne district. The | | Galveston station was wiped out and the rs. Hayes, and one of the Other persons at the tation were saved. Two of the lifeboats drifted to Hitchcock, fourteen miles nortk | | of Galveston Island,’ e R The Galveston station was Vi t { $15,000 and will be rebuilt. The San Luis | _Red Cross Subscriptions. | life saving station was damaged to the¢| OAKLAND, Sept. 20.—The Red Cross | extent of about ¥ | Soclety reports the following donatfons i T SO S | Total receipts of yesterday. i Previously acknowledged Total to dat $22,987 86 —_——— T s Galvegton suffered | o the Galveston fund: Already reported, ey B e e the Wirms art.| $191 5; new subseriptions, M. Youns. $i | S "Patrick’s Catholic, the First Baptis - B Btk e thodist churches are | B- R. Banning, $; Mrs. C. H. Banuing, | total wrecks, while Trinity Church, the | $; Garrett & Taggart, $; H. C. Taft, % Inst Presbyterian, the Swedish Church | Mrs. H. R. Taylor. ${; Mrs. Archie Bo: o magosue are partially de-|land, $5: a friend. 25 cents: a friend. R It e phucible that Tepairs may | cents; a donor, 50 cents; Miss Annie Lons. make them serviceable. t a church |50 cents: Mrs. R. Veltch, $5; Kahn edifice in the city escaped serious damage, | Bros. $10. The inmates of the Protestant Orphans’ { Home will be transferred to the Sealy building to-morrow, where they will tem- . AUvvEs M} . porarily reside their bullding h_:\vmz been ~ destroyed by the collapse of the roof. A large quantity of stores for the Red Cros. | ing. The Red Cross Soclety will look aflex’i e little ones. | S. E. Barton, Red Ci from New ted the a nephew of Clara Barton | Society, arrived here to- | York. In an iaterview he T ing of a fund of from ‘ § 000 to $15,000,000 to aid Lthe people in | rebuilding their homes. An appeal of this | nature will be made to the people of the | IRY eod States. "rl"‘l:r“*r‘gt" t loss of a single family by | the flood is that of the Rattezaus, who | residged down the island. <]vr a family of | orty-five forty-two were lost. | s A wop Galiagher of the Catholie church } | has made the following report of th losses estimated to have been sustaine | by the church from the storm: Property | loss, $326,000; communicants, 1100; ten sis- | ters of charity and elghty orphans. | | | of the day boys o orncinin MANY BODIES RECOVERED. Any boy huvmg one Two Hundred and Seventy-'rhree‘[ Corpses Recovered by Searchers. | GALVESTON, Tex.. Sept. 20.—Miss Clara Barton has charge of all the nurses | in Galveston. In a quiet and unostenta | tious way she is doing untold good for | the sick, maimed and suffering. £ It is definitely announced that the first | train will enter Galveston to-night. The | temporary bridge is two-thirds completed | and the remaining third will take only | twelve hours to buiid. With the first| train commerce will begin to revive. | of the school suits des- cribed below will re- ceive free a fine Mother’s Friend Shirt Waist worth soc. But remember, this offer is not good after The needs of the homeless are Saturday night, se come today. | very great The War Department ha { done incalculable service and the sanita- jon is being improv: Two hundred THE SUIT and seventy-three d were recovered - yesterday and it is now believed the ruins Double breasted coat, knee in the West End contain less than 700 knees. and as full of wear as any g5.00 suit made. A good chance for a big saving, $2.85 corpses. The end of the week will prob- pants, with double ably clear the city of nearly all corpses. With next Saturday supplies will be de- nied to all men at work and earning money. Food and clothing relief will be given to only women and children an men who are unable to work, until every case of need Is investigated. SAN FRANCISCANS SAFE. Former Residents of This City Es- caped Fury of the Hurricane. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. HENDERSON, Tex., Sept. 20.—The fam- ily of A. Pimstein, who for a long time | were residents of San Francisco, but | who removed to Galveston and were there | during the storm, are safe | - OUTSIDE COUNTIES ORGANIZE. Reports to the State Committee Show the Work Has Generally Started. The State Relief Committee handled $565 yesterday, most of which represents the work of four of the sub-committees ap- ’ | pointed to canvass the various trades. | Letters from Sacramento, Merced and | Stockton, were received, all announcing that the work of receiving subscriptions was well under way in those countles, | and in each the work is in charge of some competent organization. Last evening 300 or more singers met in Turner Hall, 322 Turk street, to rehearse for the big concert to be given in Metro- Tweeds or cheviots hae-osy Maner_f MUNYON'S GUARANTEE. Strong Assertions as to Just Whae the Remedies Will De. { 5 Munyon _guarantees [ bis Rbeumatismn re will cure neaciy all cases of rheuma tism in few bours; that bis Dyspepsia Cars will cure indigestion and stomach _ troubles: eatarrh no matter how loog standing: that his Headache Cure will cure politan Temple Monday evening. The any kind cf bea choruses all went off with a vim and vigor l a few mm,fi“‘:’: that promises well for the great evening his _ Cold wiil of song. There will be another rehearsal quickly b aoy Sunday afternoon, at 2 o'clock in Turner | sm of eold aad so on * the entire Hat of Hall, 323 T“H‘Tsl:;”tfi the las;“oln%ebefora' l-ut":l-_:":"'fl‘"l"ll:‘;;. ';i'rl. a v|=| the concert. choruses sung i e Prof. Munyon, under the direction of Professor Fried- 1806 Areb st. ™l It 1a absolutely free. richs, Professor Rieger and Professor Holzhauer. Already the sale of seats au- gurs a great success. A monster entertainment and dance in aid of the Galveston sufferers was given at Native Sons' Hall. Seventeenth street. near Valencia, last night. The entertain- ment, which consisted of a lengthy and varied programme, called forth great ap- plause from the crowded house. The af-| fair was under the management of C. E Gunn and will net a neat sum for the suf- ferers’ relief. Dancing followed the en- tertainment, ‘The officers, crew, marines and appren- DR. MCNULTY. HIS WELL-KNOWN AND RELIABLE OLD T Spociatist cures Blood Poison. Gonorehaew, Gieet, Stricture, Seminal Weakness, Impoténce and their allied Disorders. ook on Diseases of Meu, frae. Over2vears e xperience. Terms reasonabie. Hour 9to3daily :6:0t03. Wev'gs. Sundnys. 10t 12, Conanl: uflonkeelnd-cmlyemlfl-lh Call or address ROSCOE MeNULTY, M. D. Kearny St., San Francisco, P 206! |

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