The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 3, 1902, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1902. TWO GONES BELCH FIRE AND SMOKE Mount Blackburn Joins Redoubt as Active Volcano. Top of Alaskan Peak Is Burst by Tremendous Subter- ranean Force. Disturbance Explains Recent Series of Heavy Earthquakes That Jarred the North Pacific Coast. e to The Call. Special Dispa SEATTLE, June 2.—Travelers arriving from Alaska to-day report that two vol- me, smoke and cin- Territory. One is 10se eruption was re- The Call some Mount Biack- ore has been t voicano. The erup yurn was sudden and ed, it is be- nan being. His explains arred a geologist, who was was within a _few kburn on April 11, the hidden an interview or tensils when became op- common differ- me sudden ir ecome mountz 1 should Blackburn frc as it BURSTS OPEN. ath my feet accom- d up at as if the s burst out. >t into the here seemed the top a ~ ter many succeeded f the mountain. untry m nd nea ver raslIc been cc OF REDOUBT. ook ERUPTION tion of nt that until or the miles mor: wher ding over At times volcano no flames d were no ashes sheet the column it it probably Will Admitted. was admitted or Court The man who is caged in or cooped up y without sufficient exercise to suffer for it. Quite often the is the first organ which becomes he and general physical tor- life miserable. to go to the root of the disease, once for all. Such cures of sordered or diseased liver almost llow the use of Dr. Pierce’s Medical Discovery. It always nost always cures. It reg: strengthens the stomach, ree’s Golden Medical Discovery is the cdicine, mzde,” writes Michael Maher, of N. V. (68 Center St.) "I had yellow nd liver trouble in November, 100, whole body was as yellow as sick at my stomach alf the time. three doctors and they gave me tablets d another one some other stuff, but I cssrs. O'Rourke and Hurley's drug store and got your ‘Golden Medical Discovery. One bottle cired me and I thank it and God that T am a weil man.” Accept no substitute for the * Discov- ery.” There is nothing “just as good.” The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, a book containing 1008 pages, is given away. Send 21 one-cent stamps for expense of mailing only, for the book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for the vol- ume bound in cloth. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y, re- | the Alaska | m the | peril- in Then for miles entirely cov- vol- | ured from the ven warm y of dust, I stavea hours Precipitous the scene clouds is more | the was flames could but a few hun- was | to | i constipation, biliousness, | There’s only | to deal with liver “trouble” and | lost sixteen pounds in three | JOIN THE RANKS OF THE STRIKERS Engineers and Firemen ‘Quit Work in the Preservation of the Seal Herd. WASHINGTON. June 2 —Representa tive Tawney of Minnesota to-day present- ed the report of the Ways and Means Committee favoring a reopening of the seal negotiations with Great th a view to securing the per- manent preservation of the seal herd or else the destruction of the herd with the exception of a few for the preservation of | | the species. The report says: | The killing of the serplus female seals will | be an act of mercy, since it will put an end | at once to the extreme brutality of the pel- | agic hunter's work. It will prevent the slow | torture to death by starving of tens of thou- | sands of heipless young which is officially oh- served and counted every season by our agen under existing la and regulations. It we { do it, it is but one killing, and then the work is epded. If not done by us, then this anR-‘ mous and cruel butchery of the female seals | | and the starvation -of the young by the pel. | agic hunter will continue year after year in | the future, as it has prevailed from v m' year since 1893, and will end only with the ex- | | termination of this seal life in the very near | | tuture. | The report says that the young male ! seals will be destroyed by 1906 and the | | virth rate will cease on the breeding- grounds almost immediately thereafter. | The accompanying papers represent that | the seal herd has been reduced from 4700,000 in 1574 to 224000 at present, and > United States has spent $1,441,351 ) in protecting the herd, over and above all receipts for rent, etc. PAUNCEFOTE BODY STILL IN ROCK CREEK VAULT It Will Not Be Removed From There Until After the Coronation Ceremonies. WASHINGTON, June 2.—Lord Paunce- fote’s body will be taken’ to England | about July 1 on the Brooklyn. The Navy | Department has ordered that only such part of the $2,000 worth of repairs or- dered for the ship shall be made as can | be completed before June 2. The Navy | Department was notified that the body | will not be removed from the vault in Rock Creek, this city, until after the coronation ceremonies. — Decides in Favor of Railway. WASHINGTON, June 2—The United Stdtes Supreme Court to-day decided the case of the Interstate Commerce Commia- | sion vs. the Chicago, Burlingten and Quincy Railway Company and others, in- | volving the right of the commission to re- uce the terminal rate made by the rail | roads in Chicago on cars containing live- stock. The opinion was presented by Ju: tice White and affirmed the decision o the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sev. | enth Circuit, which refused to carry into | effect the order of the commission reduc- ing the rate from $2 to $1 per car. Supreme Court Adjourns for Term. WASHINGTON, June 2.—The Supreme Court of the United States to-night ad- journed finally for the present term. The court will convene again on October 13th next. SENATOR MASON FAVORS GIVING THE FILIPINOS SELF-GOVERNMENT » Says He Would Not Have Voted for Peace Treaty but for Under- standing That Natives Were to Rule YAQUIS EAGER FOR A BATTLE Indians. Are Intrenched on Mountain Near Themselves. Grant during the Civil War and declared: ““The most shameful thing in this whoie transaction is the summoning of the au- | thority of General Grant to justify the order of General Smith.” Stewart of Nevada deplored such acts of cruelty as had occurred in the Philip- | @ tmtetototmiioofoofomfosoniefonfmtosfofeognfoforfofnfeconfoonfosfrfeforton TEN MILLIONS FOR NEW HOTEL Magnificent Structure Is to Be Erected in New York City. — NEW . YORK, June 2.—Another hotel and greatest of all, the most magnificent in the world, is to be erécted 'in New York. The Plaza Hotel, bullt iess than eightecn years ago, and long one of the show places of the city, stroyed to make way for the structure now planned. Capital to the amount of §10,000,000 is to be invested in the enter- prise. The greater share of this sum will be Tnis , it is understood, by men whose fortunes have been created out of the steel industry. As it is now planned the hotel will have a frontage of 200 feet on the plaza, while on Fifty-ninth street. overlooking Central Park, the frontage will be 250 feet. The architects are now preparing the plans on the assumption that the struc- ture will have a facing of 125 feet on Fifty-eighth street. The structure will be of twenty stories, and in design will be in keeping- with its proportions. Charies M. Schwab and John W. Gates are inter- ested in the enterprise. a Striking Bakers Enjoined. KANSAS CITY, Mo., June 2.—Striking union bakers were to-day enjolned by Judge John F. Phillips of the United States Circuit Court, who Issued a tem- porary order restraining them from pa- trolling in front of the Grand-avenue Bakery Company or otherwise interfering with the employes of that concern. The action grows out of the lockout of the un- fon bakers by six leading firms, members of the Masters'. Association, because the union bakers demand that the drivers of bakery wagons be allowed to organize a union. The strikers annoyed the bakers. The bakers appealed in vain to the police, and in order to place its case within the Jjurisdiction of the Federal court recently reinco;pol‘fl(ed under the laws of Colo- rado. This made it a non-resident. Saloon Watchman Kills a Soldier. DENVER, June 2—Edward B. Britt, a private of Company M, Efghteenth Infan- is to be de- | STURTEVANT blVES GAGE A GRILLING read the address of Buencamino to the United States Senate when he wa: Aguinaldo’s “Minister of Foreign Affair the addr. urging the granting of inde pendence to the Filipinos, thereby “bring. ing to an end this cruel and wicked wa wesforie e el try, was shot in the head and killed at 5 o'clock this morning by Frank Wag- ner, watchman in the El Caney saloon in Sheridan, a suburb of this city. After killing the soldier Wagner went to bed and made no report of the affair until after daybreak. He claims that he heard i | | | somebody trying to open a window of the saloon and he shot through the window. at Bostgn, Mass., and in _the Philippines. of Company M said a model soldier. g Government Files the Replications. ST. PAUL, Minn., June 2.—The replica- tion of the United States in the railroad merger suits were to-day filed with the clerk of the United States court by the United States attorney for the District of Minnesota. The Government reserves all advantages of exceptions which may be to manifold errors of the defend- A general denial of the points In inswers is made and it is alleged that the answer of each defendant is very un- certain, evasive and 'imsufficient in law to be replied to. The plaintiff avers that it will prove the bill to be true. Tramp Stabs Saloon-Keeper. SACRAMENTO, June 2.—Ellis W. Jones, who keeps a saloon in Elk Grove, elght miles south of this ecity, was seriously stabbed by an unknown tramp at 10 o'clock to-night. The tramp had been about the saloon several hours and early in_the- evening Jones ejected him. The fellow waited on the outside and when Jones appeared plunged a knife intp his abdomen and then escaped. Officers and a physician left this city for Elk Grove in-mediately after learning of the assault. o S0 2 ~ Rushing Work at San Pedro. LOS ANGELES, June 2—Contractors constructing the San Pedro breakwater deposited a total of 40,000 tons of material on the work in_May, as against 35,000 tons called for in the specitications of the War Department. The work of constructing the superstructure in the breakwater has begun. The contractors are confident the entire task will be completed within three years. Gage Pardons a Murderer. SACRAMENTO, June 2.—John Barbean, convicted of murder in Mariposa County in May, 1895, has been pardoned by Gov- ernor Gage. ————————— How Is Your Fountain Pen? If it doesn’t work well a little zdjusting may be all that it requires, which we can do without charge. We are selling agents for Waterman's Ideal and Swan Fountain Pens, and sole agents for the Marshall, the best $1 })en in the world. Sanborn, Vall & Co., 741 Market street. - Britt_ enlisted served three years Captain C. D. Hank to-day that Britt Carmack then read at length portions of | his time cxpired Money continued it by | having the clerk read another section of | the statement, final reading going over | until to-morrow ‘ o | When Money's time had expired at 4:5 | the Senate went into executive session and shortly afterward adjourned. S0 2 2 2 e 2 2 ST ) ! INDIANS MURDER - BLIND TRIBESMAN Brutally Avenge Convic- tion of Two Redskin Desperadoes. detail. from what they expected an agreeable surpris 10 to $30, and each price money. , eclal Disvatch to The Call. CONCONULLY, Wash., June 2—Blind Billy, an old-time Indian resident on the Colville reservation, was brutally mur- dered a few nights ago by friends and relatives of Indian Quesiskan and Indian | Sam Miller, who are now en route to the penitentiary in Walla Walla to serve long sentences for the killing of Chelan Wil- He. It was in Blind Billy’s cabin that Chelan Willie was murdered. At the trial Blind Billy testified against the prison- ers, whose voices he had recognized dur- ing the fight. After Quesiskan and Miller started for prison their relatives and friends went to Brewster and got intoxicated. Then they went to Billy's cabin at night. One of the savages seized Billy from behind, placed his knee against the blind man’s back and drew his head backward until the neck and back were broken. The flesh on Billy's ‘throat and chest was torn loose. A squaw who had hidden in terror in Billy’s cabin saw the deed. She brought the news to Conconully to-day, and an effort is being made to capture the murderers. Merger of Street Railways. LOS ANGELES, June 2.—Consolidation of the Los Angeles Traction Company's street car lines with the Huntington-Hell- man lines, forming the city traction bus- iness iInto one system, is the present.plan, it is said, of the electric railway mag- nates. Senator W. A. Clark of Montana, the builder of the Salt Lake Railroad, will not become interested in the traction company, having allowed the option which he held on the property to expire. Tn raflroad and business circles there was a report in _circulation that Henry E. Huntington had succeeded Senator Clark as the prospective purchaser of the trac- tion property. Although confirmation of the report could not be obtained, it was | circulated with great persistence. chooses to keep the suit. SN Men are often very critical folks—they know ex- actly what they want when going to buy clethes. Crit- ical men come here with a preconceived idea of what they want and their desires can be satisfied in every The only thing that they will find different e to them'when they find out what a good suit we make to order for as low a price as - g |1 Our prices for made- Every suit is guaranteed. Money back to the cus tomer if dissatisfied; a year’s Could we interest you in our sample: our self-measuring system— write for samples. 00D (0 718 Market St..and Cor. Powell and Eddy Strects. L8 | . et g e i H i Eer : ermosillo. Collieries. ASHINGTON, June %.—Gen-| pines, but insisted that the Philippines / eral deBate on the Philippine | was a nest of pirates and barbarians. 2 1 hae Teller gave notice of an amendment pro- : sovernment bill having heen [ jTeller ave ROtles o, an amendment pro; General Torres’ Force of Mex- | Governor and Attorney Mine Workers Say They Have c°“°l“def":'h;se,“la‘e{( "’t‘;eg“‘_ zens of the “Government of the Phitfp- G T Offic 5 convened af o’clocl 5 pine Islands” instead of “citizens of the i i ral’s ) Not Yet Shown Their | agreed to the arrangement that the de-| Philippine Islands.” ican Soldiers Is Strongly enera. | bate on the bill should proceed under the AN AWKWARD PAUSE. | Reinforced. Clash. Strength, fifteen-minute rule. Lodge, in charge of | . < ool o oo e SR as. the bill, orflorcd se]vera.l :\men?;ne;‘tfi, After exhausting thirty x}r‘unmrs of time principally of a verbal nature, to the . | hy unanimous consent, chiefly in having i o, F o WILKESBARRE, Pa., June 2—The or- | One of the most important was an amend- | pead doouments and extracts from books Special Dispateh to The Call. Executive Appoints Special der of the United Mine Workers of Amer- | ment striking out the words “nor more | Bacon vielded the floor. An awkward TUCSON, Arix.. June 2—A courler ar- ica calling out on strike all ensincers. | (han five thousand acres to any associa- | panze cnsucd, nobody befhyg ready o pro- riving st Fietmasilto, and coming by way | Counsel to Defend the e D b wark aay | 100 Of persons.” relating to the disposi- | oo WA OIS PURRGL o8 TuEEceton lof.Ures confirms the report that the | llerles where the elght-hour wotk day | tion of public lands. and inserting a pro- | I8¢ SOTC (hjections and after . further. | | Yaquis have withdrawn from the coun- Coyote Cases. | With present wages was not granted Wehl | vigjon that *no such land shall be leased, | dolay Bacon resumed his remarks. i try contiguous to Camou - Mill. and El into effect to-day, and a majority of the |, o gevised to any corporation until a | To offset the testimony of Felipe Buen- | | Tanque, and that they are assembling in b eheyed s ordi‘-" ::euhgr i‘\?ee She | 1 regulating the disposition of the pub-| camino, now belng taken before commit- | Mazatan Mountains in large numbers for | Tirey L. Ford Resents This Slight claim a victory at this time, becaus 1! 5 - H & v AV . : | ja second battle. A dispatch via Ures says s struggle on this phase of the anthracite |F 5 | e Yanuis have peen reinforced by | nd His Deputy Denounces coal miners’ strike has just opened. There | 400 Indian warriors, with Mausers, and the State’s Chief im - | was only a partial showing of strength | { supplied with a large quantity of ammu- o Gt to-day. The real test of whether or not vition and provisions. The Yaqu‘f nme‘ pen the mine pumps shall be manned will | regovered from the fight of May 29 since RN Ie SR V. hough a majorit, belng reinforced. and wish to again en- begin to-morrow. Although a majority gage the Mexican soldiers. Special Dispatch to The Call. X S Ehe_Jmen Wyult “'"“'e:ihed et | The Mazatan Mountains are very | 3 . generally speaking, succeeded in keeping rough and the Indians will have a great | RS 2—The first of & their pumps in operation. The operator: advantage, owing to their mode of war- | SAC R.?AE. TO, {:::tfie 'gmle puoghe feel tnat they have the advantage, bu | fare. The battation under command of | scries of cases aze S sivete Sl | they are not so sanguine as to the fu. | General Luis Torres has been reinforced | fornia in the matter of coyote scalp | tu 7The exact number wWho quit work | | { by a large contingent headed by LOrenzo | claims came up for hearing before Supe- | to-day coula not be ascertained. sach side | { Torres, and the Mexicans wtilll [hd © the | nior Judge Hughes this afternocon. The | refused to make public its ngures, but $ | SxaliEa I vl ver S T 1 | Legislature appropriated $210,00 for the | gave out information that rougniy esu- | {, The Yaquis are gathering in R ayment. of .clafue agsinde Uhe Sinde i mated the number of men affected. These ! | | pands throughout the district, an e L i bt STRE o | estimates are far apart. i oW reporded '(ha. they hat ef . | holders of coy S 5_& _p~ A F g™ | Nauonal President ~ Mitchell of the| | trenched In the foothills of Mazatan | priating $5000 for traveling expenses o | miners gave out a statement, in which he | | Mountains. Many of the towns which | c"Attorney General's office in defending mays: | | could spare men sent volunteers to the |, suitg against the State was vetoed by Reports received from every important min- | | | [ 214 of General' Torres & rain from Pes-| Governor Gage, but when the suits were B O e | | quira arrived at Hermosillo, bringing | about to come up in the Superior Court — :‘]{”.r.l:‘iir'e‘}’nly:Ml:ur‘nu;:;i:edayf:“‘l-n;t:.pff:! | { | many families from towns and ranches | of this county the Governor employed have ceased work. The number will be: mu- | | in_that neighborhood. who 2 ug{st r:;gfif | Senator R. T. Devlin of this city to de- terially increased to-morrow. In some sections guntll the danger was past, ~NUMeEroUs|fend them. The Attorney Gemeral's of- ne roremen have positively retused to per- | | bands of refugees continue to seek pro-| g " Lol cnted by Deputy George A. he work of engineers, nremen and pump- | I | tection in Hermosillo and the town is| €€ represented by Deputy Seotee 5o in some places firemen have manned tne | | |crowded. On Friday night a volunteer | Sturtevant, resented the entrance of ps and clerks have also been reguired Lo | i | patrol service was organized under the | SOWTSE. NG COEE PRCEL e e was rm this labor. A periect army of irre- | | | divection of Felipe Salido, a Government | DA UG LS00, [OEC Sturtevant said: e men have been employed by the coal | engineer. Many of the militlamen organ- | “SG%0 008 S0 highest regard for Senator companies to act as coal and fron policemen. | | |ized under the command of Simon Bley |, , naVe (A0 NERCRL TeROte OE O Ror The services of these men are unnecessary and | | have joined the regular forces and a sec- | ;10 e 0 o CRCn and, speaking person- ety e, Ay St et jond company was needed to guard the | jj, '} 4m going to conduct this case my- | no violations to-dey by the mine workers and | | | surrounding ranches. The engineer had | 2ll¥, & N e ctior 1a - there wi ac self, and 1 shall make such objections am sanguine there will be no overt acts on | | ne trouble in recruiting patrols, as the during Its progress as seem proper. I e | | citizens were cager to Join. | haven't seen anything In the papers about ESTIMATES ARE TOO HIGH. | , -] The excitement in Hermosillo has quiet- | BYR \ feen Sputiune [ Ule DRRSIS 810V On the other hand a mining official of | | |ed :fi[{cgi;&;gflgflflfij ;:lalqma"‘gg:sfl“.;g’j I seen any charge of crookedness in rela- one of the largest coal companies made‘ et et s - 15 from roving | tion to the administration of the dffairs this statement: s LR m IOVINE | of the Attorney General's office. 4 - | Pands. Mazatan “Mountains are twenty- | @gtie JtloRney FEOIRUS STCE & abour “_1 r;;m:mt ){uc‘;‘eu:— eslum?u is “lou high. | | five miles from Hermosillo. the ‘spectacle of Gage Being ¢verywhare € have received estimates from all our coi- i e ————————3 Sta - lieries and the general superintendents of all | i in the b‘ml_e“?u( ",‘, au?,n(‘x,ar:r;'gnhhll:\‘ld the other coal companies. but they are not o | | { SCEDIERS. ATD STVIRERS he recognized the authority of the Aftor e given out, as it would not be licy t H o 3 h 3 Seveal Ak Sl e 1 Betiey e e | MEET IN DEADLY CONFLICT |ney General and there would be no clash. holds as far as thev relate to the collleries | | e, | The cases proceeded without further in- lly. 1 can sa ,‘huw»\er_ that about | | Forty Workmen Are Wounded and |cident. per cent of the Lehigh Valley's men, | i Ty B cattered from near Scranton down 15 Sha. | . Bhreg ofgEhemt: Gulmaquentty: IVES LOST IN A FIRE went out. The Delaware, Lackawanna | Die in Hospital: LIVE: tern, the aware and Hudson and { . 4 s % p the Erle companies, whose operations are i LEAB(,H_RG. (lia‘uc:’ap.n,:zls‘;:-;:.s .Z‘u:e it IN BANFOR]? S CHINATOWN mostly north of here, fared a little better. | | serious affray betw E and strik- 3 The Susquehanna Coal Company's collferies | ars occurred to-day on the Schnetsen |Ome Mongolian .and Thres Women Thich arexcontsblied fy cho Penniylvatiia. Rail- Platz. While a company of infantry was and Two Children Are TO and which are lecated at Nanticoke, south ¥ 3 . of bere, were crippled less than any com | returning from a drill the strikers began Missing. in the ‘region. The Reading Compan | stonings the SPaope:. .2 2 . a3 v 2.—Fire broke out forty collieries in the lower region, was th: | diers were injured and all the windows in HA‘\FO,RD} J'ur.;inm“ barber shop, worst sufferer, more than 70 per cent of it the vicinity were smashed. The infantry | this morning in a Chi s 3 o men refusing to go to work. The individual { then charged and some forty workmen | following the explosion of an oll lamp. he small un- | companies lost more than 50 per cent of their | were wounded with sabers or were shot. | x haif block was consumed, including the men. | A further collision between the strikers | optaC P MEOC WS NS0 (oW of brick tanding the big desertion of men | | and the military occurred here this after- | p e VESORE further destruction. | ever ~ in the district which made the | noon. in which the soldiers fired on the [ P00 N8S KFEVETER, (P A SGoath dus- | efr le to get up steam and maintain it. | ;. ja1ds shall have been enacted and | strikers. Three civilians who were wound - | , CPYRE "og A8 THONG (8 028 Chinese otwithstanding the large number of | approvi | ed were removed to a hospital, where | yciron and two children are missing. The men who were idle the coal fields were | Another amendment provided that here- | | tiley subsequently died. operty loss is about $10,000, well insured. P prop ¥ Ve umeL el day L Sil A 2 after o corporation should be authorized o -—m—l e hsstsior a5 | small army of coal and iron police- | to engage in agriculture until provision | ck Islan ou ions . +5 Automobile Accident. | men which is in the field is not much in | should be made therefor. | Teave' fbin: Franiclocy s every’ Wedneuday. .ant | 1Y SOGALBG sy < - evidence. The companies have instructed |~ Mason of 1llinois spoke, as he said, for | Vs Rio Grands and Rock fsland Ray- | NEW . YORK, June :—The Cosouei’s | the men to aveid trouble and that they | the Filipinos. He referred to the case of bbiss] g i 4ol I Pane oy jury investigating the deaths of Andrew must not make themselves conspicuous. | the Cubans, who had patiently waited the ways, and via Los Angeles sng acifle ana | Featherstone and Joan T. Bogart in the EEMAIN IN THE MINES ' (pleasure‘of the Unlted Stater or thelcin- | ] e o Raitwavs. for. Omaha Raneas | automobile accident on Staten Island on - | dependence. 1f we gave: the Filipinos an i slan 3 Saturday to-day brought in a verdjet ex- Committees of the local unfons were | ooBOR TR 0% TU6 BCVTL 0 self-govern- | Chicago and all points East. For further | Fa ing W. G. Baker of Cleveland and busy to-night canvassing the men who | pPPOrtURY 10 Loy LA L0 O 8C e e | Information address Clinton _Jones, Geéneral | onerating W. G- T remained at work to-day. Hundreds of | jooing S0 e, we St won e have votod . Agent Rock Island Raflway, 624 Market st. * | C. A. Denzer. them, however, cannot be reached, as| g, ‘the peace treaty but for the open and | e comieartered within the confines of | giorious understanding among Senators [ e here: to-dns when 1t was Qulte a AUITY | that there was to be a vote on a resolu- arty of megroes had wriieaaca.that a ! tion to_give to the Filipinos self-govern- s - Fersey Contral Railiad" Tt aaSer the | ment as soon as in the opinion of the peo- | . Sater e was learned | 1. of the United States they were equal | : ater that the negroes were only engaged | Pl¢ of the | { : e omne ot the non-union men temporar- | "%y} Gt try it7” he asked. “It weuld | — The several bortherhoods of cost mnothing. o _harm can _come from | | employes in this locali an effort in that direction. Some of us to at which the general strike sit are tender and jealous as to what other ation was discussed. No action of sy | Dations will say if we compromise with | | % kind was taken. The railroaders are 1y | thiS poor struggling people. l|m{; nnrdrr-!‘ | h. v sympathy i “etriking | Public is strong enough to be independent Sy Eympainy. with - the. - striking | BIRIC opinion of the nations of the world, | F. J. Mullahey, State secretary ana | QUr republic is righteous enough to do treasurer of the Stationary Fifnmv\r?‘g right, ‘("‘l;""dlj . 1('f v\:ha‘l the _olgl_w na- 3 Union, to-night issued a statement, in | tions of the world may think or sa which he says: HOAR AGAIN HEARD. Reports received at headquarters from all| Hoar, after reviewing the situation in fistricts indicate that the firemen have obeyed | the Philippines and referring to the out-| | | R b he it s e BAn A rages which had been committed, said: X - % | - s the, pext: twenty- fourboics I do not charge these things upon the | = 25 | L] Ed e is granted 2 an ei#hi-} army. 1 charge them upon imperialis TWO SENATORS WHO ARE TAKING AN ACTIVE PART IN ARGUING | | é : | He referred to the cost of the war { & o ~IV - - q q = NES | e : ik THE BILL FOR CIVIL GOVERNMENT IN THE PHILIPPINES, enough to establish universities like Hz B v £ |1 ‘COMMITTEE FAVORS | vard throughout the country, and said: WHICH WILL BE VOTED ON TO-DAY. 4 ! REOPENIN EGO' 7 “This miserable doctrine of buying sov- 2 | S MEROTTATIONS |, Johs ot sl e — ot 2 The. wi + Britat R He adverted to the references whic 2—The will of the | Great Britain to Be Asked to Aid in had been made to the acts of Generzl| tees of Congress, Patterson of Colorado a statement of Sixto Lopez, and when | will be the price. It will be to-order clothes range from represents full value for the repairing free if he Suits for out of-town customers made to order satisfactorily through e e e ————————

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