Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY JULY 31, 1905. ANGLO-JAPANESE -BONDS T0 BE WELDED STRONGER Negotiations Are Under Way for Per- fecting a N ew Alliance. ITS SCOPE IS TO BE MUCH ENLARGED Great Britain Will Give No Advice to Tokio as to P eace Demands. ST. PETERSBURG, July 30.—The Emperor has issued the following note in reply to an uppeal from the clergy of Oreiuburg wot to conclude a shameful pence: “The Russinn people can rely upon me. Never will 1 conclude a shameful ce or one uaworthy of great Rus- 2" WASHINGTON, July 30.—Keen inter- est §s felt here in the negotlations, which, #t is understood, are making substantinl bheadway between Japan and England, looking to the remewal of the Anglo-Japanese alliance. The scope of the alliance, it is known, will con- siderably xceed the present uanloa, though to what extent meither Europe mor Washington has been able to learn. The ansouncement of the main points of the mew alliance soon after the con- clusion of would not here. the Washington conferemce surprise diplomatic circles ace would be se from her a gestions, garding which peace When Japar uce f the in n the part sinte: preted 5 6 io assuming pan has been oughout at all appre- 18 to Washing: nmoderate or nable t reasonable.” ONE ST UMBLING BLOCK. Believ as o Washington does, insist on the dis- vostok. should Rus- Arthur, the ceces- which, it is under- ng essential con- officials here believe, s obstacle to peace n had not been it initiated his gerents together. hat time, Japan had Russian _territory, n of Washington bringing about aghalien capt from a source fal, is vigorously op- ralien. Whether, insistence on this t to peace, Russia of speculation so re are concerned, v to Russia serious expressed whether M. de rings with him the authorization ory or whether he sk for such authority. el G ON SAGHALIEN. that Russia Witte bt SHARP FIGHTIN: Two Hundred Ruw ms Killed and Five Hundred Captured at Rykoff. TOKIO, July —The following dis- patch has been received from the Jap- anese army headaquarter: “Our independent cavalry which en- Saghalien Island, for- ADVERTISEMENTS. well in- | ty-five on July miles northeast of Port Due); withdrew on finding order » unfavorable to its occupa- Our army, intending to crush the before they retreated ences west off; of nce at 3 m. on 3 together with an in- dependent of cavalry, advagced by forced march. attacking and dis- lodging the enemy holding the north- ern extremity of Rykeoff, = rushed to the tow Confused stre: ued, but the town w:. ken at 8:30 o'clock in he enemy's main strengt opposed our right column, order s ward, taking the short route le g to eonot “On July 28 a detachment which was sent soutl pursuit of the enemy met the ene infantry, some $S00 strong, t a point six miles h of Rykoff ed and killed more than 200 and captu strength opposed was of 80! to 3000 four guns and four ma- and that opposed to our some 2000 infantry and MATURE. Spokesman Sato Says Hermit King- dom’s Protest In Absurd. YOR 30.—Baron Ko- the Ja peace plenipoten- v anese mura, y, and Baron Kaneko, the Japanese 1 agent, both of whom are d graduates, nt to Peekskill where og t they e day e headquarters 2 on was not entir nded, however, several of the sec aries contin their lahors with tches and v Some of the the day at the various re- the city, while others wis- ited some friends of commis ds. Korea, would protest against a peace in which.she was not d-were culied to the attention Aimar Sato of the commission and all he would say was that the time for of those protests to be made was the negotiatiods had been con- ed ‘No one,” said he, “has any business before the commissioners but = them- number of Japanese newspaper correspondents are in th city Sev- eral came with Baron mura’s party. to-day it is the thdt, when peace is declared, Japan, having become a world power, will elevate her ministries in the capitals of the -powers to em- bassies. All agreed that it was the understanding Japan that If peace the coming megotia- would become a Count, which carries with it in Japan a gift of a large sum of money and that. Minister Takahira would be ele- vated to the rank of an Embassador. e g SCOPE OF PROPOSED REFORMS, Eilectoral System Advocated by Russian Council of Ministers. . ST. PETERSBURG, July 31.—The fol- lowing are the principal points of -an electoral stem approved by the Coun- of Ministers for the proposed Na- flonal Assembly. The aim has been to claborate a s me eliminating as far ss representation. The the fran- vears, refects and police authorities, nomads. and persons deprived of civil rights. For St Petersburg, Moscgw and 2ighteen of the larger towns there will e a system of electoral colleges num- bering 160 members; for St. Petersburg, Moscow and eighty other towns these bers will be eclected by electors of first degree, comprising owners of land and house property exceeding $1500 in value; the electors in the case of St. Petersburg, Moscow and 1500 other towns to include algo the holders of industrial patents and paying speci- fled tuxes, with no distinction as to re- ligion. For the provinces a similar system ot colleges will be elected by voters of three categories, namely, land owners, electors of other towns than the hefore ioned large towns, and cantonal epresentatives of peasants. Here, also, property gualification of $750 is re- guired and similar tax gualifications. The elections will be by secret ballot | and an absolute majority is required. 4 P DE WITTE NOT OPTIMISTIC. LONDON, July 31.—The Daily Tele- graph's correspondent on board - the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, on which M. de Witte, the Russian peace envoy, |15 a passenger, sends an interview which he has had with M. de Witte, in which the latter said that if Russia ana Japan had agreed upon a common basis before appointing peace plenipotentia- ries, it would have been much better. As it was, M. de Witte- sald ‘he regarded himself rather as an imperial courier, | sent to ascertain the terms of Japan. He | was prepared to make peace, neverthe- less, he added, as his powers were very complete, and he would discuss the ae- munds bused on Japan's actual military | and naval successes in a business-like |'spirit of give and take. “But 1 cannot and will not, continued ~'s loss in trophies is un- | OVER SCORE ADDED T0 FEVER LIST | Twenty-Seven New Cases and l Three Deaths Reported in | New Orleans From Dread Disease During Sunday QUARANTINE HAS GROWN MORE RIGID Mississippi Troops Placed on the Coast to Do Guard| | the silent pressure of a hypnotic spell ; Duty in Enforcing Embar- 2o Against Infected City — by NS, July 30.—The fol- jowing summary of the yellow fever situation: New cases reported up to 6 p. m. to- day, 27. Tetal cases to date, 283. Deaths to-day, 3. Deaths to date, New foel, 4. Total foei, 41. ‘Though this was Sunday, the work of 8 tation, fumigation, oiling and screening went on just the same and will continue daily until the city has been thoroughly screened and made mosquito “proof. The record for to- day shows little change from that of vesterday, except in the reduction “of the number of deaths. The decrcase in the number of new foci is also encour- aging. A new complication was disclosed to- day when Superintendent Curran of the New Orleans and Northeastern Railway announced that two passengel who had remained the required length of | time in the Slidell detention camp and sought admission into Mississippi, had been turned back. If the Mississippi health authorities now refuse admis- | sion to holders of certificates of deten- tion issued by the Marine Hospital it will result in the Government aban- doning those camps and then truvelers will either have to stay here or o0 1o points in the North and East and spend ten days before they can return to Mis- | sissippi. The location of the Louisville and Nashville camp has not yet been fixed, but Dr. Guiteras hopes to get into com- munication = with Adjutant General Fridge of Mississsippi, who is in charge of the State quarantine on thg gulf coast, and finally arrgnge the matter. The Mississippl troops are now doing guard duty on the coast. Health Officer Kohke, who is in immediate . charge of the situation in | the city and who has been subject to some criticism from various sources, to- day gave out the following statement, which shows how the authorities handled the infection as soon as it was discovered: HEALTH OFFICER’S STATEMENT. The first_intimation of yellow fever in New Orleans ‘was had on July 13, when two physi: c reported two cases of iliness resembling. ©ver, . which cases. were submitted to. presldent of the State Board of Health office. The health officer of the city oned immedtately, and the cases re- being already dead at the time, Ly -him . considered, for eanitary actual yellow fever, and theprem- ireated accordingi that is, the methods empioyed were those: ainet yellow fever infection. The diagnoses s being judged a matter for later vellow the at_hi n, tituted an _investigation of the neighbor- )d euspected of infection, and thls investi- gation disclosed evidence pointing to prior cases X in the same neizhborhocd. All measures were employed against yel- low, fever infection wherever suspicion pointe In a few daye it was learned that sev squares were Intected apparently to & gree j for the possible existing infected mosquito. The neighborhood operated on is almost wholly inhabited by an Italian population, many of whom are connected with the hand- ling of bananas and the unloading of such car- goes from fruit shivs arriving from Central American ports. ry means was employed, from soft persuasion to brutal force, to reach infected places, and the wholesale fumigation was in progress during a period of ten days . during which period an autopsy de- strated the nature of the disease, which must have begun at some time during the gec- | ond half of May. Fyom the infected nelghbor- hood at varying tfmes residents removed their domiciles to other sections of the city, and in' this way cases of the disease developed in persons infected not only in the Italisn dis- trict but residing in other districts at the time of the first appearance of the first syinp- et de- ‘0-day there gre few cases not connected In any known way ‘with the Infected district, and all cases of th, diseasc known to exist are isolated and subjected to the proper meas- | ures of prevention.based on the moequito law of yellow fever iransmission. The spread of the disease has not been «s great as was at first feazed, and hope is entertained that it may be gontrolled. CITIZENS AID IN WORK. & the sanitary work done by the au- in the neighborhood contaiping casss of the disease, the citizens generally are en- thusfastically engaged in riddlng the city of the vellow feyar mosquito by the use of oll on water surjaces and the fumigation of dwell- ings, the object of this being to render barren of yellow fevar infection the s:ctions at pres- ent containing no cases of the disease. Quarartine 'méthods against fruit vessels have been made more stringent to prevent the introduction frem Central America and_the fruit ports generally of additicnial yéllow fever nrection. fund of mcney of practically un- limitsd @mount has been guaranteed and is | being furn:ghed to the health authorities, who [are zssisted by officers of the public health and Marine Hospital service, representative members of the medical soclety. The situation ricognized as one offering an opportunity for the pecple of New Orleans to demonatrate their willingess, determination arid ability to care for yellgw fever aiter its introduction and no effort of energy or expenditure of money < spared to_attain sucgessful vesults. So far s now kuown. no infection has occurred the casés cutside of the infected district and organization will, it is thought, b= so complete in @ short while that the stamping out of any such secondary. infection is now unlikely. The impression that the authorities withheld information_ae to the extent of infection fs occasicned by the necessary’ aslay incident to the investigation upon the result of which the official_report is based. Soucher of the State Board President of Health has aigo taken cognizance of Governor Vardaman's comments about | evasion and dissimulation. He said: 1 most emphatically deny the assertion made health officer immedfately | fying the fumigation af every house | | | yesterday morning. She Is Brought to Hospital. | Husband Avers I/Vife Is Hypnotized by Friend. Was Mrs. Louise Welch acting under | when she snatched her little babe from | morning, stole awa seems aiways {o have been made pleas- ant for her, and then, without sufficient winds, wandered down a strange road until, falling exhausted by the wayside, she lay with her little one clutched tightly in her arms until a passing police- man picked her up and sent her to the | Emergency Hoepital? Was it Mrs. Mary Lund, a neighbor overpowering influence which caused her ened lest her work should bring Ler into serious difficulty with the police, restored | the woman to her natural selt? Or was | there merely a temporary insanity? | These are the questions which are puz- Hospital, who worked for hours yester- day trying to fathom the remarkable case before them. The case of Mrs. Welch is a mysterious one. Found sesmingly, crazed yesterday morning and brought to the hospital, she sat there for hours without speaking a word to any one. Then she began to ask for Mrs. Lund. Her husband came and she drew repulsively away from him. Still she erled for Mrs. Lund, whom she sald would put her right again. A man went to this woman. | that Mrs. Weleh was apparently insane and was crying for her she trembled vio- lently and refused to go to see her. Then she withdrew to her room. Within a few minutes Mrs. Welch, miles away in the Emergency Hospital, straightened up, & sane woman. “Send for my husband.” she said, “I want to go home. Mrs. Lund I barely know her." In these few min- | utes did Mrs. Lund break the hypnotic spell? | | | | | i ! WOMAN IS HELD. | Mrs. Welch was not sent home. She will remain in the hospital until the cause 6f her strange actlons s determined. The | little child is being cared for by tender | nurses and he coos happily to his newly | made friends. The mother lies peacefully in a clean white cot, unconscious of her wanderings of mind during the day. Mrs. Lund s at her home in San Bruno, whence she may be summoned by the police at any time. And now comes the strange story of these two women. The husband of Mrs. Lund died nearly a month ago, and for | a week after his death_sH® came - and |livea with Mrs. Welch In' thd little home |at 240 Sweeney street. Until. thiz fime | Mrs, Welch had lived contentedly with | her “husband, who is emploved in the city rornd. There was a little baby to bless their household and a vretty daugh- ter of 14 years to help with the work. Never was there a finer picture of simple happiness than when this loving family |-went_strolling in the hills on Sunday | afternoons, as was their wont. All this | was before the advent of Mrs. Lund. | Shortly after Mrs. Lund left this happy | household the sister of Mrs. Welch died. | In her sorrow Mrs. Welch went to see her newly made friend for consolaticn, and | it was then that an intimacy, which the husband claims {s the cause of all yes- | terday’s trouble, began to grow up be- |‘tween them. | SPIRITUALISM A FACTOR. | Spiritualism was the outcome. Both | Mrs, Welch and. Mrs. Lund wanted to | talk with the dead, and they attended | many meetings which were led by nys- | tics, V. hen they were together their taik | was constantly of hypnotism. Mrs. Welch began to stay away trom home at nights, | _In the meaitime her husbani trisd to | reason_with her, but to no avail. Mrs, | l.and he shunned. “I felt that I could not trust myself to be near her,’ he gaid, “for fear that 1 would lose my tem- | ver and without thought of the conse- quences strike her down. 1 knew that |-8he was cxerting a terrible influence on my wife, although I never suspected that it would come to thi “A few weeks ago she began to nour- ish the {dea that hér mother had left her @ grest sum of money. Mrs. Lund told her thut there were two cans of it burled in the ground, and the woman searched long for it. *“Ihen my Wwife began to grow very jeal- ous. She feared that I was keeping com- pany with other women, although eévery one will say that I'am a very quiet man. 1 belfeve that Mrs. Lund put this {dea into her head, for after my wife would return from that swoman's house she would talk about this. “‘She acted strangely, as If some one was_eXerting an influence over her. 1 she was perfectly free. The outcome was this morning, when she left the house about 3 o'clock and wandered away. ““I heara her go out, but supposed that | she was going over to see Mrs. Lund, for | the two had been spending much time together of late. I did not worry, and | before I went to work I sent my little | girl over to sec. She was nowhere to be found. Mrs. Lund had not seen her. ‘Send -her over to me quick,' she sald, ‘and I will put her right again.’ What did that mean? Was my wife under the hypnotic ORI SRR R LT recently erected on the island. Of this number.only two are seriously ilf. They are Thomas McGill, one of the Se- Found Exhausted, | its cradle long before sunrise yesterday.| from a home which | clothing to. protect her from the cold | who admits having talked spiritualism to . this woman, who placed hor under the | to run away, and was it she who, fright- | zling the physicians at thé Emergency | When she heard | questioned her about it, but she said that | guranca's stewards, and Vincent Novo,, DEMENTED WOMAN TAKES BABE AND WANDERS FROM HOME. Apparently demented, Mrs. Louise Welch took her babe and wandered from home early She was found exhausted and taken to the Emsrgency Hospital. There Mrs. Welch cried for a Mrs. Lund. Mr. Welch, has hypnotized his wife. The latter, acc Later the unfortunate woman became sane. ording to the declaration of — { | | | i RS. LOUISE WELCH, WHO IS SUFFERING EITHER FROM HYP- NOTISM OR DEMENTIA. — ¢ Influence of this woman? 'I believe that ste was.” _ e PATHETIC' MEETING. Y The scene between husband and wife at the hospital was a pathetic one. The heart-broken man had hunted hours for the woman he loved, and when at last he sought the police and they told him that she was In the hospital his heart leaped for joy, as he hurried to her side. Imagine the feelings of this man when she turned away from him and held the child of them both far out of his reach. With loving werds he sought to right her mind and cause her to retura to him, but she only shrunk the farther. He dared not attempt to caress her. All the timle she said that her real friend was coming to help her. With tears in his eyes Welch left his wife in the care of the white-aproned nurses. He could do nothing for her and he went back to his saddened home. Wife and babe were gone, but the daughter, a bright girl, the child of his wife by her first Lusband, was there to cook the evening meal for father. | Then it was that some one was sent to’ see Mrs. Lund and find out if she would not come to the hospital and bring the unfortunate woman to her senses. When she heard that Mrs. Welch was apparent- ly suffering from insanity or from a hypnotic influence she trembled con- vulsively. She would not go to see the woman and quickly hurried to a room alone. Now came the mysterious circum- stance, Within a few minutes after Mrs. Lund had retired to the privacy of her own room out in 8an Bruno Mrs. Welch, miles away in the Emergency Hospital, straightened up quietly, a perfectly sane woman. ‘“Where is my husband?' she asked, "I want to go home to my fam- ily.” She knew nothing of her wander- ing and refused to talk of Mrs. Lund. It was a strange reaction. A moment before she had, cried for this woman of alleged mysticism, and in her period of sanity she sald that she scarcely knew her. A moment before and the nurses tore the child from her for fear that she would kill it, while she fought blindly to keep it:.sane, she did not know that the baby was there. Mrs. Lund declares that she cast no spell over Mrs. Welch. She admits that they were friends and that they often | talkea of spirituallsm, but she insists | that she exerted no influence over her. | Mrs. Lund is employed in a cannery at | Tenth and Bfyant streets, and save for | an extreme nervousness she does not | have the appearance of a mystic. Welch says that unless she remains away from his wife in the future he will swear out | a complaint for her arrest. In the mean- | time Mrs. Welch will be kept in the hos- i pital until the soundness of her mind is ! fully established. ’. LANCASHIRE COTTON MEN 'MAY FACE BIG STRIKE | | | | i | | —3 SLAVERY (P08 MERCAN SO chool Superintendent Says | t Traffic:in White Children Is Carried On in Alaska SO I Special Dispatch to The Call ST. LOUIS, July $).—Slavery within the | | dominion of the United States, white per- | sons sold and held in bondage despite all | the laws of clvilization, this is the | charge of Professor W. . A., Davis, su- | perintendent of public schools at Un- alaska, Alaska.. In a letter the professor tells how he has been at work since 1393, when he went to Alaska, to eradica the evil, but he has been unable to get | the United States authorities Interested. He says he has personally freed two | | little girls from slavery and sent them to their homes, while he has worked with- out avail to procure the release of six other white girls in Unalaska. He says children are sold in other towns. In part the professor writes: | ““At the beginning of school in Sep- | tember, 1903, I canvassed the village of | Unalaska for scholars and to my sorrow and disgust I found eight little girls, | ranging in age from six to twelve years, ir slavery. When I asked their masters it they intended to send them to school | they seemed much surprised and grew cuite indignant and In substance said, | ‘Send them to school? We did not get | them to send to school. We got them to wait on our families and that's what they are going to do.’ | “Immediately upen making this dis- | | covery I called the attention of the proper | authorities to the facts and was told that immediate steps would be taken to | remedy the evil. Up to the present time | nothing has been done officially, though | by individual effort I have obtalned the | release of two pitiful little creatures who were returned to the island whence they came, and all, in all probability, were sent again at the first opportunity in some other direction. “These children are usually orphans and are given away by those with whom | they have been left by their dead parents | as freely and with as little compunction | as one in the States gives away pupples | of an inferior breed of dogs. They are | brought. by trading schoeners from vari- ous parts of the territory and as a rule | are owned by white men, who have na- | tive wives, | BATTLESHIP'S CREW } * COMPLAINS OF FOOD | |Eight Sailors Aboard the Kentueky Are Put Into | Iroms. ; pectal Di [ 1 8 | Dispatch The Cal | | NEW YORK, July 30.—~Having read | of the sailors’ mutiny on the Russian | | warship Kniaz Potemkine, it occurred | to the saijlors on the United States bat- | | through the town of Trumbull. | was no warning to t | water course. LIVES BLOTTED OUT BY FLOOD | Bursting Reservoirs Sends Great Torrent Down Upon Many Homes in Connecticut FAMILY HAS WILD RIDE Asleep in the House When the Water Strikes It and Carries It Along a Mile o SRR e BRIDGEPORT, Conn., July 30.—Loss | of life and immense damage to prop- | erty followed the bursting of reser- | voirs north of this city as a result of the unprecedented fall of rain early to- day. The precipitation in the series of showers which struck the State last night and this morning reached a total | of seven Inches. The .dam went out at sending a great at Ward's mill at Aston 2 o'clock this morning. body of water down Thera he people who lived on the banks of what i3 usually a small The house occupled by John Lesco was picked up by the flood and carried a mile below. In it at the time were Lesco, his wife and several children. The members of the family were asleep at the time and all were rescued after a perilous journey. A house occupied by Michael Moran was hurled against the Berkshire bridge and smashed to kindling wood and it is believed that Moran was | drowned. In North Bridgeport the water swept against the Barnum-avenue bridge and wrecked it just when an ice wagon was crossing it. In the wagon were Wil- llam Kowzeski and John Starkin. The wagon and horses were swept away and Kowzeski was drowned. Starkin was able to swim ashore. During the progress of the flood sev- eral heroic rescues were made by the police and firemen. STREET RAILWAY USES THE GRAVITY SYSTEM Raised Stations Supply Pow- er on a Chicago Elevated Line. Special Dispatch to The Call CHICAGO, July 30.—As an addition to its electric power the South Side Ele- vated Railway will use the gravity sys- tem to assist in starting and stopping . its trains when its new third track and Englewood extensioh are completed ‘While this announcement has not beeu made by the officials of the company, & railroad engineer, who has watehed the construction of the 1 says it is built on the “inclined plane” plan, with each station at the summit of a hill. While much power will be saved by the news system, the object of the scheme is not se much economy as it is to produce speed in starting and stopping trains. The incline will b. sufficlently great, it is said, to start train without the use of electric pow It is said that ‘the Chicago ty elevated system is the first to be in- stalled in the world, aithough steam railroads have for years employed the system in freight yards, where cars are switched without other motive power. The fall from the summit of one of the stations to the lower point of the incline is about three feet. The new track at the stations is about thir ty-six Inches above the old one. Engi~ neers say that this fall in a distance of two blocks will produce a great amount of “gravity power.” Although the track is built on the “bump-the-bumps” pein- ciple,. the fall is not great enough to be perceptible to the occupants of the coaches. The power will be utilized without Inconvenience to patrons of the road. ——————— GENERAL RANDALL TAKES COMMAND IN ST. LOUIS Will Have Charge of the Northern Division of the United States Army. ST. LOUIS, July 30.—Major General George M. Randall arrived from San Francisco to-day to take charge of the northern division of the United States army, with headquarters in St. Louls. He succeeds Brigadier General Theo- dore J. Wint, who/ has been temporarily " commanding the division since Major General John C. Bates left for Wash- ington, D. C, on June 16. General Randall for the past two years has been in command of the Department of Lu- zon. He will retire on October 8 next because of the age limit- DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. TIRED OUT. “There’s many a wife sits in the growtn: of an evening, knowing Wha it is to feel tired out; as If there was not another ounce of effort left in her. But if healthy she knows how sound her slumber will be.and how re- freshed the morning will find her. But it's_another thing for the sick woman to feel tired out. Rest only to_inercase seems her She made the use of Dr. Plerce’s Favor- ite Preseription. It establishes y hi ver, in the N v | gy A v The policy holder in owever, in the New World, will be to| . 0 0 W Sim + § per cent advance in wages. A ballot (ipjes.’ At other times somé one would | M. de Witte, “entertain demands based by Governor Vardaman of Mississippi ‘that I |4 fireman. McGill is resting comfort- g g5t regularity, dries | upon expected milltary successes. Tam knew Uhere Were n great many cases of yellow | ubly and somewhat better. Vincent Sixty Thousand Operatives Prepare to Y Eeaity ,;‘}ff:_‘,’,::{,"‘.“' thelr | yeskening drains, heals inflammation | conversant with the humane intentions | fever $ New Orleans before (e anrouncement | Novo, however, is very il Dr. Doty Baek Up Demand for Increase “The trouble started off Culebra. The 38d ulceration and cures female weak- CHATS of my imperial master and I will do | oi4 erratic and quite In keeping With the weli | 52id he could not definitely state in Wages. | grub that was being served out to ws | NS suything = compatible with Russla’s | known temperament of Governor Vardaman. | Whether these men are suffering from | 1 onnON. July 30.—A strike of 60,000 | was simply rotten and we didn't get | fo lufor you of the bengll | honor and dignity to establish that | e yellow fever. The bactériological ex- ' ““* ik i, ek 3 vas simply | mm‘owg; Pieree’s Favorite work of which I have been an U-| puie.sen FROM QUARANTINE. | &Miation will not he completed before Lancashire catton operatives Is threat- | enoush of what there ek 2% FEL €09, s Eitzaceth & Oo s swerving advocate. My first task, | X ¥ * | to-morrow morning. : ened owing to the masters' refusal of a ' men $ave SN 10 HAC RS Li4R 2 T R | Canad: = discouraged the the Pacific Mutual search for a basis for fruitful discus- | 3 5 | Life Insurance Com- sion.” . in New York. PARS UP {5 SENNRAIER. ! {’,’; :::.e o‘;‘:fi:‘};’fl,fl&:::‘;‘;z ;,‘:‘"'.':"r? lhout,‘ ‘What's the !-nauer with the ‘ s A NEW YORK, July 30.—Health Officer | Western Part of Siate Will Guard sult of the ballot will not 'be made E7UBE and the reply, from the crowd | oy B scontent Among Resery Doty visited the quarantine Isiands in ust the Fever. e aton, (het's majority | “This was kept up for some time and | aftairs of the compa- ny are an open book. Drop in at any time and inspect for your- self. The home office is on the.corner of Montgomery and Sac- ramento Streets. The San Frabncisco Branch is in the Crocker * Building, for_ your convenience. Walter <Hoff Seely, Manager. ST. PETERSBURG, July 31.—The No- voe Vremya publishes this morning a report from Khersu that there {s great | @iscontent among the reservists in Manchuria at the distress inflicted on | their families because of the negligence of the authorities, who have falled to provide proper support for them. This outspoken admission from a Russian source ig looked upon as significant. - Stoessel’s War Service Ended. ST. PETERSBURG. July 30.—General Stoessel has been relieved of the com- mand of the Third Siberian Army | Corps. the lower bay to-day and shortly after- | ward three passengers of the steamship | Seguranca, namely, Miss Heckter, Hen- ry Boyd and Miss Wempe, were re- leased, together with the two members of the crew of the steamship Eldorado, which arrived yesterday from New Or- leans and were held faor.observation ow- ing . to high temperatures. The . four passengers of the Seguranca detained a: Hoftman Island are comfortable, and. it all goes well will be released probably 10-morrow. PRI The ten members of the crew. of Seguranca are pleasantly llgted at | Swinburne Island in the two new wards Ag MEMPHIS, Tenn., July 30.—The re- port given out yesterday following the meeting of the State, city and county | boards of health regarding the quaran- tine regulations established - against New Orleans and fever infected dis- tricts proves to be partly erroneous. The official statement is to the effect that. West Tennessee and Hamilton County will close their doors againsu the fever districts. No quarantine rules for the entire State have been pro- mulgated. Strict vigilance is ,being maintained by quarantine officials who are guarding the approaches from the south to this division of the State. { will favor a strike. 1 5 —————— | Fatal Wreck on the Santa Fe. |- CHICAGO, July 30.—A broken axle of | the wheel of a smoking car caused the | wrecking of the California special on 'the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad at Lemont last night, when one man was killed outright, four per- sons fatally Injured and a scére of other passengers received injuries. The identity of the man killed s still in doubt, but he is supposed to have been John Grugerie, an Italian laborer, of Sunnyside, Utah. | | nearly every day some of the men were | disciplined because of the kicks they made. Several wrote to the Navy De- partment, but it did no good, and some of the bolder ones made threats against i the steward. Finally a batch of the i ringleaders were cdlled befors Captain | Barnett. - He put about eight of them in ifrons.” e ST. JOMNS, N. F.. July 30.—Governor Me- Gregor and a party of English colonial sclen- | tists started to-dzy for a six weeks' cruise { along Labrador coast. It is expected that im- portant results will accrue from this expedi- l“'a' representing the industrial future of Lab- rador. - _