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Show OBNERAL KINO'S VIEW. Says the War In the 1-hlllpplnes It lijr no Means Cnded. San Francisco, Juno 3. General Charles King, U. 8. V., was among tho passengers from Manllu that arrived on tho City of Puebla. General King, In au Interview regarding tho Philippine Philip-pine situation, said: "The situation In the Philippines Is most serious.- Tho pcoplo of those Islands Is-lands will keep up a guerrilla warfare, and there Is no tolling whenhostllltlei will cease. They retire to the fastnesses fast-nesses of the mountains, retreat when they aro whipped and hide In tho Jungles. Subsisting on practically nothing, they have no need of base , of supplies. It will necessitate a largo force of men to subjugate them completely. com-pletely. ''The war In the Philippines Is by no scans ended. Their Intrcnchmcnts ire works of military engineering and onstructlon, equal to the best tho most :lvlllzed military nations have pro-.'ured. pro-.'ured. Under the Spanish regimes the Filipino learned somethlngof war, and ro aro receiving evldenco of this every lay. "The volunteers who fought In the Philippines are a splendid lot of men, iapablo and accomplished fighters. They behaved like veterans when un-ior un-ior lire, and there Is no limit to their iourage. Their record In that a.vful :ountry will adorn pages of American history recently made and yet unwrlt-ln unwrlt-ln .. |