The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 13, 1898, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 189S8. ILANNA THE VICTOR BY ONE VOTE Close ofthe Bitter Sen- atorial Fight in Ohio. Both the LLong and Short Terms Fall to the Lot ot the Incumbent. ‘Will Represent His State in the Upper House for Over Seven Years. THE UP-HILL BATTLE WON Comblne of Powerful Politicians De- feated Through Brilliant Generalship. Epectal Dispatch to The Call. COLUMBTUS, Ohio, Jan. 12.—Marcus A. Ha was elected to-day to repre- sent Ohio in the Senate for seven years and two months. 1f McKinley should ted Hanna would still be there end of the President’s ond Including both the short and the ter Hanna's t as Senator 1 expire in March, 1 than two a entered politi McKin idency. He f the Mc conve sec ms, e o Senator advocating the 1 as the t the St ss years ag in ¥'s ca ard as National he has n g his short Senator Hanna fighting, but 1 a victory as was duly de- to-day for both et the 0ppo- in the after- to-night. Just Hanna withdrew be- 1 as a means r the benefit g to- 0 Suppo for d was n pledge: stated th: presentatives for Har it was last on coercion. and Hanna n the roll of the House d in the ballots for anna, 56; Mc- absent, (one (one absent, Cramer). itions showed that of three over f two over all 1 the members y. The demon- e hall were unusually the secretary to the Nell ng the commis- a Senator for r Hanna, ac- Thompson, >. Rath- Judge men North- ton and Hon. aired to the nel Rogers, in on to Senator nator Hanna, I have the honor to -nt 10 you your commission as States Senator for the short which has been sent sident to-day. Your com- - the long term will be sent u within a few da and a copy » forwarded to the President of the te.” tor Hanna, in reply, said: Rogers, 1 thank you and this, and 1 give back to the pledge that I will execute the t extent of ability, and will do my best to serve the interests of all the people of my State.” Previous to the two houses of Legislature going into joint c at noon for the election of Senator, res- olutions were offered in both houses for an investigation of the bribery charges mad Representative Otis of Ham- flton County. After the election of Hanna the House adjourned until to- morrow with its resolution still under consideration. ~ Consideration of this Jlution was resumed in the Senate s afternoon and adopted by a vote of 22 to 6. The dissenting votes were al Ser power given to me to the fulle m the Senators Blake, Carpenter, Garfield, May, Sullivan and Voight, who ex- plained that they regarded the matter as buncombe.” The Republicans vot- ing with the Democrats for the adop- tion of the resolutions were Senmators Burke, Cable, Crandall, Lutz, Riley, Weightman and Wolcott. There were eight Senators absent, or not voting. After the adoption of the resolution to investigate all bribery charges, the Bramley bill to repeal the fifty-year street-railway franchise law was dis- cussed at length with many passages on the recent Senatorial contest. The bill was amended and passed. Among the Representatives during the afternoon there was a considerable agitation of a proposition to reorgan- ize the House by ousting Speaker Ma- 8on and all other officers of that body that had been elected by the fusion ten i vas claimed that the ntatives who voted for and constituted a ma- Jority of thr in the House would stand together for that purpose. pcuitic Ll Fioneer J. B. Chamberlin Dies at Auburn. AUBURN, Jan. 12.—J. B. Chamber- lin, a ploneer of ’49, died here to-day. | Most of his time in California was | spent in El Dorado County, but he has AR SPIRIT CROWING CINJAPA Personnel of Marquis Ito’s New Cakbinet Announced. ‘[Himself Premier and Nissi Minister of For- eign Affairs. | Activity at the Japanese Dock- yards Is Not Permitted to Decrease. Continually Discussing the Possible Alliance With the English Government. | Epectal Dispatch to The Call. | LONDON, Jan. 12.—A dispatch to the Daily Mail from Shanghal says that the new Japanese Cabinet has been completed with the following distribu- tlon of portfolios i Premier—The Marquis Ito. of Foreign Affairs—Baron the Interior—Viscount Kost Minister of War—Viscount Katsura. Minister of Marine—Marquis Salgo 1gumichi. Minister of Finance—Count Inouye. Mini Minister Suicamtsu. Minister of Education—Marquis Sal- of Communications—Baron Minister of Justice—M. Sone. atch to the Times from Kobe : The endeavor to form an Ito- Okuma coalition ministry failed. Mar- quis Ito, after great difficulty and the personal. intervention of the Mikado, has constructed a ministry independent of political parties, for which a brief career is predicted. The mil party strongly approves Japa ing herself in the present crisis the activ: at the doc rds abated. The press is constantly dis- cus: g an Anglo-Japanese allianc Times at he learns from good authority fror he Korean finances are alre disorganized and that McLeavy Brown will retain the commissionership of customs under M. Ii\'\ml Alexieff, the Russian representa- A speclal dispatch from Shanghai 'S the treaty providing for a lease of Kiaochau to Germany is not yet signed. Japan is strenuously opposing the final signature. The British gun- boat Swift has gone to Hainan to as- certain the French movements. - DISGRACEFUL CONCESSIONS MADE BY THE CHINESE. ary un- The correspondent of the 1y Kobe, Japan, Must Even Meet the Expenses Incurred by Germany in the Seizure of Kiaochau. VANCOUVER, Jan. 12. — The steamer Empress of China, which ar- ‘rived from the Orient to-day, brings detalls in reference to the occu of Kiaochau. following demands of Germany: “Indemnity for the German mission- ation aries who were killed; the erection of a memorial church at the scene of the murder; the payment of expenses in- curred by Germany In the occupation of Kiaochau; the permanent dismissal Li Ping the retiring of the Governor of from the Heng; Shantung and the recently appointed public service of Viceroy of Szechuen, and the severest punishment of those who murdered the priests and of the local authorities where the crime was committed. Re- garding special privileges to be grant- |PRESS STILL BELLICOSE. | ster of Commerce—Baron Itomi- | China has agreed to the the Crime to none other than James C. Dunham, in-law, stepfather, brother-in-law, San Jose, Cal, on May 27, 1896. less craving for blood displayed by person. The description of Muller dot with that of Dunham in almost of Muller, as far as accounted for, whereabouts at the time it was lost case. On June 26 word was recelved cisco police. L L M had been lost. CHICAGO, Jan. 12.—A Boston speclal says: The police and detect- fves working on the Newton family butchery at Brockfield are of the opinfon that Muller, the hired man believed to be the murderer, is The strange likeness existing between those two revolting crimes, the evident motives which prompted their commission, and the ruth- seem to link the two murders together, to establish room for the al- most natural deduction that both crimes were committed by the same recognized in Boston by a former friend, who notified the San Fran- Detectives Gibson and Anthony were immediately dis- patched to this city, but all clews as to the fugitive’s whereabouts DUNHAM BELIEVED TO HAVE COMMITTED THE NEWTON BUTCHERY 'Massachusetts Officers Charge the Fugitive Murderer of the Mc= Glincy Family. who foully murdered wife, mother- servant girl and hired man near the murderer on each occasion given out by the police tallies to a every respect, and the movements take up the thread of Dunham's by the detectives working on the that Dunham had been seen and HOT WORDS END [N BLOODSHED | Tragedy Near the Little Village of Clarks- burg. Jeffie Cabe Kills Louis Isham, His Brother-in-Law, Over a Trifling Dispute. There Are Some Fears of a Lynching by the Slain Man's Neighbors. Special Dispatch to The Call. SACRAMENTO, Jan. 12.—A shock- ing tragedy occurred this morning near the little village of Clarksburg, on the Yolo side of the river, some fifteen miies south of this city. Jeffie Cabe, a young son of one of the most prominent of Yolo’s old-time farmers, shot and killed his brother-in-law, Louis Isham, in a quarrel over a trifling matter. The af- | falr occurred at the pumphouse of the Lisbon reclamation district, where both men were at work. Cabe insisted on hauling away some cinders, to which Isham objecte They had some hot words over the matter, and Isham went to his house and got his pistol. When he returned Cabe had a load of cinder withwhich he was about to drive awa when Isham sto) d his team. An- other wrangle ensued, and it is sald that Isham either drew his pistol or attempted to do so when Cabe grabbed his shotgun and fired. The charge took effect in the breast, neck and face of Isham, and he died this afternoon. Cabe claims he acted in self-defe: About 5 o'clock Cabe w seen at Freeport on his way to cramento, and told a friend that he was golng there to engage a lawyer. Coroner Bean of Woodland has been notified of the shooting and will go after the body to-morrow morning. Isham has a host of friends about Clarksburg, and fears are entertained that should Cabe return to that locality there may be some demonstration against him. Isham was a married man and leaves a widow, sister of his elayer, and three children to mourn him, while Cabe was single. Cabe will be arrested as soon as the necessary papers can be taken out. ed Germany with ergnce to coal mines and raflways in Shan- convention between China and France | | the charred remains of the woman and | illlllIIIHIIII‘IIIIII—II‘ AWEUL FATE OF THREE GYPSIES Little Child Falls Into a Fiercely Burning Campfire. The Frantic Mother Burned to Death While Attempt- ing Its Rescue. | Falling to Save Either, the Husband and Father Cuts His Throat ‘With & Razor. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. PORTLAND, Or., Jan. 12—A harrow- Ing tale of a triple tragedy in a gypsy camp about ten miles south - of Mec- Minnville was brought here to-day by Frank Burroughs, a commercial traveler. A band of forty gypsies, bound for | California, camped on the scene of the tragedy last Satuiday night, intend- ing to proceed on their way the Mon- day morning following. Sunday fore- noon a two-year-old child of Andre Ostrander, the chief, fell into a fiercely raging fire built of fallen trees. The screams of the infant attracted the at- tention of its mother, who was only a dozen yards away. azed with ex- citement at seeing her little one being devoured by the flames the woman thoughtlessly leaped into the fire, in which both she and the child were burned to death in a few minutes. Os- trander’s efforts to save his wife—who must have gone stark mad at witness- ing the horrible fate of her offspring— proving futile, he slashed his throat with a razor, bleeding to death in a short time. “I met the caravan of gypsies late Monday afternoon as I was driving from McMinnville to Lafayette,” said Mr. Burroughs, “when the elder son of Ostrander, a strapping fellow of 23 years, then the acting chief of the tribe, halted me and voluntarily told me of the fearful occurrence Sunday. These three lives, of course, count for noth- ing as the world goes, yet it was a piti- ful tragedy, all the same. Young Os- trander told me that the Coroner of Yamhill County had not been notified of the three deaths, because the tribe is governed by its own laws. They had her child and the body of Ostrander in | one of the wagons. Their remains wiil be taken to the redwoods in San Mateo DURRANT'S CORPSE THE ATTRACTION Hundreds Await Its| Arrival at Los Angeles. Throng of the Morbidlyj Curious Gathers at the Depot. | Body of the Murderer at Once Taken to Undertaking Parlors. | PARENTS STAND GUARD. | Refuss Until Late at Night to Quit | Thelr Vigil and Seek Needed Repose. Bpecial Dispatch to LOS ANGELES, Jan. people waited an hour at the Arcade depot of the Southern Pacific to-day | | to see a box containing the body of W. | H. T. Durrant removed from the ex- | press car to the undertakers’ wagon. The train was forty minutes late, but the delay had no effect in diminishing the number of morbidly curious peo- ple. At River station 500 people col- lected to see the train pass, and at | Commercial there was another knot | of curious humanity. | The box containing the body was at once conveyed to Kregelo & Breeze's | undertaking establishment, and the announcement was given outthat in the | morning it would be conveyed by wagon to the Pasadena crematory, arriving there at about 10:30. It would then be | consigned to the crematory, and in | six hours would be in ashes. Then the parents were to have the ashes in | an urn. Mr. and Mrs. Durrant left the train at River station and were driven at once to the undertakers in a hack. | Here they awaited the arrival of the | box containing the body. Then they held a consultation with the under- takers as to the arrangements that had been made. They expressed them- . selves as satisfied with the details. atement is made to-night that will be held at the crematory rding to the Catholic ritual. In- quiry fails to either affirm or deny the rumor. The sealed casket will not be opened with the consent of the par- ents. Both are opposed to anything of the kind, as they do not wish or de- sire that any one shall again view the remains. Mrs. Durrant was quite calm and collected. In conversation she said: “I cannot bear the thought of losing him, even now.” The father was resigned in his de- meanor. He inquired carefully after all details and expressed himself as satisfied. Both Mr. and Mrs. Durrant will, it is reported, remain here a short time after the cremation to visit Mr. Durrant’'s mother, who resides here. She iIs an elderly woman, but has some very pronounced views as to The Call. 12.—Fully 1000 the manner in which the body of her grandson has been handled. | At 10:30 p. m. Mr. and Mrs. Durrant | became thoroughly convinced that no | attempt would be made by any one to | disturb the body, and they then con- | ented to leave the undertakers and go to a private house and obtain rest. They left two private detectives be- hind to guard the body. | “If he had been guilty he ought to have died. But he was innocent— there is no doubt of that—and this per- secution, continued even after he is dead, is brutal. I can't express it any other way. The undertaker who ha withstood public opinion and had hu- manity enough to think about the feel- ings of the poor boy’s parents in this | matter, is a noble man and has our heartfelt thanks. You may be sure that | we shall not forget his act.” | TO HOLD BACK THE CROWD. | Officers to Be Stationed Around the Pasa- dena Crematory. PASADENA, Jan. 12.—The remains ! of Durrant were not cremated here this in 1895 is to be followed” Japan has issued instructions that those in authority shall see that for- | eigners are treated with the greatest | respect. Pirates have been committing depre- dations in the French settlements at Haijohn, and even In the of Hongkong itself. On the 15th ult a gang of 800 pirates atracked the sub- urbs of Haijhong, which is inhabited | by Europeans, setting fire in places simultaneously in four quarters. The desparadoes were fired upon by a party of French marines and about thirty killed. Two FEuropeans were murdered and a quantity of property stolen or dam- aged by fire. In the vicinity of Hong- kong pirates have confined themselves to the capture of junks in which they secured property valued at 10,000. Since the establishment of Germany at Kiaochau Dame Rumor has been very busy in Hongkong, but at the time the Empress left all residents there were agreed that the British gar- risons at Singapore and Hongkong must be immediately increased. In consequence of the Kiaochau affair ex- tra precautions are being taken, ac- cording to the native papers, to protect missionaries and their property. The churches in many places are being guarded by Chinese braves. | Two priests arrested by the Chinese authorities in connection with the al- leged fraudulent sale to Russia of land in the Kuikiang Mountains have died as a result of tortures. Three more | are in prison, and it is feared will meet | a similar fate. 1 A native telegram received from | Peking reports that Viceroy Chang Chin Tung has energetically protested to the throne against granting of the German demands, and he especially | protests against the dismissal of ex- | Governor Li Ping Heng, whom he de- | clares to have been in nowise to blame | in the matter of the recent murder of German priests. | He fears that if Li Ping Heng be | dismissed the other Viceroys and Gov- | ernors will resent the injustice done | to their colleagues. The Viceroy fur- ther declares that the people are loyal to the throne and only need men to lead them. His Excellency offers him- self as one of several high officials of the empire who will be willing to lay down their lives if necessary for the dynasty. —_———— been a resident of Auburn since 1880. Advances made on furniture and planos, with or without removal.J. Noonan, 1017-1023 Mission. vicinity | range of mounta: County, Cal., where hundreds of Romany race have been interred in the past thirty years.” NOT THE Booty | Isaac Irwin Arrested for a M ' UBER LYNCHING L%E— S (o) ur- derous Assaulton E. A. BEF‘""-EE GRAND JURY. | Brown. A Thorough Investigation Will Be Made and a Number of Indictments Seem Certain. | l GENOA, Nev, Jan. 12—The Grand | Jury met this morning to inquire into the Uber lynching case. The session will probably last two weeks. Good | clews are sald to be had and several in- | dictments seem to be certain. There | were four’ witnesses, including the Sheriff and Constable, examined to- day. Mrs. A. Harrls and Mrs. C. Brown of Gardnerville were the other witnesses. The former is sald to know the parties concerned in the lynching. The latter accuses certain parties of having urged her son to join the mob. by ARGENTINE REPUBLIC wiLL PAY BOUNTY ON SUGAR. Senate Approves the Bill Providing for the Substantial Encouragement of Exporters. Copyright, 1898, by James Gordon Bennett. BUENOS AYRES, Jan. 12—The Sen- ate has approved the bill to give a bounty of 16 centanos per kilo on sugar exported until the sugar exportation | reaches 25 per cent of the total produc- tion. | “I Suppose I Am In for It,” He Says ‘When Identified by His Vietim. Specfal Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, Jan. 12.—Jsaac Irwin, | alias Isaac Marvin, the Oregonian who | assaulted and came near killing E. A. Brown, the Hollister rancher, in a lodging-house in this city last Sunday morning and escaped with the trousers of his victim containing $390, was cap- tured this afternoon at the ranch of | James Mcllraith in the Los Animos Valley, about twenty miles east of | this city, by Deputy Sheriff Tenant, Constable Willlam Fay of Morgan Hill and Officer Scully. Irwin was in the fleld plowing for | Mcliraith, and did not deny his iden- ;my or resist arrest. He had disguised | himself by shaving off his beard. A search of his person failed to reveal | any of the stolen plunder. The agc- cused denied committing the deadly as- | sault or the robbery, claiming that | Brown, his former friend and benefac- | tor, was nearly dead when he returned to the room after feeding their horses, and he ran away for fear he would be accused of the crime. | Death of Skeriff Yancey of Irwin was traded by a clew given by | eatl y of Tuolumne. | Foreman Robinson of _the Morrow | SONORA, Jan. 12—T. M. Yancey, | ranch, at whose house Irwin applieq Sheriff of Tuolumne County, died at his | for a meal on Monday evening. residence at 6 o’clock this evening af- |, When confronted by his victim Irwin | ter an fllness of several months, With told Brown that he was innocent of | the exception of one term, Mr, the crime charged, when Brown said: has been either Sheriff or dep “Why, I saw you standing over me | the past twenty-filve years. | —_———— uty for He w: ;g:lh ;}fiznpl::‘)ll :;‘r zg‘;fl ’l;llnnd! :nd l;aw | & Mexican War veteran and pm:,mefi V. 5 e e blow | in Masonic circles. i - | which knocked me senseless.” The ac- 5 T8 Coneral will - take place under the auspices - | cused said: You are mistaken, but | cific Commandery No. 3, I(nlght:r o~ | if you say so I suppose I am in for it.” | plar, of which body he was a Only $10 was found upon Irwin. An- | mander. | other $10 he gave “Big Jim” Mcliraith | to purchase goods for him. of the money is supposed to be buried | somewhere in the Mount Hamliton ins. past com- the | Yancey | Tem- | The rest | e ——————————————————————————————————————— ot Tt afternoon, as expected, although every- | thing was in readiness, and the body reached Los Angeles at 1:45 p. m,, ac- | companied by the parents. It isthe wish of the Durrants that the casket be cremated with the body, but Reynolds & Van Nuys say the body will be re- moved as usual and placed in the cre- matory. It is feared a crowd of scusation- hunters will follow the remains from Los Angeles, and the Mayor has taken steps to protect the crematory from t! crowd, and an effort will be made to keep the curious out, although this will | be difficult if not impossible. Reynolds & Van Nuys have been anncyed all day by applications to witness the crema- | tion, and have also been the recipients | of a large number of congratulatol telegrams upon the stand they have | taken in the matter. GOVERNOR BUDD CITED 1 Must Show Cause Why He Does Not Declare a Certain Act of the Last Legis- lature a Law. SACRAMENTO, Jan. 12.—Governor Budd has been cited to appear in the Superior Court of this county on Sat- urday next to show cause why he does not declare a certain bill passed by the last Legislature a law. This or- der is made in response to the applica- | tion of W. J. Gavigan of San Francisco | for a writ of mandate to that effect. The last Legislature passed a bill creating the office of sociological expert in cities having 25,000 school children or over (San Francisco). Ten days af- ter its passage Governor Budd vetoed the bill, but Gavigan—in whese inter- est it is said to have been passed—has always claimed that more than ten days elapsed before the Governor sent | his vote to the Senate, and that the bill is in force. " The San Francisco authorities elected Gavigan to the office, and he brought the action against the Governor to compel him to promulgate the bill as a law. Gavigan's claim iIs that the Gover- | nor allowed nearly three hours in ex- | cess of the legal ten days to pass before | the Senate was notified of his vote. T0 APPEAR IN COURT | ik NEW TO-DAY. OF OUR GREAT UNLOADING SALE! We intend it shall be the banner week with inducements greater than ever— prices way below cost. IT'S MONEY WE'RE AFTER=-NOT PROFITS! Others don’t carry such well-made, perfect-fitting clothing at the price this great sale offers them. ¥¢ OVERSTOCKED are MEN’S DRESS SUITS Bing, Black, Brown and Gray, Cas- Simeres and Cheviots. Elegant single and donble breasted Sacks ; regnlar $11.50; We're overloaded and they go for $6.65, OVERCOATS—BIng and Black Ker- 8eys, half silk lined ; dressy; swell gar- Tents that others can't offer ; regularly $12.50; we're overloaded ; they go for $6.65. MEN’S DRESS SUITS. In Black, Clay Worsted, single and domble breasted Sack, Cutaway and Frock ; latest and most stylish Browns and Grays—very swell suits ; also in Cheviots and Tweeds. High - grade clothing ; regularly worth $16.50 and $16.00; we're overloaded and they go for $9.65. We were 90 days late in opening our new store. YOU KNOW THAT’S A FACT! We must get rid of a $50,000 surplus of high-grade clothing at a loss. PROFITS GO TO RAISE MONEY. and must unload. o < Q. bersd | Z = 8 MEN’S PANT All-woul, Stripes, Fancy Checks and latest patterns ; our windows show how choice they are; former price $3.50 and $3; they go now for $1.95, Our $5 and $4.50 PANTS shall go, Decause we're overloaded, for 432',451 CHILDREN’S | Extra choice Tweeds and Cheviots, latest shades of Tan and Gray. All-wool 2-piece snits—dressy and exclusive— formerly sold for $5, $4 and $3.50 ; we're overloaded, S0 take your choice for $1.95. BEWARE!Y There are imitators all round us. See how they have copied our signs and our methods. Your eyes tell you we first started this great sale. Come in and see how we save you money. That's where we beat them all. | 200-206 KEARNY CORNER SUTTER. UNITED STATES (lose e vemo et o | LAUNDRY, IF YoU CANNOT SEE EQUALLY WELL BOTH NEAR § OFFICE, AND FAR_CALL AND SEE US. i !904 Mnrket St., lephone, Near Powell. 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