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THE SAN rixaANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1900. DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. BRIGHT'S DISEASE For the First Time in cine, a Cure for the History of Medi- Bright’s Disease Has Been Discovered. Swamp-Root, the Great Kidrey Remedy Has Proven by Thousands of Triumphant Tests Its Wonderful Success in Diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder, Blcod and Bright's Disease. “CALL" READERS MAY HAVE A SAMPLE BOTTLE FREE. N7 9 T¢ Lpboratony- Finghemton, N ‘,‘ The Eminent Kidney Speeialist, Discoverer of Swamp-Root, in His Laboratory. as the break of dawn | does pain in the uble. 1e weak and waste in the isonous mat- cell, and the urine. Then rich, red ystem breaks . to ay the own iright’s Dise: aking awa is v more e necessary s Disease? Do out here is with your kid- but sure test ng or sediment, all particles float be assured that and that your te effect of the ! ems t 1 the changed con- e made apparent in he world of great | afeguard in o s Dyc man to say “that it is egret to this Gov- rnment of Colom- om communica- the recent e tions between us in expect- ne of joint W 10 the protection ch bind the South republics together | and relations powers.” He also gave | 1 that the United States | consider a long communication, he connection ever be ntrol become in the national relations a mat- jower it will surely Government ur 1o Fugge: ength of the Government of adequate to maintain its panic »mbia, »n %0_enforce the aties impose upon sincere friend- #hip for t ymbia W in- duce them upulous fidelity. Ex-Secretary Foster’s Protest. Another communication of some interest that «© Secretary Foster to Mr. | mber 22, 1892, relating to e Panama Canal Com- sion of one year. He d the concession, saying that the | mpany was bankrupt and hence the ap- plieation for an extension was not bona fide he said, “the United | nlin “In view of this, States Government earnestly trusts that h extension will be granted without ntial guarantees.” | rting later that the extension had | nted Minister Abbott said: time will never come, in my judg- | ment, when the Colombian Government will refuse to grant canal concessions lOl uropean companies until a definite prop- n for the construction of the work come from the government or a re- iable company of the United States.” Th e last document of the series is a remonstrance from Charge d'Affaires Rengifo of the Colombian Legation at | Washington against the attitude of the | United tes Government toward the | aguan_canal. He sald the new ma Canal Company _was well | equipped and reminded the Secretary of | Btate that there were doubts about the | practicabllity of the construction of the | Njcaragua route. He expressed doubt as | to whether, with the two canals con- ! structed effher would pay and reminded | the United States that the support given | by this country to the Nicaragua route | would be injurious to Panama. Hon. ohn Sherman was then Becretary of tate and the record shows that he only formally acknowledged the note. Natives Are Buying Lend.. MANAGUA, Nicaragua, March 2L.—Tt is | purch, ‘deputation is Russia. famous new discovery, Swamp-Root, is soon realized. It stan: its wonderful cures tressing cases. Swamp-Root is the d eminent kidney spec recommended fc you have kidney or d s orders, you will find Swamp- ust the reme you need. 1p-Root is d in the leading 1s, and is taken by doctors them who have kidney ailments, be- cause they recognize in it the greatest and most successful remedy for kid- ey and bladder troubles. wamp-Root will set your whole sys- der that all affiicted fits, a special ar- rangement has been made with the an Francisco Daily Call by which all readers of our paper who will send their 1ames and addresses to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., will be sent absolutely free, by mail, a sample bot- of the most di overy and is not ases, but if dder or uric acid wamp-Root. Also a book of treating of all kinds of kidney diseases and containing some of the thousands of testimonial letters re ceived from sufferers cured If you are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what you need you can the regular 50-cent and $1 size bottles at the drug store: claimed that natives confidence of Pri or receiving grants of lands in the eastern part of the country in lots of from 3000 to 4000 acres each.” These operations, d out, have become active since nt conferences between the Isth- 1 Canal Commission and the Pres and it is declared they indicate a willingness on the part of the Government to sell to the United States at an accept- able price a belt of land across Nicaragua from ocean to ocean, having the canal route as its long axis. Heretofore, it is further said, the friends of the President have been careless in regard to securing lands at low rat in v of the con- struction of the waterway, with the ex- ception of having secured several hundred thousand acres extending north from the canal route to Monkey Point on the Caribbean Sea and west for a distance of sixty or seventy miles. CARNEGIE COMPANY'S TRQUBLES ADJUSTED Warring Inter;;; Arrive at an Agreement Which Needs Only the Acquiescence of Frick. - ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., March 21.—The | conference held here between the rival in- terests in the Carnegie Steel Company of Pittsburg has probably resulted in an agreement of settlement of the stock con- troversy which has been interesting the steel industry of the country for some months. The Frick element was repre- sented by Henry Phipps, F. T. F. Loveloy, A. M. Moreland and Lawrence Phipps. Andrew Carnegie participated in the meeting, with Charles H. Schwab and D. M. Ciemenson. he only fact given out was the im- portant reached agreeable to the Carnegie inter- ests and that the suit in court would be withdrawn if Frick himself confirmed the | The entire party went | agreement made. to New York to-night. it e 2 ey PLAN OF A RAID. LONDON, March 22.—Spencer Wilkin- son in the Morning Post offers the follow- ing suggestion: “It may be part of the plan of Lord Roberts to make a raid with the mobile force Lord Kitchener is- col- lecting at Prieska through the country beyond the Vaal River, where many Boer parties are scattered, and to recover uruman from the Boers. Such _a raid might be an effective means of helping Colonel Baden-Powell at Mafeking.” - RUSSIA THEIR OBJECTIVE. LONDON, March 22—The Gape Town correspondent of the Morning Post says: “On the best authority T learn that the real oblective of the Fischer.Wolmareng T also hear thai they have.taken away all the Secret ln criminating documents from Pretoria, thus making it difficult to implicate Steyn and the bundites.” ST MACRUM’S CHARGES. WASHINGTON, March 2L.—Represent- ative Dinsmore of Arkansas to-day 'n duced a resolution requesting information from the Secretary of State as to y correspondence with Great Britain in re- lation to the alleged detention, opening and subjecting to censorship of official correspondence addressed to Charles Ma- (‘Arelrll!:‘.a_lale United States Consul in South SR Tt Injury Proves Fatal. BAKERSFIELD, March 21.—Harry At- cmm‘r;. the 13-year-old boy who was acci- dentally shot by a companion yesterday, ied from the effects of his injury this morning. The weapon with which the in- Jury was inflicted was a target rifle. —_————— Stops the Cough and Works Off the Cold. Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure & cold in one day. No cure, no pay. Price 2c. the highest for | of the | depending upon | point that a settlement nas been | QUAKER COUPLE - WED WITHOUT A PREACHER Unique Ceremony Is Per- formed at Pasa- dena. e i There Was Neither Ring, Music Nor License, but the Form of Mar- riage Is Recognized by the State. ol Spectal Dispatch to The Call. PASADENA, March 2L—Willlam F. Michener and Mrs. Mary V. Miller, both of this city, to-day married themselves without the aid of any preacher and with- out even having previously secured a cer- |'tificate. Their marriage must be recog- nized by the law, too, It was the first | marriage of the kind which was ever | solemnized in the State of California, ac- cording to the claim made by the parties. | It was made under the law of the Quaker | church, originated by George Fox, the | founder of the Quaker church in England 250 years ago. | Several other States of the Union, after & strong effort had been made, recognized this form of ceremony and in 1367, through the efforts of Senator C. M. Bimpson, | California legalized it. The groom did | not have to procure a license. "On Satur- day, February 17, the bride and groom in- formed the Quaker church that they con- templated marriage. A committee was appointed to see that there were no ob- stacles. Thirty days later the committee reported that there were none. The couple then informed the church that they were still in the same mind and another committee was appointed by the congre- gation to see that the ceremony was properly performed. This morning at 10:30 o’clock was the time set. At the close of the prayer service bride and groom stepped before the congregation, facing the groom's brother. Dr. J. C. Michener, a prominent physician, was the first waiter or grooms- | man, and Professor and Mrs. 1. N. Vall, the nearest relatives of the bride, were her attendants. The couple joined their s and the groom said: . in the presence of the Lord and before this assembly I take Mary V. Miller to be my wife, promising with di- ne assistance to be unto her a loving and faithful husband until death shall repeated this formula and they inscribed their names upon a certifi- cate reading: | “William F. Michener and Mary V. Mil- ler of the county of Los Angeles, State | of California, having made known their intentions of marriage with each other in a public meeting of Friends held in Pasa- dena this 21st day of March, in the year f our Lord 1800, declared that in the of our Lord they took each other band and wife. And as a further confirmation thereof they did then and there in this presence subscribe their names, she, according to the custom of man;\,.ge, accepting tne name of her hus- band.” The witnesses signed the certificate. | There was no ring and no music. PROBING MICHIGAN MILITIA SCANDAL Trial of ex-Inspector General Arthur F. Marsh Begins at Lansing. LANSING, Mich.,, March 21.—The first testimony was taken to-day in the trial of Arthur F. Marsh, ex-Inspector Gen- eral, for alleged complicity in the State military clothing frauds., Two deputy Attorneys General swore to communica- | tions between the indicted ex-officers and the Attorney General's office in reference to the disposal of the clothing in ques- tion. The witnesses testified that the in- dicted military officers did not follow the v General's advice, which was to r such clothing as the military sired to dispose of to the Board Auditors. Records of the mili- of State tary board's proceedings were introduced as evidence. Governor Pingree was sworn as a wit- ness this afternoon and a letter which had not heretofore figured in the case was produced in evidence. It was signed by the Governor and addressed to Quarter- master General White, directing White to enter into two contracts for equlpring the National Guard and to advertise for bids. Governor Pingree sald the letter was genuine. He could not remember the cir- cumstances, nor could he remember any- thing about it, mor recall that any one ever asked him to sign the letter. He said, however, that he would sign such a letter to-day If the Quartermaster Gen- eral asked him to do so. He did not know that such a quantity of clothing was on hand, nor that the board contemplated purchasing 380,00 worth of goods. The prosecutor produced a letter read | before the Detrolt corporation counsel, which s the office in which Colonel Sut- | ton, one of the indicted men, is employed, | and had the Governor compare it with the | paper on which the order was written, | The paper appeared similar, the printed i L&upr»hrml having been torn’ from the or- | der. | . The Governor stated that he never dreamed that any Improper use was to | be_ made of the money received from the | sale of State clothing and Judge Cahill | stated on behalf of the prosecution that | no one ever entertained the slightest idea | that the Governor had any knowledge of | the affair. —_— L ASSASSIN SHOOTS | AT A PARIS JUDGE | | Litigant Attempts to Commit Murder Because of an Adverse Decision. | PARIS, March 21.—In the Palace of J | tice to-day an attempt was made to mur- der the presiding Judge of the Fifth Court by a druggist named Bardin, who had | just lost a suit. The Judges had just taken their seats and the counsel fn an- other case had begun his ?‘peech when Bardin aimed a revolver and fired three shots at the Judge, who had a narrow es- cape, the bullets grazing his head. Muni- din and removed him to a cell, while the Judge, with perfect coolness, sald to counsel: “You can continue, Maitre; it is noth- ing. — i AGONCILLO REPORTS A FILIPINO VICTORY Claims That General Pava Routed the Americans Near Cubat. PARIS, March 22—The Intransigeant has a telegram recelved by Agoncillo, Aguinaldo’s envoy, announcing that the Filipino General Pava has routed the Americans near Cubat and taken the town. ———— New Park for Petaluma. PETALUMA, March 21.—The Oak Hill Cemetery in this city, one of the oldest burying-grounds in the county, will be transformed_ into a city park. A monu- ment erected by the State over the grave of the late Senator Burnett will be. moved. The Oak Hill Cemetery has not been in use for years. -— Coin for the Soldiers. WASHINGTON, March 21. — Senator Butler to-day introduced a bill authoriz- ing the distribution of the mone: hn.‘- been collected as eman-run.rv?ll.l'";ifiE feltures in the volunteer army since July 1, 1898, amonf the States of the Union_for the benefit of the soldlers themselves. The total sum amounts to provides for its pro-rata- 1 distribution. e et Death of Patrick Stapleton. PETALUMA, March 21.—Patrick Staple- ton, an old and respected of this city, died last nlghgg ‘He ‘r'gm“ of age and a native of Ireland. cipal guards threw themselves upon Bar- | 31, and .the.bill ' } (R 7 GO0 00-00-000000000000000000000-00-00-9 % i z t ¢ 1 L4 g ® L4 | } | | LADY SARAH don Wilson of the Blues and sister of of some.200 miles she was captured by is but a slight une. of the hour on her return to Londoh. INTERESTS THE PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAT Appropriation Granted to Continue the Hydro- graphic Office. Representative Needham Positively Denies the Current Reports That He Will Not Run for Congress Again. —_—— Special Dispatch to The Call. WASHINGTON, March 21.—Senator Perkins has secured the adoption of the amendment to the urgent deficiency ap- propriation bill passed to-day providing | $30,000 for the continuance of the work of the Hydrographic Office, $20,000 of which is to be applied 1o measurlng streams. This appropriation insures the keeping up of the work of that office until the end of the present fiscal year at least. There- after the maintenance of the office will doubtless be provided. for in the regular appropriation bill. Senator Perkins also offered an amend- ment to the bill providing a civil code for the district ¢f Alaska, declaring that | Bitka shall remain the seat of government | until the necessary grounds and buildings at Juneau are obtained. After some dis- cussion the amendment was adopted. Representative Kahn to-day received a petition from the SBan Franclsco Chamber of Commerce favoring the appropriation of $200,000 for the Philadelpbla Commer- cial Museum and urging the support of the California delegation therefor. ~Mr. Kahn also received a copy of resolutions of the Alaskan citizens of Skaguay ask- ing for the passage of a bill providing for the clvil government of Alaska. Mr. Kahn to-day received a telegram from promi. nent ship owners of San Francisco to the effect that the Treasury Department had concluded to make Cape Nome a subport of entry. Mr. Kahn called on Assistant Secretary Spauldin in regard to the matter and was assure: by him that for the present there was no dlsposition on the part of the Treasury Department to make Cape Nome a sub- | port. This will practically give the entire | trade of Cape Nome to American vessels, and British vessels will not be allowed to unload farther north than St. Michael. Representative Metcalf to-day secured the promise of the Postoffice Department that free delivery would be established at Lorin, Peralta and West Barkele{l, Ala- meda County, May 1. Mr, Metcalf has for some time been ‘working for the estab- lishment of additional sub-stations of the postoffice at Oakland. The department assured him these would soon be pro- vided. Metcalf will look over the terri- | tory and decide as to the best and most convenient locations for the new stations, | vfi:}lch will be established as early as pos- sible. Senator Turner in greuntmg his. reso- | lution, which was adopted, asking the War Department _ for information con- cerning the alleged concessions to exca- vate the gold-bearing bed of the sea near | Cape Nome said: “The Secretary of War has ;luflsdlcllon over the navigable waters of the rivers and harbors of the United | States and at various times has given to I'f\'lVlui individuals authority to excavate | the bed of such waters for proper pur- | poses. Now if fhis authority has been | 8tretched to cover such concession as that mentioned in the resolution it is a shame, | | a reproach and a scandal. | . Bepresentative Needham will be a can- | didate for renomination to Congress. Re- ports reached here to-day that he would decline to make the race again. Need- ham said to a Call representative to-da “It is not true as stated in certain new: papers in California that I am not a can- didate for renomination. I have recelved -a lnrfie number of letters on the subject and have told my correspondents that the reports had no foundation in fact, and that I am a candidate for renomination.” | By direction of the Acting Secretary of | War, Captain Benjamin C. Morse, Seven- teenth United States Infantry, wiil report in person to Major General Willlam R. Shafter, United States Volunteers, at'the headquarters of the Department of Cgll- fornia, S8an Francisco, for l‘:polntm nt and duty as aid de camp on his staff. By direction of the Acting Secretary of War, First Lieutenant Frederic W. Alt- staetter, Corps of nginéers, United States Army, is relieved from further duty with_the Battalion_of Engineers and at the United Btates ineer School, Fort Totten, . Y., to take effect not later than_April 30,1900, and will proceed to San Francisco and report in person to the commanding general of the Department {of California for ass ent to . duty. WILSON,; the Correspondent Lately Wounded at Mafeking. Next to Colonel Baden-Powell himself, the most notable and interesting figure in beleaguered Mafeking is Lady Sarah Wilson, wife of Captain Gor- Lord Randolph Churchill, and correspondent of the London Daily Mail. Lady Wilson was in Mafeking when the war broke out and left on the approach of the Boers, hoping to reach Kimberley by way of Kuruman, but after a ride under a flag of truce, where she has since remained. It is sald that her wound Tt is safe to say that Lady Wilson b4 .»—0-0—0—0—0-0—0—0—0—0—0—04—0—0—0«0_—0—0—0—04-0%4—0-0—0+0 | Upon the completion of the duty assigned him he will proceed to Mantla, Philippine slands, and report in person to the com- manding general of the Department of the Pacific and the Eighth Army Corps for duty under his orders. - | Pensions: CaHfornia—Original—George | Cole, Glen Ellen, $6; John D. Harvey, Mendocino, $. Incre Webe Eureka, $6 t Thomu; B, 8co, 0 Soldlers’ Home, to $10; Benja ; Atwo omas A. ‘Washin, on: Original—Wallace Palmer, Lynden, g v ”ll, glflfll 9— ) g 088, I!Orl{nl—u w J. Wash- Franc Oregon: burn, dead, 3 " ‘l:-.r Place, $6; Stmon Miller, the late Duke of Marlborough and the Boers and sent back into the town will be the ‘“‘lioness” % : : } AL BT BETWEEN TWO " IGED M Jobn Welch Killed by J. 8. Burett in Los Angeles. Both Men Had Passed Three Score Years, and the Latter Claims There Was No Quarrel. el LOS ANGELES, March 21.—John Welch, an old soldier, was instantly killed this afternoon by J. S. Burett at the latter's home on Reed street, sthe weapon used being an ordinary band ax. Burett claims that Welch came to his house with a . heavy hammer and made an attack on the locked doors. He broke through four doors and smashed in a window in his desperate efforts to reach Burett. The latter armed himself with a con- venient ax and when Welch reached the room in which he had barricaded himself he struck the intruder on the head, killing him instantly. Burett stated positively that he had had no previous trouble with Welch and he knew of no reason why he should assault him. Both men are about 63 years old. PORTO RICAN TARIFF BILL GAINS STRENGTH Friends of the Measure Confident That It Will Pass the Senate. ’ WASHINGTON, March 21.—The friends of the Porto Rican tariff bill in the Sen- ate are more confident than ever that they will be able to pass the measure. It is claimed that the quiet work which the harmony committee has been doing is having effect and that the opponents of the tariff are not so determined as they were a short time ago. The argument is being made that, this being a Republican measure, it ought not to defeated by Republican votes. L Pt O S ESTATE TREATY DEBATED. Amendments Defeated by Decisive Votes in the Senate. ‘WASHINGTON, March 21.—In the exec- utive session of the Senate to-day two ef- forts to amend the treaty between the United States and Great Britain relative to the disposition of estates were de- feated by decisive votes. One of the amendments offered was to strike out section 5 of the agreement extending the same privileges to each of the two na- tiops in the matter of acquiring or hold- ing property that may be extended to any other nations. The motion to amend was lost, 17 to 30. The otherr&l;nposed amend- ment related to the striking out of the gmvlslcn authorizing the Queen of Great ritain or the President of the United States to extend the provisions of the :;enty to dependencies of the two coun- es. the same proportion as the other. The principal speeches in support of the amendments and in opposition to the -ylru of the treaty were made by Jones of Arkansas, Turner of Washington, Pet- tigrew and Sullivan. They were replied to by the Republican members of the Committee on Foreign Relations. The de- bate was entirely legal in its scope. The treaty will be taken up again to-morrow. g PLAN FOR A WORLD’'S FAIR. St. Louis Asks for an Appropriation gTess. ‘WASHINGTON, March 2L.—Representa- tive Lane of Towa to-day introduced a bill providing for an exposition at St. Louis, Mo., in 193, to celebrate the one hun- redth anniversary of the hase of et i ) P a Governmen ng to cos also for the expenditure of !6.003,‘(% by-tlt‘m Government when the exposition authori- ties shall have raised 816’.000.@0. Provis- ion is made for the creation of a commis- sion and for other features giving the ex- position a national and international Bcope. ‘ —_— Invited to W: WASHINGTON, March 2L—A bill fa- vorably passed upon to-day by the Sen- ate Committee on Foreign Relations au- thorizes the President to invite the Intere national Congress of Navigation to meet in Washington in 1%01. The meets this year in Paris. New Telephone System. Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN QUENTIN PRISON, March 21— nl- will be in operation in a The new system will connect L e ] e a conve to the prison officials. ————— Dr. Parker's Cough Cure. One dose will stop Never falls. Try it All druggista, * d | | til dangerous disease ensues. MISTERY OF CLAYSON-OLSE PARTY SOLVED Their Dead Bodies Frozen | in the Ice Near | ® Minto. Further Evidence Against O’Brien, the Suspeet, Who Is Now Serv- | SICK HEADACHE Fositively cured by these ing a Term for Stealing Scows. | ST 1 VICTORIA, B. C., March 21.—The mys- tery surrounding the Clayson-Olsen party promises to be cleared up, the bodies of the missing men having been found in the | river three miles on the Skaguay side of Minto. The rews was brought by the | steamer Amur, which reached here this morning from Skaguay. Several days before the Amur left the Alaskan port Pinkerton Detective Mec- Guire and Captain Scarth of the mounted police sent messengers to Fort Selkirk in hot haste to get ice saws, stating that | they had located a hole in the ice through | which three men had been pushed and that they were sure they had at least one | of the murderers in jail at Selkirk. The | reference is of course to O'Brien, who is now serving a term for stealing scows. The point where the bodles were located is ot close to the trail, showing that the theory that they had been traveling on bicycles behind one another, and through | an accident were precipitated into river, is untenable. the lower | stratum the ice is discolored with human blood. The Alaskan says: *‘There is other evidence. Near the spot of the burfal was found a broken “‘brother’’ sleevelink and a pocketknife, | both of which are partlcnll.rl{ identified as belonging to young Relfe. Further | than this, a_closer examination of the| cabin near Minto, occupied at the time of the tragedy by O'Brien, has led to other discoveries. He had evidently burned up a lot of wearing apparel, and in the embers have been found buttons that will probably be identified.” The Coroner’s jury in the cases of Burt | Horton and his wife have returned a ver- | dict of murder by Indians. it r mdens the | “They also refieve Distress from Dyspepsta, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A pere fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsl. ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowelss Purely Vegetable. * Small Pill. Small Dose. . 8mafl Price. Ba>rgains in PIANOS ENTIRE STOCK OF HAMILTON-BANCROFT CO. MUST BE SOLD $50 upwards $20 upwards 99 Uprights - Squares SAY THE BODIES | WERE NOT FOUND VICTORIA, B. C., March 21L.—Alaska ar- rivals here to-night say there is no truth in the story of the finding of the bodies of Clayson, Reife and Olsen. They say that while the Skaguay Alaskan pub- llnmed such a story, it {uer proved un. | rue. FRESH STAMPEDE " TO STEWART RIVER Spectal Dispatch to The Call. | VICTORIA, B. C., March 21.—Arrivals | by the steanier Amur, which reached here | this morning with the startling news o(i the finding of the bodles of the murdered Clayson-Relfe-Olsen party, tell of a stam- ede to Stewart River. That gold bear- ng stream, which has more fluctuations than the majority of northern rivers, is now the Mecca of a great crowd of min- ers, who are rushing from near and far. The people of Stewart have gone in a body to a new find up the river. The dis- coverer ise W. Suttle, who was staked by some Dawson parties and who, in a spirit of pique at alleged mean treat- ment the news of his find public. He is now hurrying in, guiding Humboldt Gates and a large party of Dawsonians to the find. | Suttle says his discovery is on a tribu- | tary of the Stewart and he claims to have | taken out $500 in a few hours. R. R. Rae and F. H. Nagle, with nine | Malamoot dogs and a basket sled, have reached Skagway from Cape Nome. They made_good time, reaching Dawson from the Arctic in thirty-four days’ running time and fifty-two days actual time, leav- ing Nome January 6. They report that Nome residents are stampeding to creeks between Cape York and Unalaklik, a dis- tance of 250 miles up and down the coast. —_— Bill Regulating Homestead Entries. WASHINGTON, March 21.—The House | Committee on Public Lands to-day di-| | DR.HALL’S REINVIGORATOR rected a favorable report on a biH allow- |2’ e B AT TR secret ing an unmarried woman who locates a homestead_entry on unplatted lands to complete the entry after her m: ADVERTISEMENTS. PALPITATION . OF THE HEART Is Most Serious and May Result From Simple Indigestion. THE GREAT HUDYAN IS A POSI- TIVE AND PERMANENT CURE. There is an Intimate connection between stomach and heart. They are both controlled This was lost on a vote of about | by the same great nerve, therefors any disor- | der of one organ tends to affect the other. One may readily see the foily of permitting | any disorder of digestion to run its course un- | Heart disease is not the only danger. There is ulceration of the ‘stomach, which may take piace after the mucous membrane has been | subjected to a state of chronic inflammation. digestive disorders. HUDYAN cures are permanent. HUDYAN acts upon the liver, strengthening | it and gently stimulating it, thus overcoming | constipation. HUDYAN acts upon the many !ttle glands of the stomach that secrete the juices con- cerned in the digestion of food, increasing the | quality of those juices, as well as the quantity. | HUDYAN is for sale by druggists, a package or six for $2 50. 1f your druggist does not keep Hudyan send direct to the Hudyan Remedy Co., cor. Stock- ton, Ellis and Market sts., San Franciseo, Cal. of the Hudyan Remedy I@Ié‘ may be copsuited letter or in person. rite your symptoms. SEND FOR CIRCULARS AND TESTIMO- | NIALS OF THE GREAT HUDYAN..FREE. TAILOR-MADE SUITS at MODERATE PRICES . . 1 make suits for 25 per cent less than other tailors. Bust ts mfi“‘?{;g,’fi All-wool grub- | them when he was ill, has made | BYRON MAUZY 308-312 POST ST. SHEET MUSIC WALF PRICE TO ALL DR. PIERCE’S THIS BELT IS WAR- ranted to be the latest im- proved, most powerful and in | an the best now manufactured in any art of the world. Its equal does not exist. Tha | Baivanometer shows its electric current to ba double that of any other. Easily regulated. | Durably Insulated. Latest improved attach- ments. Special conductors and eec!mdo‘ | Double wire suspensory for men. any disease on earth that it is possible with electricity, and it cures when others f | Buy no beit tiil'you ses ““Dr. Plerce’s.” | “Booklet No. 2.” free at office or sent by mal for a 2-cent stamp, tells all about It. Address PIERCE ELECTRIC CO., 820 Market Street. (Opp. Palace Hotel) BAN FRANCISCO. Eastern Otfice—New York City. KRO Sana Centrifugal Pumps 9 Stevenson St 865 Broadway, for sale at 1073% Market st., diseases quickly cured. Send CAPE NOME TRANSPORTATION COMPANIES, CAPE NOME! Stes SAN PEDRO Steamship (Bullt in 1899.) Capacity 1000 tons. All modern conveniences for comfort, Klec- tric lighted throughout. Salling From BAN FRANCISCO i NOME DIRECT May 15, 1900 This company will have its own compiete equipment for the safe and expeditious landing of passen- gersand cargo on arrivalat Nome. For Freight and Passenger Rates Apply to GAPE NOME STEAMSHIP GO (H. R. DUFFIN & CO., Gen'l Agents,) 10 Montgomery St., San Franeisco, Pacific Coast Steamship Co. FOR THE CAPE NOME GOLD FIELDS. The New and Palatial Steel Steamshin SEN ATOR ‘Will Sall From San Francisco MAY 14th for the CAPE NOME GOLD FIELDS superior to jons on. most_of steamers advertised f Nome. The Pacific ahip Company 1as been