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THE SAN FRANCIS CO CALL, WEDNESDAY JANUARY 30, 1901. ANGRY RETORTS IN THE HOUSE nn of Oklahomu and Ste- vens of Texas Again Have an Exchange. 1 ! Colloguy ‘Grows Out of a Very Spir- MISS ASTOR MAY SOON WED YOUNG DUKE OF ROXBURGHE ‘Beautiful Daughter of Self-Expatriated American Millionaire Is Reported Engaged to the Greatest Matrimonial .Catch in the Peerage of the United Kingdom of Great Britain WILL FORCE-VOTE ON SUBSIDY- BILL Frye Announces That He Will Keep the Measure to the Front. Perkins Engages in a Short Colloquy d Discussion of the Sections of the Agricultural Appro- priation Bill. House y and ‘Gaines iimitatio of connection with our i overwhelmin of the bi FRESIDENT }'R;l( s THE CONSULAR SERVICE FLOORS CASTLE, KELSO THE_SEAT OF_THE DUKE O ROXDURGHE’ ONDON, Jan. 29.—Once again the rumor is abroad that Miss Paul- ine Astor, daughter of Willlam Waldorf Astor, is-engaged to the young Duke of Roxburg the eatest matrimonial catch in all Eng- land, and once again it has been impos- |sible to obtain a confirmation of the rumor. Both sides refuse to discuss the matter, but it is now fairly settled in the public mind that where there is so much smoke there must be fire. For which - | very homely reasbn congratulations seem { to be in order to the’ fair American who has Janded such a good thing in the peer- age. TR wil hike’ who sxiolces in the name of Sir Henry John Innes-Ker, bears in addition to the ducal title those of Mar- quis Bowmont and Cessford, Earl of Roxbitghe, Earl of Kelso, Viscount Brox- mouth, Baron Roxburghe and Baron Ker, \E 10 be abie in the ser- the steady ublication of of re- ovement ¢ dvance of the usual | wag born July 25, 1876, and is the elghth as nearly as pos- | gucal member of his house, which has long been a power on the Scottish bord sident ¢ The Kers can trace their pedigree back five.centuries and more. One branch has 3 given the Duke of Roxurghe: to another the Ma of Loth belongs. They nds Indemnity. —The President PRI R) LYNCHING MY familles nf f th lulah 4]4‘1 L B Truckee Indian Erutally Beats His Wife to Death. Special Dispatch to The Call. Our Annual Reduction B 8| TRUCKEE, Jan known as Young Botus, intoxicated this morning kicked and be his wife to death. Before death ended her suffering he dragged her into the snow back of the Europe Hotel and ther | her. Unable to call for assistance, she re mained outside an hour or more until car- ried by other Indlans to an outhouse | | near by, where she perished a few hours | later. Ishan was captured this morning. His | boots were covered with blood and in his | possession was mon woman. He is now in jail. Public feeling is strong. Crowds are on the streets discussing the affair, and a lynching may be attempted. Ishan a few yvears ago caused the death Sale. 207 Discount and Over On. Art Goods And Pictures, Crockery and B | ¢ another Indian woman, though the evi- B | dence at the time was insufficient to | | convict, NEW GOLD FIELDS ARE ) FOUND IN THE NORTH Big BPlacer Discovery About Sixty | Miles East of Atlin Attracts Many Prospectors. VICTORIA, B. C., Jan. 20.—The steamer | Amur brings news of new gold discoveries in the north. A big placer find, which was attracting many stampeders, has = B Glassware. . nn'ln Creek, a tributary of the When Charles McDonald, who has ar- B | rived with the news, left Atlin one hun- M | dred claims had been located. Lee Gor- M | don, the discoverer, says he took out $5 50 per day Stories of gold were also re- f S. & G. GUMP CO. vived from the Porcupine and Chilkat dis- B tricts. Rev. J. J. Walther says that while n3 Geary Street. he aiting the down steamer at B | Haine: r men mushed out and told him that from a space four feet square on Porcupine Creek dust worth $3000 was taken out of the claim, truth. but thinks the men told the He met a number of men from B | Bear Creek, in Chilkat di - strict, and all lI ll FENEERANEEENEEE | 0d of rich finds and agreed that the creek would prove wonderfully rich this | spring. Dawson papers tell of rich finds at | the head of Copper River and say many | are waiting. at Dawson to go into that ir‘uun!r\ at the earliest opportunity. A Dawson dispatch of January 22 says | quartz running as high as $100 to the ton | in gold hos been struck in great quantities in the Klondike. | TO CONNECT EUREKA 5 ‘ WITK OUTSIDE WORLD | Two Bl.flwny Proposxtmns in Which the Humboldt City Is Inter- ested. EUREKA, Jan. 2.—D. H. Keghersberg- | ér, former Treasurer of Chicago, arrived here to-day to investigate with a view to buiiding a rallroad to connect FEureka with the outside world. If conditions prove favorable a company will be at once organized, of which he will be presi- dent and Whiting G. Press of the Chicago Board of Trade vice president. | Another railroad proposition is | presented here by Lord Thurlow and George I1. Proctor. Their plan is to build | from Redding, Shasta County, and make Eureka the shipping point of the products of a portion of the Sacramento Valley and | of the Iron Mountain Copper Company’s | mines and smelters. ted time we offer big bargains in FuritureCarpes ng—we can eave you money. IT EXTENDED. within 200 miles on 3% T Bnlhant Furniture o, | 338+342 Post Street, Posell Open Evenings. Dled in Eonohllu. PACIFIC GROVE, Jan. 29.—The re- | mains of Mies Elizabeth L. Cloud, daugh- ‘!er of Hon. C. M. Cloud of Philadeiphia, were laid to rest beside her grandparents | in E1 Carmelo Cemetery at this place yess terday. Miss Cloud died on January 13 of typhold pneumonia, at Honolulu, whither she had gone with a party of friends on a pleasure trip Near FOLLOW MURDER left | taken from the | been struck about sixty miles east of At-| He did not learn the number | being | both found their way into the peerage about the same time—the Roxburghe branch in 1600, the Lothian branch in 1606. The* first Lord Roxburghe accompanied James VI into England, and was Lord Privy Seal to Charles I. A hundred years later the fifth Earl was created Duke of Roxburghe. It was his grandson, the third Duke, who raised the art of book collecting into a palpitating mania which has rarely been equaled. When he died the glory of his house seemed to come to an end, for, as he left no issue, his Eng- lish honors became extinct, his ots titles devolved upon his kinsman, Lord Bellen- den, while his library was sold at.auction, For forty-two days (May 18-July 8) the hammer clicked incessantly amid an ex- cited audience in the dining-room of the house, the 9353 lots fetching £23,241. - The enthusiasm buyers reached such a pitch that £2260 was run up for the “Val- darfer Boccacclo,” printed in Venice in 1471, this being the highest price that has ever been paid for a single volume. The ducal line was broken again in the person of the fifth Duke, who was Sir James Innes-Norcliffe. The seventh Duke who died in 1892, married Lady Anne L e e e e ) OFFICIAL RECORD OF DAWSON DEAD {Grim Reaper’s Harvest in Months of November and December. Special Dispatch to The Call SEATTLE, Jan. —According ficial records 100 deaths occurred in Daw- | son and the Yukon country during 1900. The average death rate was seven to each | 1000 persons. During December the maxi- mum was reached, the death rate running s high as 1875 per 1000, due mostly to w typhoid fever and pneumonia. Nine were | from pneumonia and four from typhoid | out of twenty-five deaths in December. There were seventy-three marriages in the Territory in 1900, as against flft\-nlne | in 1899. The inr‘re'un in the number of | women and children also was marked. The birth rate for the year was 1.625 to | the thousand. | Following is_the list of all those save Indians who died in November and De- | cember. together with former residence, age, occupation and cause of death: Deaths in December. Stephen Holgate, aged 28 years, California, gambler, suicide by taking morphine. William Bowes, aged 24, Ontario, miner. Herman T Kanable, infant. Mrs. Clara Barber, aged 32, monta. | W. R. Davies, 2, William Collins, 3 monia. D. Donals, 53, miner, injury. | A. J. Waltlers, 41, Ohio, miner, pneumonta. ¥. Rahn, 48, (‘rvrmln\ miner, pheumonia. Ronald McKae, 60, killed accidentally. William Edward O’ Brien, 22, woodchopper, Charlotte County, New Brunswick, kidney trou- ble. George Dudgigy, 40, miner, pneumonia. Otto_Johnson, fniner, Iiinols, typhoid. A. F. Brant, 22, freighter, Fennsylvania, typhotd. £ Christopher J. Welden, miner, New Bruns- wick, typhoid. Edward P. Gibetz, 42, pneumonta. Albert Peckham, 52, laborer, New York fever. Alex Godtrey, 45, pleurisy. Deaths in November. Elbridge Bartlett, 45, Puyallup, Wash., pneu- monia. Werner Hill, € drowned in Klondike. River. | "Afthur Willls Welbon, Infant son of Mr. and Mrs, E. T. Welbon of Ontario. Sterling B. Riggins, 46, Missouri, pneumonta. Wisconein, pneu- phetd, miner. California, gambler, pneu- veterinary surgeon, years, Thomas MecGlynn, 46, carpenter, Ireland. Joseph Kovole, 23, laborer, St. Alphgnse. Peter McDonald, 33, miner, Novd Scotia, | heart failure. Albert Pilgrim, 29, miner, Newfoundland, accident. Montague Martin, 32, artist, Oxford, England, | peritonitis. James A. White, 30, tubercalosis. Charles Topp, 25, miner, Sweden, typhold. | James Davis, Walla Walla, Wash., murdered | at Hootalinqua by George St. Cyr. John Sellers, 40, laborer, Sweden, e oy | SENATOR NOT DAMAGED. Strikes on a Ledge Off Shelter Island, but Is Soon Floated. SEATTLE, Jan. 20.—The steamship Sen- ator, Captain Patterson, arrivéd in port shortly after noon to-day. The Senator | will go on the ¢rydock as soon as she has discharged for examination of her hull. ““The Senator was making about twejve and a half knots,” said Captain Patterson, “when she struck on a ledge about one- eighth of a mile off the main shore of Shelter Island. It was not hard rock, though it was .rocky. In about two a one-half hours she floated with the tide. There was no trouble of any kind. We had a very stormy passage down from Skaguay. All the way to Queen Charlotte- Sound we faced a heavy southeaster, with rain and snow." — i Gift From Queen Victoria. SAN JOSE, Jan. 29.-At the memorial | services in honor of the late Queen Vic- toriu to be held here next Sunday night b) the British residents scripture will be ad from a Bible which was a rellfin e. n{,e ufen to the late James e hos s_at present the Tt Mrs. Sarah Baillle Weolley of this ’c’ny. who inherited it ‘mm her fathers saloon-man, England, drowned. to of- | Relative to the Payment of Bonus to Foreign-Built Ships. —_— ‘WASHINGTON, Jan. 29.—Senator Frye gave notice in the Sepate to-day that he intended to keep the shipping bill to ths front even as against appropriation bills, not yielding to them without a vote. It revealed a disposition on the par. of the Senate leaders to force a vote on the measure, whether it will pass at this ses- sion or not. Senator Turner of Washing- ton spoke to-day in severe arralgnment of the bill. Turner sald that all the world outside of the United States pald less than $20,- 000,000 annually in the way of ship sub- | sidles. This country was preparing to pay almost half as much, when it is admitted | !that our tonnage is not one-hundredtn | part of the tonnage of the world. He ar- | gued that outside of the vicious principle of the bill the greatest objection to it 13 found in the fact that it will retard in- | stead of advance American shipbuilding. The result of such legislation would be that shipowners would build ships for for- eigners far more cheaply than they would build American vessels. He asserted that | the proposed subsidy. would amount :o more than ten and half per cent on the capital invested In shipping. The ship- owners, he =ald, never would consent to a division of this bonus with the shipbuild- Turner concluded at 5:3) o'clock. where- upon Frye took the floor with a’reques | for action upon the amendments :ug‘ns!- | ed by the Committee on Commerce. | rye sald his only purpose at this time | in requesting action upon the amendments was to get the bill perfect shape and that there was no jdea of preventing op- portunity to Senators to offer other | amendments. The amendments hereto- ore suggested were then formally agreed | to. Perkins took exception to the provision of the bill limiting the amount of subsidy to go to ships built on the Pacific Coast to 30 per cent of the whole amount. Frve | replied that no more had been asked be- | fore the committee. He would be sur- | prised, he said. to find the Senator from | | California suggesting amendments to the | bill as now perfected in view of the fact that as a member of the committee he had voted for the bill when it was not | half as good as now. | " Replying, Perkins sald he had agreed to | | the reporting of the bill, but that he never would consent to giving subsidies to for- elgn bullt ships. ‘b"’rhen‘ sald Frye, *‘Oh, no,” for it “If you strike out the provision for for- elgn ships I will leave the bill,” replied Frye. “You would be forty vears in get- ting a merchant marine without it.”” Aldrich soyght to have certain amend- ments which ‘he said he desireq to sug- adopted as commitee amendments, With the understanding that they would be subject to further amendment, but | there was objection, and he contented himself with offering the amendments in | order that they might be printed. One of | these limits contracts under the bill to fifteen years instead of twenty, and gives | no premium for speed above eighteen | knots. | Before the sesston closed the committee | | amendments were formally agreed to. The Indian appropriation billi was passed early in the day. DUKE, HIS REPUTED FIANCEE AND HIS FAMILY SEAT AT KELEO. % “you will kill the replied Perkins, “I will vote s * | Emily Spencer Churchill, the aunt of the | present Duke of Marlborough, whose an- cestor had purchased the famous ‘‘Boc- cacelo,” and who, like his cousin, thé Duke of Roxburghe, came into his titls as a minor. The young Duke of Roxburghe was edu- cated at Eton and Sandhurst, and was re- cently gazetted to a lieutenancy In the Second Life Guards. His mother, who | was Mistress of the Robes to the Queen ! rrnm 1880 to 1885, was a great friend of her | | Majesty, after whom his sister, Lady Vic- toria Alexandrina Innes-Ker, is named. | Floors Castle, where the majority rejole- | ings were held in the first weeK of this | month, Is beautifully situated at the con- | | _Rev. Mr. Miller Made Chaplain. fiuence:of the Teviot and the Tweed near | WASHINGTON, Jan. 20.—The Senate to- Kelso and has been the scene of many a | day confirmed the nomination of Rev. | brllllnm i&!heflug in which several mem- | Oliver C. Miller of California to be chap- | bers of the royal family have figured. lain in the army. l 1 | Made to order- 10 We make you a good, all-woel, stylish suit to your order for $10.00. The assortment from which you select comprises § many stvlish patterns, including the tweeds of the season and §! black cheviot. You can take a number of samples home and compare them. In hddition to the value you are getting we put a ‘‘Yeargood’’ label in the pocket of the coat, which guar- antees the suit: We will keep the suit in repair free for cne year. And to protect you even further, we will return your J monev if you think you have not your money’s worth. | Could we do more to impress vou with the value of these suits and the faith we have in them? i pemsatl Out-of-town orders filled—write for samples and self- measuring blank. SNWO0D - 718 Market Street and Cor. Powell & Eddy Sts. FARE DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. DO YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK? Do You Have Rheumat]ém? Bladder or Uric Acid Trouble? To Prove What SWAMP-R Have You 00T, the Great Kidney and Bladder Remedy, Will Do for YOU, All Qur Readers May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. Pain or dull ache in the back {s unmis- takable evidence of kidney trouble. It is nature’s timely warning to show you that | the track of health is not clear. It these danger signals are unheeded more serlous results are sure to follow. Bright's disease, which is the worst form of kidney trouble, may steal upon you. The mild and the extraordinary effact of the world-famous kidney and bladder remedy, Swamp-Root, is soon realized. It stands the highest for fts wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. A trial will convince one—and you may bave a sample bottle for the asking. me back is only one symptom of kid- ney trouble—one of many. Other symp- toms showing that you need Swamp- Root are, obliged to pass water often dur- ing the day and to get up many times at night, ing or frritation in passing, brickdust or sediment In the urine, catarrh of the blad- der, urlc acld, constant headache, diz- ziness, sleeplessness, nervousness, irregu- | lar heart-beating, rheumatism, bloating, irritability, wornout fceling, lack of am- bition, loss of fiesh, sallow complexion. If your water when allowed to remain undisturbed in a glass or bottie for twen- ty-four hours forms a sediment or sot- | tling, or has a cloudy appearance, it is inability to hold your urine, smart- | | evidence that your kidneys and bladder need immediate attention. king Swamp-Root you afford nat- | ural help to rature, for Swamp-Root is the most perfect healer and gentle aid to the kidneys that is known to medfcal science. { Swamp-Root is the great disecovery of Dr. Kilmer, the eminent kidney and blad- | der specialist. Hospitals use it with won- derful success in both slight and severs cases. Doctors recommend it to their pa- tlents and use 't in their own familles, be- cause they recognize in Swamp-Root the greatest and most successful remedy. If you have the slightest symptom of kidney or bladder trouble, or if there is a trace of it in your family history, send at once to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., who will gladly send you free by mall, immediately, without cost to you, a mple bottle of Swamp-Root and a book of wonderful Swamp-Root testimonials. Be sure to say that you read this gener- ous offer in the S8an Francisco Daifly Call. It vou are already convinced that | Swamp-Root is what you need you can purchase the regular 50-cent and $1 size bottles at drugstores. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp- Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the | address, Binghamton, N. Y. OCEAN TRAVEL. Pacific Coast Steamship Co. Steamers leave Broadway wharf, San Francisco. o For Alaskan Ports—11 a. m. Feb. 5, 10, 15, 2, % Change to company at_Seattle. March 2. steamers For_Victoria, Vancouver (B. | @), Port Townsend, Seattle, Tacoma, Everett, Annenrtn and New Whatcom ( 11 Feb. 5, 10, March 2, and every fifth day thereafter. Change at Seattle for this company's steamers for Alaska and G. N. Ry.; at Seattle or Tacoma to N. P. Ry.; at Vancouver to C. P Ry. For Eureka, Humboldt Bay—2 Feb. 2. | Tk X 7i: Macch 4, and every ffth day thereafter. For San Diego, stopping only at Santa Bar- bara, Pert Los Angeles and Redondo (Los An- | geles)—Steamer Queen, Wednesdays, steamer Santa Rosa. Sundays, 9§ m. For Santa Cruz, Monterey. San Simeon, ucos, Port Harford (San Luls Obispo), Gavi- ota, Santa Barbara, Ventura, Hueneme; San Pedro, East San Pedro (Los Angeles) and Newport—Steamer Corcna, Fridays, 9 a. m.; steamer Bonita, Tuesdays, 9 a. m. For Ensenada, Magdalena Bay, San Jose del Cabo, Mazdtlan, Altata. La P: and Guaymas (Mex.)—19 a. m., 7th each month. For further Information obtain company’'s folders. The company reserves the right to change steamers, salling dates and hours of salling, without previous notice, TICKET OFFICE 4 New Montgomery street (Palace Hotel). GOODALIL, PERKINS & CO.. Gen. Agts., 10 Market st., San Francisco. THE 0. R, & . CO. DISPATCH FAST STEAMERS TO PORTLAND From Spear-strest Whart at 11 a. m. $I2 First Class Including Berth $8 Second Class and Meals. GEO. W. ELDER Satl Jan. 2% 9 a m; COLUMBIA Salls Feb. 2 Short Line to Waiia WWalla, Spokane, Butts. Helena and all points m Northwest. Through tickets to all points e E. C. WARD, General Agent, 630 Market st. TOY0 KISEN KAISHA. TEAMERS WILL LEAVE WITARF, COR- ner First and Brannan streets, at 1 p. m. for YOKOHAMA and HONGKONG, calling Kobe (Hiogo), Nagasaki and Shanghal, and amers for No cargo received on board on day connecting at Hongkoug with Jndia. etc. of sailing. §5"NIPPON MARU.. uesday, February 19, 1901 i Friday. Mareh 35, 1301 ..Tuesday, Aprii 5, 1901 trip tickets al reduced rates. For freight and passage apply at company’s office, 421 Market street, corner FI 3 AVERY, eral Agent. AMERICAN LINE. NEW YORK. EGUTHAMPTON, LONDON, PARI3. Stopping at Cherbourg, westbound. From New York Every Wednesday, 10 a. m. New York.......Feb. €|New York Fep. 27 Kensington .....Feb. 13} Vaderland March & St. Louls........Feb. 2ISt. Louls RED STAR LINE. New York and Antwaerp. From New York Every Wednesday, 12 noon. Westernland .Feb. f)Friesland . ..Feb. 77 Kensington .....Feb. 13| Southwark .. March § Noordland . Westernland... March 13 | INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION COMPANY, CHAS. D. TAYLOR, General Agent Pacific Coast, . 30 Montgomery street. COMPAGNIE GENERALE TRANSATLANTIQUE. DIRECT LINE TO HAVRE-PARIS, Sailing every Thursday, instead El(nrdlny. at tl. l.“l'll.. Banta Rosalla | Mareh 13 | OCEAN mvm WAWAII, SAMOA, NEW ZEALAND 4so SYONEY, Oceanlc $.8.C0. i v SS. MARIFOSA (Honolulu oniy).. Saturday, February 3, 7 p. m. TRALIA, for "Tahiti. Friday. Februa: l, s ‘ m. NTURA. for Honolulu, Samoa. New aland and Australia. .'Av [ ... Wednesday, February b m. =] ST PANAMA R. R. Uine To NEW YORK via PANAMA Direct Special Reduced Cabin Fare, $75. S. S. ST. PAUL sails. January 20. S. S. ARGYLL sails February 5. S. S. ROANOKE sails February 19. From wharf, foot of Fremont st. Freight and passenger office, 330 F: F. CONNOR. Pacific Coast Agent. PACIFIO STEAM NAVIGATION CO. AND COMPANIA SUD AMERICANA DE VAPORES | To_Valparatso. stopptng at Mexican, Central and South American ports. From foot of Fre- mont street. Sailing: | 8. 8. GUATEMALA February 7, 1801 S. & PALENA.... ~Febru 8. S| COLOMBIA Marc | 8._S. TUCAPEL. Ma: These steamers are bullt expressly for Cen- tral and South American passe FOR U. S. HAVY YARI] AND VALLEJO. ; Pt n o Tuefl Wed., Thurs. and Sat. at 9:48 ». m. Fri- e m. 3 (ex. Thurs. night): Sundays, 10: 1p. ¥ m. Landing and office, Misston-street Dock, Telephone Main 1308. Prer Nor 2. £DB, PIERGE'S ELEGTRIC BELT' for comparison with any belt How 8ol tn America. - Seeing is Belleving s NOTE.—We never send On Trial there. fore in grdering ~Dr. Plere is run of contracting Mkin Disease or ctber by i Sriously worn by ether o ' for m“'mm -q PIEHOE F1 SCTRIC COn rondway, (mear 26th 3i.) New Y ork, Or' 350 Mariet Streei, an Francisco. 3 noomo»m VTP TYY VYT YT YV Y Y Y YYYV T YTYTYTY ' ERMANENT CURE ! moat obstinate cases of Gonorrhae. | teed in from 3 ® @ ] treatment Sold by ail droggista. Souses, o piitard ubl.s ters, painters, shoe factories, roofers, tanners, tatlors, ete. BUCH#ANAN BROS.. Brush Manufacturers, 609 Sacramsato 5» blemen, tar-