THE rim MiUJN iOl. j VOL. XVI. ST. HELENS, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1899. NO. 46. M EVENTS OF THE DAI Epitome of the Telegraphk News of the World. TKRSK TICKS FROM THK WIRES an Interesting Collection of Item Fron) the Two Hemisphere 1'r.Hit.d la Cooden.ed Form i Til Burgher aro mid to hav secured the services of 18,000 native. . Prolongation ol war beyond Itrltlub expectations la now suld to be certain. ' The navy deiuu-tmcnt i to give Mar conl'a wlrelu telegraphy a practical test. England will expect tlio Boers to pay the coat of war when tlio euil COIIle. The government of Venezuela has been turned over to Castro, who seems to be very popular. United States army oflloorg have Imn wmt to Honth Africa to watob tlio progress of the war. A Chicago enndymau hat confessed to the police that he linn 42 wlvei In different parts of the world. Fifteen alnk men of the Iowa regi ment are now in the general hospital at the Presidio, Ban Francisco, Russia ha at lust agreed that the clulm resulting from the seizure ol goals in Uohrinif sea shall be arbitrated. : Ho Ho la itirred by the expectation of impiirtaut righting. Volley aro be ing tired at the Amortuail outposts nightly. Colonel John I). Yates, one of Gun eral Sherman's main supports in the famous niaivh to the aea, la dead at Ameslmrg, Out. The battleships Texas and Indiana re to go out of commission, aa the officers and men are needed In the 1'htllpplnw. Othera may follow, A Berlin dispatch says telegram fnim Brussels announce that' in the Tranivaal luxation circle it la stated that France and Russia will not per mit the annexation of the Trunsvaul and Orange Free State to England. ' At Atchison, Kan., two robbera shot nd killed one man and wounded an other in atore, which they later rob bed. Thny were pursued by a posse and they shot and killud a policeman and another man, both member of the pursuers. Canada ban made a uow proposition (or rmancnt settlement of the Alaska dispute. She attain ask for arbitra tion on terms similar to those ttnK)iie! liy the United State and Great llritatn over Venezuela. Fifty year of occu pancy la considered conclusive evi dence of title, She In willing to Klve up Skagway and Dyea, but wants Pyra mid Harbor, i The revolution at Colombia is spread lug. President Kroner la reported aa In favor of unconditional surrender. Insurgents in Southern Luxon at tacked Calamba, but were driven off. v F.voleth, Mluu., In to be moved tc make room for miuiug operationa ou the town alto. William II. Ilrown rode 1,000 mllea wheel lu Hi hours, breaking the rec ord by seven hours. William Wilklc, aged 10, was killed by Charles Cheliu in Chicago, aa the result of a prizefight. The British losses In Natal iu three days' fighting are laid to have beer, nearly 600 killed und wonudvd. England'a newspaper must here after look to the United State and .Canada for their paper pulp. German carp found In the Columbia and Wilauiette rivers in great numbers will be frozen for foreign shipment. Thieve entered the postofllce at Albany, Or., through a tunnel and roblwd Die vault, securing about f M0. The remains of Lieutenant-Colonel Miley, Shaffer's chiof ailo, were brought home on the Senator. . He fell a victim to fevor in the Philippines. Change In ranks of naval ollloera have made it necessary to give Sampson and Hchlcy loss advancement than would have been given ont last sesHion of congrosa. Montana waa visited by a disastrous anow storm, the woret In 20 years. The Iom of life Will exceed 20 persona In Teton county, and 20,000 sheep per ished lu the storm. A soonting party of the Thirty-sixth volunteer encountered inaurgenta in southwest Santa Arita, scattering them, killing six and capturing eight, and 10 rifles. No casualties. A cablegram has been received at the state department from United Stutea Consul Oudger, at Punuma, stating that an Insurrection ha broken out there, and that martial law has been declared. Itatos, Lawton and Fnnston hove re ceived deserved appointments. Hate haa been made major-general of volun teers, Lawton brigadier-general in regu lar army and Funston haa beeu given reappointment. One hundred years ago It was consid ered a wonderful achievement for ten men to manufacture 48,000 pins a day. Now three make 7,600,000 plus in the) name time. It la complained that the blacksmith of Minneapolis, St. Paul and Duluth how lack ol Interest in the operation of the horseshoe' license law. The members of the craft iu Duluth wore so disinterested that they conceded Ihoir vacancy to the board of examine to Minneapolis. LATER NEWS. Tho PVer loss at Eland's Laagto was ou Kinen ana 04 wounded. John Itarrett, ex-United Rtate mtn later to Slam, la locturiug in the South Klght men were buried alive by cave-in on tne laaoella mine at Cripple uiecK, uoio. President McKinloy and Secretary Long attended the launching of the Shu brick at Richmond, Va. The Twentieth Kansas volunteers have been mustered out. They left for Home on apodal train. Uolonol Hav thinks the Vnlilna trail. an all-A-aerican route to the Alaskan gold field, suitable for a railroad. Agents of the Transvaal government are in Chicago seeking to enlist Amer icana for service in the ranks of the lloera. With inipresslvo military honors the body of General Guy V. Henry was burled at Arlington cemetery, Wash' lngton. The move for the Increase of the Ger man navy waa made by Emperor Wil liam In person, and aa yet is whol! uuHuported. The Fourth Infantry, 1,200 officer! and men, has left Fort Riley, Kansas, for San Francisco, en route to the Philippine. A circular Issued by the Ohio repub Ucan state executive committee, sollO' iting contributions from federal em ployes hu been declare by the civil service board, contrary to law. According to the latest report from Cape Town , General Joubort ha joined hand with the Free State forces, and there haa been some outpost lighting, President Kruger has arrived at Glen coe. Michael Hatal waa killed while per fAnnlng a feat of magic In catching bullets in bis teeth, at New York. Leaden bullets had been substituted by some one for the usual "dummy" arti cle. General Fitzhiigh Lee, while visiting in Washington, said in an interview that the Cuban people are ateadily im proving under the exiating protectorate of the United States, but fare not yet quite ready for purely Cuban govern ment. A desperate atreet fight between meiiilx-rs of a Tennessee colony recently located at North Salem, Ind., and citi toni of North Salem, resulted in the instant death of one man and the fatal wounding of another, and minor injur ies for many others. The Secial correspondent of the Lon don Daily Mail at Ladysmith, describe! the arrival of the war balloon there. It was welcomed, he said, with wild dances by the Kaffirs, who regard it at a deity. General White and General Arohilutld Hunter both ascended and reconnoitored the enemy's position. A national billiard association may soon lie in the field. Washington Is said to be the most productive of the Fanning group ol Islands. It is rumored that A. D. Clarke, an Englishman, may try for the cup to gel even with Lord Dunraven. Colonel Frost aays the stories ol American soldiers looting churches If absolutely false. He praises Otis. The university of Oregon will play football against the university of Cali fornia at Berkeley campus November 18. St. Louis' world's fair is to be s great one. The fund has already reached f 1,000,000. The total amount aimed at is 5,000,000. The White Star steamer Germanic collided with a barge near Liverpool and was seriously injured. She will not sail for New York this trip. Reverend MoKinnon asserts that General Luna, the rebel chief killed by Aguiualdo'a orderly, had killed his wife and mother-in-law in Paris and fled. A Paris dispatch says Russia haa no interest in Kruger's people or their lit tle renuhllo. and will not Interfere. Germany is said to be friendly to the English. A irlant brass combine is beine formed which it is stated will comprise all the plants in the Naugatuok valley, Connecticut. The main omce win ue in New York city. TIiaIQ TJnunlun men-of-war in the Pacific will shortly be reinforced by six Bhips from the Eastern squadron. 'I'hu ltnrlin IWeblntt sees in this a con nection with the rumors of the China- Japanese alliance. Rnnrntarv Lons will make a recom mendation for but a limited inorease ol tha nnw iuvv in his forthcoming annual report. Ho will devote most of hit energies to urging abolition of limit ol cost in the construction of battleships. Herr Hopeff, ex-treasurer of the Al bert Verein, a charitable organization mt,lr Dm nntronase of the kins and queen of Saxony, was sentenced to im prisonment for four yea ami nint months for misappropriating 250,000 marks of the society's funds. At Paris, Mo., the grand jury re turned an indiotment for murder in the tit i,..,r,A mrniiiHt Alexander Jester, on the charge of murdering Gilbert Gates, son of a Chicago millionaire, m years ago. "It begins," says Tin and Terne, "to look as though Andorson and El wood are to be the tinplate centers ol manufacture in the West." The union cigar-makers of Tampa, t.--i.. 1.....A nnfnrnad a demand that It.., MW " cigar factories be scrubbed and cleaned once a month. There are upwards of 1,000,000 ship pers of produce in the United States, ' j u i i, !!.,. ,.,,1 that. Imm t.hnir nuiki aUU 16 W UCitwvo ... . strong national organization can b framed. , GENERAL LAND OFFICE Annual Report of Commit sioner Hermann. APPROPRIATIONS FOR SURVEYS Itoeomniondatlou ftogni-tllii; the For as Brvs of tlie North wast Charg-a for Orasln;. Washington, Oct. 28. The annual report of Commissioner Hermann mukes the following estimates for sur veys for the coming year: SO towiiililua In Central tud Wcitcrn Or(on 70,00 Oi-cunleil l.ndi In Wahllifton SA.uoO Public land. In lilsha IUu.iMi Mluerftl monument. ... v 6 UK) tiuiidurlit survey. In Ala.kn. 103,472 Of its entire grant, the Northern Pa- cillo has now received 21,718,268 acres, and 14,851,832 acres are still due. A the department now considcro that it has no authority to oxpeot payment for sheepgrazing privileges ou the forest reserves, the commissioner recom mends that congress authorize the sec retary to make a reasonable charge for such grazing, tlio grazing to be con fined to open areas. It is rocomioendod that from 8 to 10 cents per head for cattle, and 1 to 2 cents pur head for sheep be charged In the Cascade re serve, and at the rate of $5 per thous and in Kainler rosorve in Washington. He argues that so lou as tho millmen and lumber doalorn pay a fair price for timber supplies drawn from publio lands, there should be an equal charge levied upon the grazing products of auch lands, anil hopes that legislation to this effect will be early enacted. When the geological survoy has ex tended Its surveys over the reserves, and the lands more valuablo for agri cultural than for forest purposes have been segregated, the commissioner thinks a better disposition can be made for the exclusion of sheep from the re serves, and if it shall be held that no teep shall graze on any reserve, the ricultural or grazing lands should first be eliminated entirely from the re serve. Among other things the commis sioner recommends legislation term it- ting lands within forest reserves to be rented or leased for any purpose not Incompatible with the purposes for which the reservations aro created, He also desire legislation permitting too entry of lands within the reerva tions more valuable for coal than for forest ases. A larger force to push more rapidly the work of examining the remaining unreserved forest lands is asked for, which could be secured for $900,000, and $160,000 is asked for additional special agents. Other recommendations are for the compulsory attendance of witnesses at land hearings; to prevent the mining and sale of coal during the lifetime of a coal declaratory statement, or until full payment is made for the land; for changing and enlarging the Mount Kainler National Park; that a general v be enacted which shall repeal imerous conflicting and undesirable statutes respecting timber on unre served lands, and in their stead make due provision for the protection and use of timber on such lands. The report shows a grand total of 929,308,068 acres of unappropriated and reserved pulbio lands in the United States. VANDERBILT'S WILL. Its Provlalnus Mad Public-Alfred 0). t Now Head of (ha Homo. New York, Oct. 28. Tho provisions of the will of the late Cornelius van- derbilt were made publio tonight in a statement by Chauncey M. Depew. Alfred Gwynne Vandorbilt inherits the larger portion of his father's fortune and becomes practically the head of the Vanderbilt family. Tho will mokes no mention of the marriage of Cornelius Vanderbilt, jr., and Miss Wilson, nor to any quarrel between father and son because of the union, but apparently the father's displeasure was visited on the eldest son, ho receiving, all Id, under the terms of the will, but 11,600,000, and $1,000,000 of this to be held in trust by the executors. Al fred Gwynne Vanderbilt is, of course, the residuary legatee, and will possess a fortune of probably $-10,000,000 to $60,000,000. Gladys, Reginald and Gertrude (Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney) will receive about $7,600,000 cacfi. But Mr. Depew states that Alfred will give from his share enough to Cornelius to make the latter as rich as nts Drotner and sisters. Alfred will, therfore, turn over to Cornelius about $0,000,000. . Suppoaad to Ba Aitdraa' Men. London, Oct. 28. Tho Times pub lishes a letter from Itear-Admiral Cam pion, summarising a story received from his nephew, now at Fort Churoh hill, Hudson bay, which says some Eskimo traders up north sonio time ago shot two white men, supposed to be long to the Andree expedition. Spanish Guuboat Halted. Washington, Oct. 28. Admiral Watson has informed the navy depart ment that the Spanish gunboat Arayat, sunk May, 1808, in tlie 1'usig river, has been raised. The boat is in fair condi tion, and will be repaired. Itrtimby Gets a Sword. day paid tribute to her ranking hero of . : , , , j in., t j tlie BpaniBn-Amencau war, r lag juieu tenant Thomas M. Brumby, of the Olyrapia, by the presentation of a hand some sword, in recognition of his note worthy services at Manila. c.,tt nf Alva, in Southern Illinois. i ,L. V. ...... n nMMifluld nf flic wnrlft IB LIU, lUiuuai . .. . It will give this year 600,000 bushels of corn, an average of 100 bushels to the acre. ..,. BURNED AT SEA. De.trnotlon of the George B. Stetson OS) the t'oa.t of Formo.a, San Francisco, Oct. 80. -Mrs. P. W. Patton, the wife of Captain Patton, whose vessel, the American ship George B. Stetson, was burned at sea off the coast of Formosa about two months ago, haa just arrived here, and tells a graphic story of the destruction of the vessel. She was the -only woman aboard. "I did not understand at first when the alarm was given, " said Mn, Pat ton, "but a moment later my husband came into the cabin and told me to hurry and clothe the baby and myself for a trip in an open boat. By the time I was clothed and reached the deck, the flames had got aft as far as the mainmast, and the rigging almost above my head was all ablaze. "The longboat was in the water long side with eight of the crew. Just a I got Into the boat there was a loud roar and the skylight and roof of the cabin were lifted off by an explosion of the gases that had formed in the room aft. A moment later the whole ship was a mass of flames, and as we pulled away the mainmast fell. A few min utes later there was a sudden roll, and the ship went down. "Two days and two nights we were In that boat. About noon of the sec ond day we saw land and that evening we landed on the little island of Ti Pin Tsen, which was taken from the Chi nese by the Japanese during the recent war. We landed at a small village of the natives and the babv and I were the greatest curiosities the natives had ever seen." The George B. Stetson was bound from Portland, Or., for Tien Tsih, with a cargo of railroad lumber, in com mand of Captain Patton. She had a crew of 20 men. On the evening of September 10, off the east coast of For mosa, smoke was discovered coming up out of the forepeak. Captain Patton tried to rally bis crew, but they were panlo-stricken, and paid no heed to dis cipline. The boats were launched to save them from burning. From the island the survivors of the Stetson went to Nagasaki in a small Japanese steamer. Ia.peotlon at Vaneonver. Vancouver, Wash., Oct. 80. Tele graphic orders from the adjutant-general's office in Washington were re ceived today, directing the military authorities of this department to re ceive no more recruits for volunteer service. The Thirty-ninth regiment, United States volunteer infantry, and two oompanies of the Forty-fifth, recruited here, were given general inspection to day by Captain Henry P. McCain, as sistant adjutant-general, department of the Columbia, who was appointed in specting officer for this special purpose. The inspection was thorough in very detail of camp and field service and equipment. Two hundred and fourteen pack mules and 80 men arrived here today from St. Louis. The mules are intend ed for use of the army in the Philip pines, and will be sent on the transport Lennox from Portland. Rivera Dl.mlMed. Havana, Oct. 80. General Rios Rivera, ex-civil governor of the prov ince of Havana, whose withdrawal from the governorship was reported as a resignation, denies that he re signed. He says he was dismissed, and that he does not know upon what grounds the dismissal was ordered. Ho admits that he had recently re marked that he would resign in the event that at least one of the three nominations he had made to publio offloe was not approved, but he attrib utes bis dismissal to the direct in fluence of Senor Domingo Mendos Ca pote, secretary of state in the advisory cabinet of Governor-General Brooke. Me Took Tax Money. Eugene, Or., Oct. 8a Deputy Sher iff H.J. Day has been found to be a defaulter to the amount of a little more than $2,100. He went to Portland last Friday on business, and tele graphed his wife from Portland Sun day, that he would be home Tuesday. Sinoe then nothing has been heard o Win. A reward of $100 has been offered for his arrest. His defalcation is a great surprise to his friends, as he has always been considered trustworthy. The money taken waa tax money col lected in the past two months. XHsappearanee at Sea. Washington, Oct. 80. News was re ceived at the war department of the ar rival of the hospital ship Belief at Ma nila. She reported the disappearance at sea, between Guam and Manila, of Lieutenant Robert D. Carmody, who went to Guam with a marine battalion on the Yosemite, when Captain Leary Was sent ont as governor to take posses sion of the) island. There are no details of the occurrence. It appears Carmody was taken aboard at Guam,-presumably siok, and on orders home, or else on furlough. It is thought possible he may have jumped overboard while de lirious. Missouri at Port Said. ' Port Said. Oct. 80. The United States transrjort Missouri, with a laree quantity of medical supplies and a number of nurses, has arrived here, en route to Manila. Helen Gonld and Mormonlsm. New York, Oct. 80. Miss Helen Gould has given $8,000 to the League for Social Service to be used in a cru sade against Mormonism. The league has issued 1,000,000 pamphlets in pur suance of Miss Gould's directions. They are aimed dlreotly at Mormonism and Brigham H. Roberts, as congress man, and will be distributed all over the country. When they are exhausted millions more will follow them. The pamphlets and blank petitions will be sent to 60,000 clergymen, VIOLATED HIS OATH Wealthy Visayan Plotted Against the Government HEAD OF AN INSURGENT JUNTA HI Arret Majr Lead to an Ontbreak of Watlve.-Sklrmi.U North f San Isldro. Manila, Oct. 80. M. Ruperto San tiago, one of the wealthiest Vlsayans who had taken the oath of allegiance to the United States, and who posed as a friend of the Americans, has been arrested at Ilo Ilo, while other Visa yans are being watched. The prisoner is charged with organizing a revolu tionary junta. Santiago owns sugar estates throughout the island of Negros. It is asserted that a council of 10 and the manager of the junta met daily at Santiago's office for the purpose of engineering an extensive scheme of col lections for an insurrection. One of Santiago's steamers was oaptnred car rying supplies to the rebels. His ar rest caused rumors of an ontbreak of the natives of Ilo Ilo, and precautions have been taken to prevent trouble. A battalion of the Eighteenth regi ment and marines of the gunboat Con cord, formed an expedition at Concep tion, Northern Panay, to search for the Concord's coxswain, who was lured ashore by a white flag, and who is sup posed to be a prisoner. They found the place deserted, and burned every house as a punishment. Want to Fight Boer. An informal meting was held here this evening of men proposing to pro ceed to South Africa to fight for the British. More than 100 Englishmen, Australians and Americans decided to go. They organized a party and be lieve they can secure 200 more men. The volunteers include ex-soldiers, frontiersmen, Englishmen familiar with the Transvaal, and commercial clerks. A Brl.k Fight. Manila, Oct. 80. General Youug's column, which left San Isldro at day break, moving northward in the direc tion of Santa Rosa, encountered the enemy strongly entrenched just beyond the Tuboatin river. A brisk fight en sued and the rebels were repulsed. Two Americans were killed and one wounded. Pursuit was impossible, ow ing to the width and depth of the stream. Filipino EBToy Wilt Not Be Roc el Ted. New York, Oct 80. A special to the World from Washington says: Secretary of State Hay, when asked if Senor Regidor, the Filipino envoy, would be permitted to appear before the Philippine commission, said: "I have heard that he contemplated visiting the United States and would present some such plan as that outlined by the newspapers. He would have no official oi diplomatic status in Wash ington, either as agent of the Filipino insurgents or as a diplomatic represent ative of the so-called Filipino govern ment. The question of his being heard by the Philippine peace commission rests entirely with the commission it self. The state department is not con cerned in the matter in any way." LULL IN THE FIGHTING. Boer Evidently Reconstructing- Their Plan. Engllah Are Besting. London, Oct. 80. The war situation this morning presents no new features. It is presumed in Natal that the Boers are reconstructing their plans and that the English are resting, but telegrams from Ladysmith, at express rates, still ocoupy 48 hours in transmission to London, and, therefore, it is not im possible that something is happening. The Daily Telegraph has the follow ing from Ladysmith, dated Wednesday: "Our cavalry patrols have been fired on this afternoon and chased by the en emy near the scene of the Reitfonteln ngagement. The Boers show slgnB of ecoming aggressive. We learned of the capture of the hussars in response to a military wire sent to Commandant-General Joubert. " . According to the latest account of the first battle at Glencoe, the Boer army amounted to 7,000 men, and about noon another army, almost as large, under Commanant-tTeneral Jou bert, advanced within 6,000 yards of Glencoe camp and then retired. The Boer losses were very heavy, fully SOO. On the Northern Border. Cape Town, Oct. 80. A"" telegram from Buluwayo, Rhodesia, says: A Boer force is threatening Chief Khama and Chief Linohwei, who are loyal to Great Britain. The two chiefs' coun try lies at the extreme northwest of the Transvaal and includes Bechuanaland. It seems a gross mistake for the Boers to provoke war among the natives. The probable explanation is that the Boer force intends to destroy the rail way to Buluwayo, which runs through Khamas' country ,and thereby prevent a movement by Colonel Plumer's force to go to the relief of Mafeklng. Al ready there have been stories of a Rho- deaian armored train engaging the Boers some distance north of Mafeklng. Rhode Watched the Fight. Cape Town, Oct. 80. According to further sadvices from Kimberley, the Boers removed their killed and wounded in cars. No reliable estimate of their losses has been made. Mr. Rhodes rode out and watched the fight. The townspeople, including the women, mounted the trenches, watch ing eagerly for the return of the troops. Mr. Khodes is cheerful and trivet din ner parties daily, at which luxuries ars abundant. A DAY OF THANKSGIVING. President MeKlnlef Issue the V.aal Proclamation. The president has issued the follow ing proclamation: "A national custom, dear to the hearts of the people, calls for the set ting apart of one day in each year for special thanksgiving to Almighty God for the blessings of the proceeding year. This honored observance acquires with time a tenderer significance. It enriches domestio life; it summons un der the family roof the absent children to glad reunion with those they love. Seldom as this nation had greater causa for profound thanksgiving. No great pestilence has invaded our shore; lib-" eral employment waits upon labor, abundant crops have rewarded the efforts of the husbandman. Increased comforts have come to the home. The national finances have been sustained and made firmer. In all branches of industry and trade there has been an uneqnaled degree of prosperity, while there has been a steady gain in the moral and educational growth of our national character. Churches and schools have flourished. American pa triotism has been exalted. Those en gaged in maintaining the honor of the flag with such signal success have been, in a large degree, spared from disaster and disease. An honorable peace has been ratified with a foreign nation with which we were at war, and we are now at friendly relations with every power on earth. "The trust which we have assumed for the benefit of the people of Cuba has faithfully advanced. There is marked progress toward the restoration of healthy industrial conditions, and under wise sanitary regulations the island has enjoyed unusoal exemption from the scourge of fever. .The hurri cane which swept over our new pos session of Puerto Rico, destroying the homes and property of the inhabitants, called forth the instant sympathy of the people of the United States, who were swift to respond with generous aid to the sufferers. While the insur rection still continues in the island of Luzon, business is resuming its activ ity and confidence in the good parposes of the United States is being rapidly es tablished throughout the archipelago. "For these reasons, and countless others, I, William McEinley, president of the United States, hereby name Thursday, the 80th day of November next, as a day of general thanksgiving and prayer, to be observed as such by all our people on this continent and in our newly acquired islands, as well as by those who may be at sea or so journing in foreign lands, and I ad vise that on this day religious exercises shall be conducted In the churches or meeting places of all denominations in order that in the social features of the day its real sigiflcance may not be lost sight of, but fervent prayers may be offered to the Most High for a con tinuance of the divine guidance, with out which man's efforts are vain, and for divine consolation to those whose kindred and friends have sacrificed their lives for our country. "I recommend also, that on this day, so far as may be found practicable, labor shall cease from - its accustomed toil, and charity abound toward the sick, the needy and the poor. "In witness whereof I have set my. hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. "WILLIAM M'HNLEY." I It Malaria or X Wmt Languor, loss of appetite, indigestion and often feveriahness are the com mon symptoms of a physiological con dition 'termed "malaria." All these symptoms may be and frequently are the effect of the use of alum baking powders in food making. There is no question about the poisonous effect of alum upon the system. It obstructs digestion, prostrates the nerves, coagu lates and devitalizes the blood. ' All this has been made clear, thanks to physicians, boards of health, and food commissions. So "highly injurious to the health of the community" does the eminent head of the University of Pennsylvania, Dr. Barker, consider the alum baking powders, that he says "their sale should be prohibited by law." Under these circumstances it is worth the while of every housewife to employ the Tory little care that is necessary to keep so dangerous an ele ment from the food of her family. A pure cream of tartar baking pow der, which is the only kind that should be used, ought to cost about forty-five to fifty oente a pound. Therefore, ii you are paying much less, something is wrong; if you are paying twenty-five cents or less per pound, the powder is certainly made from alum. Always bear these simple facte in mind when purchasing baking powder. Popular Science Monthly. Mule Kill Hone. : Music caused the death, of a beauti ful 8-year-old filly at Florence, Ala., the other day. A farmer drove his valuable young mare into town, and as he was driving np the principal street a brass band snddely struck up its bla tant music. The mare had never heard a sound like that before and so startled was she that she dropped dead in the shafts of the trap. A veterinary sur geon who examined the carcass declared that the mare had died of heart failure, due to exoitemet caused by the sound of the uacoustomed mnsio of the brass band. Roanoke News. Maryland's Women Vetera. The first election ever held in Mary land at which women were allowed to vote for municipal officers was held in Arundel recently. ; The town is gov erned by seven commissioners elected each year by the legal voters residing within the corporation and owners of real estate. The census recently taken showed that there were 858 persons at Arundel. - About, one German woman In $7 works in a factory;, YOUNG IS ADVANCING Rebels Under White Flag Fire on a Gunboat. THE CRAFT LATER RAN AGROUND General Bate Ha Been Recalled From the North and Ordered to the onthern I. land. Manila, Oct. 81. General Young, with the infantry, is advancing upon Cabanatuan under difficulties. The country is furrowed with rivers and deep ravines, the bridges over which have been destroyed; the mud Is deep, rations are short, and the transporta tion of supplies has been delayed by low water, and the poor condition of the roads. There are sufficient stores, however, to keep the brigade. The in surgents for a long time have lived off the country, impoverishing it. The American horses are not yet accus tomed to the native grass and a long bullock train left San Fernando carry ing hay for the cavalry. J I The Spaniards report that there are no insurgents at Cabanatuan. The gunboat Laguna de Bay dispersed a force of rebels who were engaged in constructing trenches beyond Santa Rosa. The boat was fired upon by a party of insurgents bearing a white flag. She is now aground. Numbers of Chinese are coming to Angeles from Tarlao, paying the insur gents for the privilege. It is reported that Aguinaldo and the Filipino con gress are still at Tarlao. There are about 8,000 insurgents be fore Angeles. They have been quiet for the past week. Two thousand rebels are at Bamban, five miles to the north. General Bates has been recalled from San Fernando, and ordered to sail for the southern islands as soon as possi ble. LADYSMITH INVESTED. Situation Sufficiently Dangerous te Kx cite Anxiety. London, Oct. 81. The position ol Ladysmith, without being alarming, is sufficiently dangerous to excite anx iety. Evidently the Boers are trying to repeat their Dundee tactics. Roughly estimated, they have 17,000 men, as against 12,000 British. General Sir George Stewart White has the better artillery, but his is of lesser range. The delay in the Boer attack is reported to be due to the non-arrival of Commandant-General Joubert 's column. This has given the British a much needed respite after their recent exer tions. Everything, it is now considered, hinges on General White's resources and judgment. Nothing is known re garding the progress of defensive works for the protection of Ladysmith. The censorship is more active than ever. According to the Daily Chronicle's cor respondent, "the new regulations limit the number of words allowed for press messages to one-fourth the number al lowable before." Farmers in the neighborhood of Ladysmith have left their farms and stock at the mercy of the Boers and are congregated in the town. " Two guns the Boers have, mounted are powerful weapons. They are the ones used in shelling Dundee, and it is a matter of considerable surprise how they managed to transport such heavy pieces. BURNED TO DEATH. , Fourteen Persons Worn Cremated In Falre.. Alabama. . - Mobile, Ala., Oct. 28. News was received here today that 14 people had been burned to death at Faires, Bald win county, about 80 miles northeast of Mobile. Sometime Monday night last fire destroyed the dwellings of Harry Gooodlaw and Samnel Smith son, ore mating all the occupants of both houses. ' The Goodlaw family ' consisted ' of father, mother and six children. There were six persons residing in the Smith son home, the husband, wife, three children, and a sister of Mr. Smithson. The fires are believed to have been of accidental origin. Storm la We.t ladles. Santiago de Cuba, Oct. 8 1. After days of continuous rain storms, a terri fic hurricane from the southeast swept over Santiago today, causing much des truction. Twelve houses were wrecked and others badly damaged. The un precedented rainfall continues. Tele graph wires are down, and it is impos sible for vessels to enter or leave the harbor. A Ward liner haa been de layed four days. The United States transport Bnrnside has been kept cruis ing outside the harbor, and fears are entertained for the safety of the fleet of schooners from Haytl and Jamaioa that usually arrive on Monday morning. 'Jamaica Wa. Swept. ' Kingston, Jamaioa, Oct. $1. Re- . ports of the Bevere rain storm that has swept the conutry arrived from various points and confirm the fear that exten sive damage has been done. The Rio Cobre inundated Spanishtown, doing considerable harm. All the railroad lines are interrupted, and most of the highways are impassable in conse quence of the floods and landslides. , Advices from the town of Black River report great damage to shipping and wharves, as well as serious injury to crops. i Bin Hundred Sheep Cremated. Kansas City, Mo., Oct. 81. The sheep pens at the stockyards, covering an entire block, were destroyed by fire ' last night, and 600 head Of sheep were cremated, Four firemen were seriuosly injured by falling walls, and one of them, Charles Peterson, driver of a hook-and-ladder truck, may die. The loss is estimated at u0,000,