ill. MORNING ASTORIAN, FIUUAY. NUVEMBEH 8. . MOHAMMEDANS OF SULU ASK PEACE AND PROTECTION Nitive Chiefs Have Drawn Up a Treaty and are Negotiating THEIR SURRENDER Want the United States to EstatI sh Garrisons of Trcops In the Islands-Reports From Afuinaldo's Prisoners. WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 Mall advices to the war department Indicate Import ant negotiations In the Mohammedan section of the archipelago, outside of the much diacusaed territory of Sutu. Through the efforts of Mr. K. EnB'lsk John. a gentleman of Norwegian birth who enjoys ths confidence of the Tagalo chirfs In Mindanao, overtures of peace have been made to General Otis at ManUa. Mlnanao is almost equal In area to . Luion, being one of the two great Isl ands of the Philippines. The Moham medans there number 150,090 and Spain has maintained little more than nomi nal sovereignty. Thirty at these chiefs hld a conference with Mr. Engelsk- jchr. at Zamboanga and drew up a frm of treaty proposing terms of peace. They have suffered greatly from the lniiJs of the Moros and offer to s'.ibmit.to the authority of the United Stat.? on th; sole condition that suffl- dent American garrisons be established In the Island to protect them. Those proposals were submitted to Central Otis on the arrival of Mr. En gelskjohn, hut what action has been takt n is not yet known. An escaped Spanish prisoner from the AFFAIRS IN PONCE. I Johnson from St. Michaels to Cape ! Nome, where he settkd numerous dls- Preparations Completed for Taking' Pus- He also held court at Unga, Ka Census of Island This Month. i dlak anJ Yakutat. The McCulloch re- ' ports a very stormy passage. Correspondence of the Associated Press, j PONCE. Puerto Rico, Oct. 25. Census ' officials have been appointed for all ,' districts of Puerto Rico and the first enumeration will be taken between No vember 10 and December 29. Already the various offioers are busily engaged In the preliminary work and thy ar niakinp every effort and taking every precaution to avoid errors and get com plete and accurite data. The Puerto Rlcan Benevolent Society of -Ponce deserves much credit for the veiy eflitint wort It has ben doing In relieving the misery and distress among the poor of this city, especially among the poor and sick women and children. The society is made up of the leading ladies of Ponce, and has over 10o mem bers, only eight of whom are Americans. The ladies work systematically and per sonally vHt the poor and help them. This is quite a departure from the ancient custom here. The elety is go ing to hold a bazaar in the remodeled La Perla theater In December for the purpose of raising funds to establish an slms house. In order to take the nu- ! merous beggars off the streets of Ponce. . There is no such 'nstltutlon here. When ' th"ush il wa8 wlth thls reservation the alms hous- is Institute a large tha: the "'"lstandings were merely number of the indigent can thus be tak- en care of for a comparatively small sum. Now the crippled and infirm are seen on the tr-e;a ind are supported by the pennies givn to them each day. The sociM'y is ren ling to the United States hundreds of letters to prominent manufacturers and merchants, asking for contrlbutl ins of goods to be sold at the bazaar. It Is K.ped there will be a j generous response, for the contributions I will serve the double purpose of help- ' ing a worthy cause and of Introducing ; Amerlcan merchandise Into what i.J , sum to be a new market. SOMEWHAT BELATED. San Francisco Announces the Arrlvel of the McCulloih, Right From Alaska, j SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 2 The Mc- j Culloch, Admiral Dew-ey's dispatch j boat, now a revenue cutter, has arrived , from Alaska, where she conveyed Sen-j ator Fairbanks, chairman of the Alas- kan boundary commission; Senator Foe- ter of Washington and Governor Brady of Alaska. Th' tter also took Judge With General Otis. IS UNCONDITIONAL , insurgent lines north of Manila has ar rived at Ang--ls. He confirms the re ports that the insurants are running hort of Miust ammunition and are unable to refill rartridges of this class. He says, however, that they are well supplied with Remington ammunition, which they manufacture themselves. They alss manufacture dynamite and powder from petrjleum and salt, which is shipped to them from Manila and taken into ".heir lines at night. Of the 14 Amerlcin prisoners held by the Insurgents at Tarlac, the rebels claim that four have accepted commis sions In the insorgent army. Two Scotchmen, named McKlnley and Mac intosh, have escaped from the rebels. They say that the insurgent claim to have 250 American prisoners scattered through various towns, but they know of no one, personally, excepting Lieu tenant Oilmore and his fourteen sailors. The Insurgents say, however, that they have two American officers In confine ment besides Lieutenant Gilmore. Colonel Smith, at Angeles, has sent to General Mac Arthur a placard In Spanish, which was found nailed to a tree out.slJ.-s the lines. It was an ap peal to the col red troops to Join the Insurgents in the fight for frwdom and referred 'to "your brothers Sam Hose and Gray, whfe blood calls aloud for veiifcvanee." PAF.TITIO.N OF SAMOA. The .Wgotiaibns Are Proceeding Rap- Idly. WASHINGTON, N,,v. 2. The negotl ati'ins for the partition of the Samoan islaM.s are proceeding rapidly, and of ficials here would not be surprised If the final agr-in-nt were reached in the re-ar future. The chances seem good fcr an agreement that two powers dl vHe the islands, thus giving a dual gov- ernp.ent In place of the present un- wieldly tripartite arrangement. It seems t lie generally accepted by the negotialors that the United State would be on i f the two powers to be represented, and that the Island of Tu- tuilla, on which the harbor Is located, would naturally fall to the lot of the l'n,,'fd U 8UKd OnaX Britain cede the Gilbert and Solomon islands to Germany, the latter retiring from Samoa. The foregoing general outline was glv e" tc(lay ln garters " Informed on ,he gsneral llr " the neK'Jtlatlon, al. f"rm'"ive and still open to material ' 'lan-- DIStTSSIV; THE WEDDING. Washing-tun Society Expects the Dew ey-Ha.en Wedding to lie a fiiilltant Affair. NKW YORK, Nov. 2 A special to th JljU1.nal an(, A(Jv(.m I1(t,Jn ta-s- ser from Wash- -rh ,.,,, Inc 'aeduing of Admiral Dewey and ,,. , alls, ilazen, sK-iety Kays, will be per- f,.,i , , , .,, , fum ed either by ArchbUhop Keane or . '-aidinal Oibbons. Some wiy the wed- i ding will I a brilliant private affair, I others that It will be a brilliant church affai So,ne tf 'IrH- "azen'B friends Bay that I" all probability Mrs. Hazen would prefer to be married at the residence of her mother, Mrs. Washington McLean, and that the officiating clergyman will be Archbishop Keane, formerly rector of the Catholic university. Mrs, Hazen was received into the Catholic church by Archbishop Keane about six years ago. Sha was raised a Presbyterian, but was attending St. John's Episcopal church at the time of her conversion, . The gvmi-al Impression la that whether by virtue of a dispen sation from the pope- the wed ding ceremony be performed In a chuivh or whether It Is performwl at a private reldence, lh affair will le as brilliant as tho high posftlon of the a.l mlml and the social prestige and wvHh of Mrs. llasen lead svMy to expect. AN OVSTEU TRt'ST. Growers of Long Island Sound to (n solldute Their Intervals. NKW YORK. Nov. 2. The oystermen of Long Island sound are utd to be pre parihg to consolidate their Interests. Such an attempt was made last spring, but the movement proved unsuccessful because many of the 22 dealers who had combined beoam afraid of being un - il..m.ilil hv nJlier nuMiiht'ra of the union and began cutting prices. The present movement Is said to desU with Intervsts capitalized as high as $20,000,000. Such a comblna'lon will save about $1,000,000 a year. It Is sU 1, and wltl protect h seed men from the present downward I drr of prices. Ten years ago the ruling price for oysters of the Irsat quality was 70 cents j to $1 a bushel. Export oysters were In j demand at $5 to $6 a barrel. Now the prices paid for marketable oysters Is only 30 to 5" cent a bushel and $S a j barrel Is the top notch for those whipped to Europe. One reesn which Is given for this decline Is that the middle men are making the money. The middle men buy the seed which develops from oys-1 ter spawn deposited on the submerg-M 1 lands of the seed men along the Ixmg Island sound shores, and taking It to the Narraganse-tt bay, New York and New Jersey, they replant the seed after the oysters have matured. They sell their product to the scow men, as they are called In New York city. The scow men sell to the consumer. AMERICAN LOSS TEN THOUSAND I'jstialiies of Our Two Wars The Number of filled and Kounilcd Soldiers L'p to July I of This Year. WASHINGTON, Nov. 2. A recapltu laJior. of the casualties In actions and deaths In the regMlar and volunteer armies between May 1, 1S9S, and June 30, 1S99, contained in the annual report of the adjutant general of the army, shows a grand totaj of 10.076. The casual'y lit alone aggregates 3,454, of whom Co officers and 45S enlist ed men were klll-?d and 197 officers and 2.7G4 enlisted men were wounded. The death list, numbering 6,619. was made up of 221 officers and 6,395 enlisted men. Of the total, but 38 officers and 45S en listed men were killed, the remainder of the deaths resulting from various causes, including the following: Wounds, 10 officers and 192 enlisted men; disease, 167 officers and 5.344 en listed men; accident, 6 officers and 209 enlisted men; downing, 3 officers and 8H men; suicide, 2 officers and 52 men,' and murders and homicide, 52 enlisted ! i men. In the regular army the total casu-J allies In action andideaths amounted toi 4,155 and in the volunteer establishment! to 5,921. In the casualty list, the regu- lars had 127 officers and 1,656 enlisted men killed and wounded, and the vol-! unteers 103 officers and 1,366 enlisted j men killed and wounded. In the reg- j ular army, between April 30, 1898, and j June 30, 1S?9, 91 enllHLed men were dl- charged by sentence of general court martial and 2,946 enlisted men diverted. I Three officers of the regular army j who were killed also held commissions I in the volunteer forces, In which theyj are Included ln the abeve recapitula tion. FATHER MATTHEWS' CAPTURE Chaplain of Irish Fusileers in Hands of Boers. NEW YORK, Nov. 2. A dispatch to the Tribune from London says: Among the officers of the Gloucesters and Irish fusileers, alive or dead, ln Boer hands, considerable Interest Is evinced by Roman Catholics -."i TO CURE LAGRIPPB IN TWO DATS, j Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tableta. ; All druggists refund the money If It j falls to cure. B. W. Grove'g signature fute of Father Matthews, chaplain of the latter regimen!. l4oml Curloton la the youngest ivginioulal commander In ft he service, being only 42. He had wen no fighting IWw. There Is a touch of html luck In the ce of Mclklejohu, se ilor subaltern of the Gordon Highlander, a son of Pro fessor Melklejohn of (he Slramlivn uni versity, He hnd Ixvn fighting on the Indian frontier with the Hint battalion for the Inst live years, and was one of th heroes of PiirgiU. whore he was vounded twice. Exchanging Into the Second battalion, he went to Natal, to lose his light arm at Klund's lauigto. As he Is left- handed. It Is hoped by his friends that he may remain on the active list. WKH1UNG IXIU'STUY. ' Lai gvst Concern in the Country Going j j Into One Org.iutiutlon. j ( I i HUSTON, Nov. 2. At a meeting of I representatives of the majortly of the I largest concerns In the webbing Indus try In America, the work of the prelim inary oigunlriUton of a national com blimtlon was perfeoted. The combination Is raprtullied at $12.- 00o,0u0. L., Hlgglnson & Co. are th financiers of the deal. The companies I take alt of the stock then-selves. Op tions have been secured upon 20 of the most Important plants in the country. ! among them being the American mills, j the Revere Rubber Company, the East j Hampton Rubber Thread Ciwpnny, the l Thomas Martin & Hrvw Co. and th I Nashawannock Manufacturing Com- j j pany, Gwrge f. Cotltton Company, the New Haven Web Company, the Hub Gore Makers, the Glendale Company, the Connecticut Web Company, the Nanagansett Webb Company and the Ansonla Elaslc Company. In the olili n dsv men were phviiiilly. at lrH, woithv ol' Ihr almiiiiioti of ? wemen It in a tT'eat big MiimthiPK for woman to ("eel that tier tin- hand tin ul coinage to de- fi nd lu r lltroiuh all the vicissi tude of life. Now.id.ivH there ii not much to ud- tniu- alMiut the iver.iitc ni n Iroin a ptivMcal ; standpoint. He maybe moral and a men ! tal giant, but lite fleh of ill health iswrult, I and he is probably a phy-ocal coward. It is not in nature for a irkly man to tie brave man. His spirit mar or willing but his : body is weak. That it the man's own fault Aajr man can be health? who will pay a lit , tie common sense attention to hia health when he has it, and when he gets a little out of sorts, take the right remedy Many of the diM-ae that afflict mankind arr : traceable directly to indigestion, torpidity of the liver and impurities in the blood. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Diwoverjr is the greatest mrdicine for disorders of this nature. It Ktrtngthrns a weak stomach, corrects all disorder f the digestion, fcives cage lo me appciur, invigorate mc iiyci, purifies and enriches the blood and tones up and invigorates the ncrvrs. It aearches out disease germs, kills them and carries them out of the system. It is the great blood maker, flenh builder and nerve-tonic and restorative. It makes ttrong, healthy men out of weak, sickly invalids. Medi cine dealers sell it and no honest dealer will urge a substitute upon you. ' I have hrrn tnking Dr, Pierce's CoMrn Med ical llincoverv anil I'rltrti ' anil must y that thrjr have wilrknt wonders in my case." write Mr. L L- Pack. Illoi i;), of llinlon. Hummers Co., W. Va. " I feci like a new person, in fact I think I am well, hut will take one more bottle to make sure the cure is permanent. I cannot peak too hli(h!y of the 1 Discovery.' 1 can eat anything now without misery in my stomach. I have gamed some eight or ten pounds, weighing aa heavy as I iiit1 three years ago. ' The medicine certainly worked like a charm cm me, but when I first tx-nan to take it I felt a Utile worse for a few days; had pains through my ludy and hone, but all this left me after taking the medicines four or five days." arvn nnnnrwin inruvuiuwuvunrip 5 The Most Annoying Thing One encounters in the wearing of glasses is the constant care neces sary to keep the li'iices clean anil cleat. The handkerchief is al ways handy but not always ttle- 5 gant. We (five a fine leather ense s and cltarnois lens clearer witli ? each pair of glasses we sell Northwest Optical Co., The Inhlia lllclg., Second unci Wnslilnuton Ht ltooniH ao-ai-J3a3 VTjruvvuvnsirJuuuunn.rLr. X Portland Buyer Mrs. DALTOX, who 1ms years' of experience as a . Buyer . hail I'lf;"sQl to give persona attention to all customer. i Correspondence solicitei 3G3 Second St., Portland. vf"'-'? li lllu' it""ltd pio. JW-iivA Av ,t'ct"r It i a coin J VVi'jT tl -t.'. nut for Iter to feel I-J7ul I T 't ir,3thj W' i iihvical "taint IT m 7. V-,r,Vvvi VT? The "Delsarie" and "Regent" Shoes for Women Also "Queen Quality" Shoes for Women $3.00 E. C. Goddard & Co, On-gonimi ISuililiiig, Portland. ST. HELEN'S HAItlt. A BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS Rfloppned Heptwnber 13. For circular! add rend. MISS KLKNORK THIBIiKTl'S, Pb. I) Priui'iil, Portlaud Oregon Telephone Keii 391. HIS MOTHER'S BREAD He lays was always go light and well baked. Well there Is a knack In mak ing It. But don't forget the kind of stove or range used makes a difference. His mother used a Star Estate Range w. J. BCULLT. Agsat, 4U Bond Itreet Styles 'j-V to PS'-'' 11 One f ::j?.V any Price fr;fj'm $5.00 $3.50 Shoe w 0L 1 Wx llB: Wilson Improved Air Tight Heaters ...FOR COAL . . . This lit'iitt'r is pspiviiilly in! Ligitilo. I'ho hotly nut stot'l Ivxlra Iteiivy slinkinj,' ami (lunipinjj l''iro pot extra lieavv with lanro ash nit urntti. lias a itiekcl urn, nickel iiii ki'l nlatoil foot rails. Tlitliot hlast draft is soi'on.strui'U'd that tho fscapinj; gases are all consumed, which innken a groat saving in lht constiinption of furl. Price, $12.00 to .525.00. All Varieties cf Wood Air Tights at FOARD 0 STOKES. Books Nought, Sold and ut the Kx changed Old Book Store Hiatory, lliogriti.liv, Miclinlmil, Iti'tori'in-', Pin-try. Mn.llonl, Ijiw. lHlgluiu, Soluiititlo All itunduril wurki. StfCond-liiitul tolnxil btHika, luryc itix k olii'aji. BisHiod-linnd niHKiiii. LI lirariiM boqglit. Iirge Mock ol novel, 10.000 tllin. HYLAND BROS. rOHTI.AND, t. 2-':'.U Vmnliill St., Ih-1ow 8i"oihI. Toloplu.no lfcsl '2.S.S3, R. MARSCH Tonsorial Parlors 301 Washington St., (;orner Fifth Opfxmite Hotel lVrklui Ladies Hair Dressing a Specialty I.niliea onirnnre to bath on Fifth utrwt. PORTLAND, OUEOON. Golambia Electric & Repair Go SucceaHor to COLUMBIA IRON WORKS Blacksmiths BoilerMakers Machinists Foundrymen Logging BnglnoN Unlit and Repaired Heavy Forging Under Power Hammer a Specialty Sole Manufacturers of the Unsurpassed ... M Harrison Secton" Propellor Wheel ... f Contractors for Electric Lights and Tower Plants. ... 1 ne dsiTioncl Motel... i PORTLAND, ORE., FRONT Eiirii"au plan, .'nu: 1 1 p,ir iluv. Aiiierleun plan, 11.00 in '2.00 pvr Uay. CHAS. HEILBORN & SON IRON AND BRASS In nil sizes BEDSTEADS 5 V IHTRI W-. w PORTLAND, OH. I The Only Flrt-C1oH adiiptetl for Soft Coal is iiuulo of ptilislied natno pinto atnl two Umbrellas Best and Cheapest Almi IU'altiii mid UoiTirln2 ut Meredith's Waftliiiixtmi Ix tsiii'ti.'itli mul Htli Strata. rt'liTI.ANP, OUK. John B. Coffey, Rlercliant Tailor a i,tKit sr. i "it. 1 11 1 it 1 Portland, Ore. W. C. A. Pohl, foun 'roiMii. Undertaker, Umbalmer and Funeral Director Citakt't" Htiil rtiiicrHl Suiiillit ciinttiuit y mi Imiul. C'oroor lltli Btul lMiiiuo Hta, Aatorin, Or llnllaltla f-r..n ol a mn-lianlral c.r Iniimlra ml nil li-ilrlnaa trip 1., Hi. I ntl. Kipoalllun, wllaauwl mttry ainlnnni'ipl.. I1..11I.I Krtla " Tit l Alh.NT lUXOIUJ, llMltlmor. Md. Loggers Supplies Kept in Stock AND MORRISON STS. OSCAR ANDER80N, Mmiiir- i J. V,. I'KNDKC.AST. nhliif nii.rk it nnd stylos. We hIuiII conlimio tti eul Iron nnd Driutu jlnlstomlN at the same Low Prlcci reiirdlfiHs of the rniHO In tho price of iron and brnss - . wa - 2 Hotel In Portland s