VOL. XI THE -DAIXES, OREGON. WEDNESDAY; APRIL 26, 1899 NO 328 CALUMPiT IS NOW INVESTED Present Heaflqnartcrs of tie Rebel Ann; Willie Talcn it Oar Fortes TiSay. BRIGADE SEES . HOT FIGHTING A Brush at Pulitan in Which the Amer icans Lost Six . Killed and Eleven Wounded Two Hundred Rebels . Killed During the Advance. Washington, April 25. The follow ing has been received at the war depart ment from General Otis : "Manila, April 25. Hale's brigade, MacArthur's division, moved down the right bank of the QuiDqua river yester day to the vicinity of Calumpit, and was joined by Wbeaton's brigade on the left bank. Hale encountered fierce oppo sition, driving-the enemy with heavy losses and taking his entrenchments in the flank. Hale's casualties were six killed and twelve wounded. "The division has now invested Calumpit, which will be taken today. Law ton, with part of his command, will reach Norzagaray this evening, where be will be joined by the center column from. Bockve. "Extreme heat, rain, hi eh streams and bad roads made the march very difficult. He has not met opposition since leaving Kovalicbes, the enemy re treating in Lis front south of and near Manila. The enemy has a force of 4000, making demonstrations daily, so can be easily taken care of. It cannot com municate with the north. OTIS." Brigade Saw Hot Fighting. Manila, April 25, 6:15 p. m. Gen eral Hale's brigade, consisting of the Nebraska, Iowa and South Dakota regi ments, with three guns, which left Ma lolos Monday, followed the west bank of the Rio Grande river to a ford. Many email bands of rebels were encountered, and during the afternoon the Americans discovered several hundred of the enemy entrenched near Pulitan, north of Quin gano. Our troops attacked the rebles, losing eix men killed and eleven wounded. . General Hale's troops claim that nearly 200 dead natives were counted along the country traversed. Among the dead was a Spanish captain. The South Dakota regiment bore the blunt of the fighting, and had five men killed and nine wounded. The country travereed by our troops is thickly wooded and hardest for fight ing. The rebels along Bagbag river were reinforced from Calumpit as the troops under Hale approached. During the day the Americans captured thirty five prisoners. ' As this dispatch is sent the rebels are retreating in the direction of Calumpit. The Filipino troops engaged were well uniformed and well drilled. As the campaign progresses the work of the rebel troops ia improving. They are adopting American methods, and the accuracy of their shoaling is evinced by the fact that five Americans were shot in the head. General Hale at 4 o'clock this morn ing crossed the river and advanced on Calumpit. MacArthur's division also advanced, and nine of the armored flat cars were pushed ahead on the railroad The Kansas regiment advanced on the right of the track and the Montana regi ment pushed forward on the left. The rebels are already returning to Malolos and becoming . troublesome They fired on an ambulance yesterday which was passing across the plaza, and they have driven the Chinese out. The Absolutely Makes the food more delicious and wholesome ROYAL BAKINQ POWDER CO., NEW YORK. Third artillery night. patrolled the town last Malolos to Be Evacuated. New Yoek, April 25. A dispatch to the Herald from Manila says : The movement of the American forces on Calumpit has beguB. General Hale's brigade crossed the river at Quingua and moved down the bank toward Calumpit. Many insurgents were driven' from in front of the line of march. Fifty of the enemy were killed where the American loss was only one killed, It ia reported that General If a :Arthur, Whea ton's - brigade and an armored train, is waiting at Malolos for the strat egic moment for an advance on Calum pit. This advance from Malolos is momentarily expected to begin. The town of Malolos will be evacuated, only the railway station being held. The natives are returning there in great -numbers. All are professed noncom- batants. The army gunboats being unable to ascend the river, and co-operate in the movement on Calumpit have returned to Manila. . CATARRH OF THE STOMACH A Pleasant, Simple, Safe but Effectual Cure for It. Catarrh of the stomach has long been considered the next thing to incurable. The usual symptoms are a full or bloated sensation after eating, accomp anied some times with sour or watery risings, a formation of gases,' causing pressure on the lungs and heart and difficult breathing; headache, fickle ap petite, nervousness and a general played out and languid feeling. There isoften a foul taste in the mouth, coated tongue, and if the interior of stomach could be seen it would show a slimy, inflamed condition. . . The cure for this common and obstinate disease is found in a treatment which causes the food to be readily and thoroughly digested before it has time to ferment and irritate the delicate mucous surfaces of the stomach. To secure a prompt and healthy digest ion is the one neceeflaiy thing to do, and when normal digestion is secured the catarrhal condition will have disap peared. According to Dr. Harlanson the safest and best treatment is to nee after each meal a tablet, composed of Diastrse, Aseptic Pepsin, a little Nux, Golden Seal and fruit acids. These tablets can now be found at all drug stores nnder the name of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, and, not being a pat ent medicine, can be used -with perfect safety and aseurrance that healty appe tite and thorough digestion .will follow their regular use after meals. Mr. N. J. Booher, of 2710 Dearborn St., Chicag?, 111., writes: "Catarrh is a local condition resulting from a neglected cold in the head, whereby the lining membrane of the nose becomes inflamed and the poisonous discharge therefrom, passing back into the throat, reaches the stomach, thus producing catarrh of the stomach. Medical authorities prescribed forme three years for catarrh of the stomach without cure, but today I. am the happiest of men after using only one box of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. I cannot find appropriate words to express my good feeling.' I have found flesh, appetite and sound rest from their use. Stuart's DyspepBia Tablets is the safest preparation as well as the simplest and most convenient remedy for any form of indigestion,' catarrh of the stomach, biliousness, sonr stomach, heartburn and bloating after meals. Send for book, mailed free, on stomach troubles, by addressing the F. A. Stuart Co., Marshall, Mich. The tablets can be found at all drug stores. - 3 YPmxmtm 'Puke INADEQUATE TO EXPRESS HORROR Men of Note Comment . Affair. on tne COL INGERS0LL ON THE LYNCHING Country Which Can't" Protect Its Cit izens ia Time of Peace Has No Right to Ask its Citizens to Protect it in Time of War. New Yoek, April 25.. Colonel Robert G. Ingersoll says of the lynchings in Georgia: "I suppose these outrages-these fright ful crimes make the same impression on my mind that they do on the minda of all civilized people. I know of no words strong enough, bitter enough, to express my indignation. These horrors were perpetrated in the name of justice. The savages who did these things belong to the superior race. They are citizens of the great republic. And yet it does not seem possible that such creatures are human beings. They are a disgrace to our country and the human race. "Let me say that what I have said is flattery compared with what I feel. When I think of the other ljnching of the poor man mutilated and hanged without the slightest evidence; of the negro who said these murders would be avenged and who was brutally murdered for the utterance of a natural feeling I am utterly at loss for words. . . "Are the white people ineane? Has mercy fled, to bear this? Has the United States no power to protect a citizen? A nation that cannot or will not protect its citizens in time of peace has no right to ask its" citizens to protect it in time war." W. A. Barker, ex-attorney-general of of South Carolina, who has just returned from Lake City, S. C, where he was prosecuting attorney for the government in the trial of the lynchers of Postmaster Barker, says : - "I believe in the lynching of the negroes confessedly guilty of crimminal assault. It is the only protection of the women of the South, and especially of the rural districts. Otherwise I am opposed to lynching. - "I feel sorry for the South that this blot is upon us. It effects us all over the world. It robs us of. material pros perity and of the high moral and social position to which we are entitled. It ruins the worth of our investments. If it is not stopped then shut the school houses, burn the books, tear - down the churches and admit to the world that Anglo-Saxon ciyilization is a failure." Rev. Horace Bumstead, president of the Atlanta university, of Atlanta, Ga., when interviewed in regard to tbe lynchings in that state, said: "In common with all law-abiding Americana, I cannot but deplore the horrible transactions of the last day or two in my adopted state of Georgia. Aw ful as is the injustice of such dealings with the negro race, their results will be more terrible in their effect on the white race in undermining all respect for law and order . - "It is a gratifying sign ot the times Hi., cu U guon .lontoern man as ex Governor Atkinson should bodily en deavor to stem the tide of wrong and should declare his willingness to testify against the wrong-doerp. If only the number of eucb men can be increased in t. .1 f- -,.nU I r . . the boutfa, that section can hope to per petuate the best American civilization within her borders." The colored ministers of New York city, at a meeting in St. Mark's Methodist Episcopal church, passed resolutions de nouncing the Georgia lynchings. Rev. William H, Brooke, of St. Mark's ehurcb, was among the speakers. "We have no sympathy," he said, with' the crime charged against the negro throughout the South, but what ever the crime, we believe there is sufficient law to protect them until the trial comes. I hope and rruet that the S-cnlar and religions papera and pulpitB will give their aid and throw their in fluence on the side of right." Rev. P. B. Tompkins, pastor of St. James's Presbyterian church said : "I wouldmueh' rather be a Filipino and be under tbe Spanish yoke than under the law and order now practiced in Georgia." . HU Life Was Bared. Mr. J. E. Lilly,' a prominent citizen of Hannibal, Mo., lately, had a wonder ful deliverance from a frigbtlul death. In telling of it he says:" "I was taken with typhoid fever, that ran into pneu monia. My lungs became hardened. I was so weak I couldn't even sit up in bed. Nothing helped me." I expected to soon die of consumption, when I heard of Dr. King's New Discovery. One bottle gave great relief. I con tinued to use it, and now. am well and strong. I can't say too much in its praise." This marvellous medicine is the surest and quickest cure in tbe world for all throat and lung trouble. Regular size 50 cents and $1.00. Trial bottle tree at Blakeley & Houghton's drnz etoie; every bottle guaranteed. 2 Poor Mail Service. Washington, April 22. Second As sistant ' Postmaster-General Shallen berger has euspended action in tbe case of P. C. Richardson, of Seattle, whose contract for the overland mail route in Alaska from Juneau to Circle City and Tanana has been held up. He has fur nished satisfactory assurances of keeping to his contract in the iuture. The ser vice has been very poor. Richardson claimed the failure to perform service was due to the weather and the breaking up of tbe ice. The department in decid lag that he may continue conceded that twica a year, when the water is freezing and when it breaks up, the weather might bean excuse, but that these ob stacles by no means extended through out the winter. The route is' about 1200 miles long. Deafness Cannot be Caret. by local applications, as ' they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear There is only one way to cure deafness and that is by constitutional remedies --Deafness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the Eus tachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is en tirely closed. Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed for ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of tbe mucous sur faces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars ; free. . F.. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. .CfiTSold by Druggists, 75c. 6-10 Hall's Family Pills are tbe best. Elegant new Pullman palace sleepers between Portland and Chicago have just been placed in service via the O. R. & N., Oregon "Short Line, Union Pacific and Chicago & Northwestern railways daily every day in the year. Cars are of the very latest pattern, in fart being the most improved up-to-date sleeping cars turned out by the ' Pullman Company. These new palaces will leave Portland on the evening fast train of the O. R. & N. arriving at Chicago the morning of the fourth day and running through with out change via Granger and Omaha. 19tf Use Clarke & Falk's Quinine Hair Tonic for dandruff and falling hair. tf i - , SUITS FOR MEN- YOU The latest and most popular Hats for Spring' wear displa3 ed in our east window. A. WILLI AIV1S& CO. Ghioniele Publishing Co. The. The Dalles, Oregon, S H ! 5 CHOICE . Northern Grown SEEDS . In Bulk at J. H. CROSS Feed and Grocery store Cor 2d & Federal Sts. ARE PASSING Our STORE TOMORROW Stop long enough to look at some of the best S7.50 suits (oi jneo It has ever been our privilege to show. TROUSERS also at $2 00, $2.50, $3.0O and $4.00, that are leaders in their line. We Have... PRINTERS Qaiek Uiotfk. Reasonable Prices. White Russian Granulated Rye Meal. Fine for Breakfast Mush and ' Gems, 25c per sack. The Celebrated Lincoln Seed Oats From 100 to ISO bushels per . acre has been 'raised from these Oats. For sale at J. H. CROSS, Feed and Grocery Store.