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About Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1898-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1899)
limp t - i Eebels Attack a Train Near Manila. TKOOPS IN PUBSUIT The GoTemmnt Will Permit Land iuz of Cainege If OtUConHd- . . efg It Advisable. WASHINGTON. Sept. M.-Seneral Otis baa cabled the following account or an lnurr-nt attack oo a railway train near Angeles. ' I -Manila, Sept. 23. Adjutant C?ener at Washington: Tie i-vrgenls suc ceeded In derailing a section of a train yesterday, a short distance frm Ad- geles, then made attack. n the rail way aruaris. The result waa uvai Captain Perr, the quartermaster, vraa lightly wounded In the arm; Private CbarU-s Zlemin, cf the hospital corps, waa klllel:' Private Sam Steele, Seven teenth Infantry, waa reverely wounded and an unknown .civilian iwas killed. The Insurgent were driven ., away leav.ng six dead In their track, and troops were- Immediately sent In pur suit. (Signed) Qua." J i INSURGENTS DEFEATED. Manila. Sept. 24- (Sunday). 11:15 , n- The United State cruiser Char leston, the Monitor Monterey, the gun boat Concord and the supply ship Beafare. this morning attacked dan Capo, on Subig bay. The . warships, after briskly bombarding- Olangapo, landed 250 sailors, who destroyed the Insurgents' position. One American .was mounded. i A TBANSPOBT SAILS. : San Francisco, Sept. 23. The trans port Sherman sailed today; for Manila, with the Thirtieth regiment United States volunteers and a detachment of 20 recruita. LEFT TO OTIS. W"n.hinti n, .pt. 23 The landing of a ahiplcad of Chinese, now at Ma nila, vtf.l depenJ on military expe.ll-t ency. which will be determined i by Oeneml Otis. If, in Ms judgment.' the latifllr.n of 700 Chinese wl not inter fere With military conditions or disturb th situation. thy may land. The conditions in tho PhUipftnes, it Is pointed out. ae ruch es to mako the entry of Chinese laborers a disturbing element. The 'Filipinos are opposed to them." asd there is bitter feeling i: Isting against the ChImeinow thers. It U tell-ved here that, if the l.'nit.-d Slat's mi itary authorities allow Ibv Chlnf fr sc-eeas to the Philippines. It wH exasperate the people an.l lend to retard the pacification of tl isl ands. This is ow cf the reasons c.iven Vkhy It Is ncejary. trtn it military standi oint, to keep them out. HAVE KMT AVPEARf D. New Tcrk. Sept. 23. A ifcial l th Herald from Washington fays: No of flctal confirmation has been received of the teort that Agw"nald a envoy has reached Manila end that conferences are in progress between him ami Gen eral Ois. Such lnfoiiTiation is hourly exiceled, however, and he; authorities are waking with much Interest. 3 Acting Secretary Allen hiis received this dispatch from Rear-Admir.il Wat son; Ptnsy, Ler.ay ctmmandinfr. cap tured the sfamer Mundaca illicitly trading. Mnrlveles, Oman j command Ing. captured steamer Tanleno for aid ing and ahetting Insurgents. Tanleno will make gocd gunboat; 100 ions; will fit out and man her." I Th Paiiay Is commanded by Ensign Lanlng, who was pievtouely attached to the Monad ni ck, lieutenant Joseph W.-Oman was transferred to the Mart velea from the Helena. It Is evident from Admiral Wasis dispatch tlat, lie Is maintaining;. A sharp watch for fllitm&ters. The fact that efforts are being made to send in such bu r plies seems to indicat: that lh insurgents bav no Intention of yttlding. ' WAUlY NC'T IlEADT. Kw T rk, Sept. .dispatch t the WavM front Manila, fiepteniber 19th : xix K'c Kong, says. ? General Joseph Wheeler afttr a skirmish a J'arac, tel-e-snphel to Gtueral Os j oi-kins '.he laltr to snd tav.Iry for tlw purpose ttt preventing a rrasemMinu? of the in L'uipnts. ; General Oil replitl that he coutd not send the cavalry until Ovlo lr. -. : ; . ? : ." ;." Thrt attempts hivt Wtn made to assrFhinaie, Tttvera, the loader of the prt-Ainer1cn Filipinos, ;- ." 4'.' There ls a growing feeling among military men and the native- police that the native Judges are unreliable. An inquiry is now prwet-ding. Commercial dislocation has resulted In Manila tHaus? the goods ordinarily lrocured here are unoh'nlned since- the provinces have been dislrld. Now adays the goods are t niy obtainable ffr.m attead. "r ; TU Illlpino newnaperi?: Indepen- d en .-, mym Insurgent preparations are tt.TipJo.Je to abandon Turlac, If ne cessary. Agutnaldo's ftrce. this organ says, will be able to e-jntinue their Fubian tactics suteffully. exhaust ing the American troops more easily than the Romans wore out Hannibal. THE WAR CLOUD. OOM PAUL HAS) THE -MATTER IN JUS HANDS. !Tde- Fest Opportunity to Strike Now. Before British Troops Are Ln&d at Natal Is LONDON. Sept 2X Never, at any ctage of the Transvaal crisis, has peace or war rested. so entirely within the hands of President Krueger. The longer he delays precipitating the def late issue, the better are the chances for ""peace: He now knows to what extent be can rely on the sections of South Africa to uphold him and ha realizes tnat me " " , -;v.i .i1 the conflict until the last transport lands her men. and he is too . leader not to know the military advantage that comes to the aggress or His appeals to toreign power- intervene hive apparently, been hope less, hut his efforts to drag In the Or ange Free State have been successful. f he honestly intends to defy Creat Britain be never will have XS inwhTSU most la the minds of the thinking British, and which prompts them to fear that, before next week's cabinet meeting the boers will have passed over the Xatal border. If they have not there will be much ground for Deuev- tea: President Krneger Intends an ul timate backdown, through srhether he Is strong enough to carry his people with him In such an action is open to great doubts. '. A GEBilAN VIEW. Berlin. Sept. 23. The outbreak of war In the Transvaal Is regarded here as a question of a few days or, at most, of a week. The - whole press devotes considerable space to the matter. Neither the attitude of the people nor of the press has changed materially. Without exception they disapprove of such a war and blame Great Britain for badgering the Transvaal' beyond endurance. The liberal . press also blames the Transvaal for its illogical stand in first sanctioning Great Britain's at tempts at Interference In Hts internal affairs, and then rejecting such at tempts and making of them a casus belli. . : . WONDERFUL C PRE AN' IXSAXfi MAN IS RESTORED TO KFTASON. Now Treatment Discovered by a Phy sician iu Missouri The Ex JOL.IET, IlL. Sept. 23. Irwin Fuller Bush, a your s man led man of this city, waa sent to the Kankakee asy lum last March, prtcounced hopeless ly Insane. Today, through treatment with lymph from'tha glands f goats,' Bush is at home, completely restored in mind and body. ; The lymph hal ben discovered by Dr. Roberts, a phy sician of Greene City. Mo. lis nppl!ca-i ticn for Insanity esses was , demon-; strated at the 1 Chicago laboratory where Bueh was taken l it June. He was subjected to irjections of the lymph, showing Ptfady improvement,' until h was discharged last Tuesday, completely cured. . ' . CHINESE ADMITTED. Will Be Permitted to Land ; Philippine Islands. in the New York, Sept, Z9.A. special to the Herald from Washington says: Chinese will be allowed to land in the Philippine islands temporarily, pend ing the edoption-of a definite policy by the government. This was decided at the last cabinet meeting, after a long discussion in which the views of mem- mbers of the cabinet v. he were present were f: eely exprersed. v The matter was brought up by the Chin3re minister's recent protest and by inftrmation that a feMpload of 500 Ch'.uamen ha ttefi stopped by Gen eral Otis. After the meeting a catl.' gram was sent to General Otis anlbor- liinf to admit h-re Chinamen tem porarily, with the understanding that if it It was finally decided to exclude all Chinamen, they should bo sent back to China. ; la a torero a ar of eonanmptloa. It la a dlseaaa el the blood. The armptoma are quit num erous and are readily dlacerned. - If ths progress of the disease la not checked death from consumption or some ether diaeaae is IseviUhle. IltDfAN will check iu sroa;- OCOYAN will enrich tbe blood aad saaks ths patient streng. Ht DTIN la vegstable ramadr. harmless ia Its effect. . It contains bo Iron to cans ths teeth to de- ear. If roa are au2er- lng roa should take BCDTaJC now and then not tbe change la your condition. Stadv yoar artnptomt csrefallr. These are yonr symptom. Take IICDTAN now and they will disappear. YOUR WEAK POINTS ARE: 1. CONSTANT HEADACHE. HUDYAN,br lta action oa the blood, will sonelUe the circulation of blood and the headache will disappear. x-a. bunkeh stiballs and DARK RINGS BENEATH THE XTES. HUDYAN wUl cause the rings to aiaappear and make the ere bright. VS. FALI CHtXKS. HUYDAN will enrich the blood and cans the cheeks t become bright and roar. t WXAEaESS IN THE HEART. The heart becomes weak and there to a con stant sinking feeling around Is. HCDTAK wIU make ths heart strong and cause it to beat regularly, aad ths slaking feeling will a. rEKJsZJia OT WEIGHT Ilf XttSI BTOMACH ASD INDIQKS. HUDYAN wIU cause th food te se property digested, Improve the appetite and reliTe coustipatiea. Bt'OTAX wUl nltera an the above aymptoms and make yoa welL ror yoa. After yoa are eared tau other wosoeo what BCDTAN has done r.ea..-- HCQTAJV eaa be procured from raggwis nw toe. per eackags,or six packages for IU0. If yoar drargiat does not keep It send direct to Hadyaa Remedy Co Eaa rranetsoo. Call npon the BtDTAX doctors. Consul taUon to froa. Yoa may call upon the I or wnie, as yea desire, Address HUDYAN REMEDY COMPANY, Car. teektee, atsrfcet ssd Dlio tta AN rRANCISCO. CAL. ANAEMIA frcy 4 f I QUI 1 Awful Disaster at Eeno Siding, Colorado. TWO TR ilKS COLLIDE Six Persons Killed and Fire Are la I Jared- Fast Freight Diso beyed Orders, DENVER, Sept. 23. Six passengers were killed and five injured, one per haps fatally. In a coMIsion on the Denrer Sc. Bio Grande railroad, at Re no siding, near .Florence, at 4:08 o'clock this afternoon. Tbe train In collision were the Phlllpps-Judson - excursion from the East, and the east-bound fast freight. " -'" -: The killed : are: F, Saltar, manager of the excursion. Eva il. Walker, aged 12 of Westford. Mass.; Eugenia a. Judklnsw aed 12, r Spokane, Wash.. Addle A- Judklns, aged 10, Spokane, Wash.: Oeonre H. Judklns, , aged 8, Spokane; WUlls, a boy, aged 9, los Arr- The Injured are: Mrs. &. A. Willis. Loa Angeles, badly hurt; Harry Wal ker, Westford, Mass Internal Injuries, nnt serious- iMrs. Grant Biddle. Col- camp, (Mov Internal Injuries; Miss El la Brddle, Colcamp,' Mo., bruised; C. R. Millers. Ind- bruised. , The excAirsion train had run from Chicago over the Chicago- & Alton and the Missouri Pacific roads, and was turned over to the Denver & Bio Grande at Pueblo, at 2 p m. The pas senger train was running at the rate of about thirty-five miles an hour when the collision occurred, The excursion train consisted of one day ; coach and two iPullman tourist sleepers. There were about forty pas sengers, most of : them from Massa chusetts, en route to the Pacific coast. The special had orders to run to Reno siding, and when only a few hundred yards from the siding it. collided with the freight train. The trains came to gether with terrlfic force. The second Pullman telescoped the first one, and the day coach Is a complete wreck. The freight train consisted of fifty narrow guage cars loaaea wirn , ore end lumber, anfi. the wreckage i la strewn along the tracks cor nearly a nail mile. All train men saved themselves by jumping. It is understood the freight had orders to take the sidetrack at Reno, but for some reason It failed to do SO. I - E. S. Plaisted, one of tbe excursion party from Revere, Mass., said: 'Our party of thirty-five ' or forty persons left' Boston Wednesday morn ing last, on a pleasure and business tour, to the Pacific coast. I had been riding in the first sleeper , but had just entered the day coach with ithe Pull man conductor, and had got comforta bly seated when there came an awful crash. 1 Quickly doubled myself up and waited for the worst. I i found - I . was : not seriously hurt, and with a little effort was soon extricated from under the debris. ; I looked for the conductor who sat by my side, and there he lay, a corpse. The other men in the same car (-there were four In the day couch) escaped also. This car was a complete wreck as was the tourist sleeper next to It. There were lx persons killed, five young people and our Pullman con ductor, who came with us from Bos ton. Geo. J. judklns, . who was trav eling to his home in Spokane, had the misfortune to see all three of his chil dren killed while he escaped with a few bruises and scratches. The poor man Is almost distracted with grief." i ANOTHER ONE Pittsburg, Sept. 23. Two trains on ithe Alleghany railroad collided head- on at Parker, Pa., last evening, to tally wrecking both; engines, demol ishing eight freight cars, badly wreck ing two passenger coaches and Injur ing nearly a , score of people. None of the Injured will die. Officials of the company say the engineer of the freight forgot that the passenger train had the right of way. CUBAN RAILROADS. New Line to Be Built to Every Point of Impcrtance. New York, Sept. S3. General G. A Greemvool,' who has jost returned from Cuba, has the following to say of Cuban railroads: Wii hdn a very short time the con- strticiicn of a railrcad will probably be begun which will make every nofnt of importance in Cuba easy -of access. We have the right of way; we have the concessions, and. best cf all, w nave the money. It Is our purpose to have main Jane through the island, and lo-d-i thns w- mvst build a read from Santa Clara to fc'anJujro de Cul. a distance of about 4Cw miles. Then we will build branches to the mi in tinA from evv-y i c-rt cn the nrth anl south sides of the IMand. TTbis means the buile irur of more than 5 miles of l cad at a cost of at least : IC.IMO.CCO. lAindoa and Beaton capitalists rave financed the undertaking- . : Thai surveys have ben made. an J all tLai is necessary to permit tne commencement of the wcrk of con struction is the repeal cf the Foraker resolution. Trls we La re every reason to btJieve will be repealed ir. the early aays of the coming session. We shall I "a lue wotk ana give Cuba a rail - - v road system that will prove of Incal culable benefit In the development of her many resources." IT CAUSED TROUBLE. Irish Flag- Creates Discussion A Mob Dispersed. - London. Sept. 23. That th tht flag sometimes, creates discussinn in other places than over the New Vnrir city hall was amusingly Instanced this week when Lord Grevllle, chairman of newlr-formed Westmeatn coumy council, attempted to fly the reen m Uem over the county court house at iMullingar.J. Captain Greville, - wl is high sheriff and a son of Lord Grevllle, said he would He shot before his fa ther or his council hoisted that flag over his court. The council reaffirmed its decision and Grevllle the younger prepared to resist. Thursday there cecurred (what Is now called -the bat tle of Mullingar." The council, led by Lord Grevllle, entered the courtyard, n HiiA a crowd of about 1000 people were iuk notaide bv a larsre force of noiice. iAm the councillors were en ftavorinsr srulle fully to get Into, the court, the crowd hrolt through the police lines, stormed the court, forced an entrance aad a torn green nag was waved from a window. This was the signal for tremendous cheering. ." The triumph waa short lived, for the police drove out the mob and captured the flag. leaving Grevllle the youngr the victor. " JINGOES WANT WAR. London Pa)er Warn the Government Against Tardiness In Action... Imdon. Sept. ?S- The ' sands are running ouU but all too slowly for the jingo party. The Morning Post editorially warns the government that It runs a two fold risk by its renewed pattence,Aflrst' of exhausting the patience of the loy alists In South Africa; second, of its surporters at home, who are not too enthusiastic over Its previous dealings with Imperial Questions. The Chronicle bluntly tells the gov eminent that ."their proceedings are undignified? adding "the fact remains that Krueger has been given another jerlcd of grace, thanks, primarily, ta tha fact thai we are not yet prepared for war, but also probably Salis bury's moderating influences, on Cham berlaln'a impetuosity." It is asserted -tni Cape Town that the combined Trarilvaal and Orange Free State tactics will be fto prevent Brit ish advance- friom 'the Natal border. and to assume' the defensive against Britlf h territory jfrom akng the un protected Orange river bcrder. Krue- gvr'a hope la thus to. snatch victory as in 1SHI and secure ef-s y terms of peace. . , An interesting note In - connection with the attitude of the Afrikanders Is that Secretary of State Reitz is Prem ier- Rehreiner's brother-In-lawv QUICK WORK. EASTERN OREGON STAGE . ROB BERS CAPTURED BY OFFICERS They Are Two Young iMen, a,nd Were Arrested at d?endleton toy Sher iff akley. : . PENDLETON. Sept. 25. J,' Barclay, aged twentyfour, and Forest Fer rons, aged twenty-one, -were arrested today on the overland passejnger train at this point, and held pending the ar rival of Sheriff Huntington, of Baker City, s Who telegraphed Sheriff Blak ley here. They are wanted for holding up the stage -between Ontario arid Burns, last week. v Barclay had a bulldog and (30 qO. his person,, and Perrons about $15. Sheriff Huntington, when told ahe men's names, telephoned In reply that they were the men he wanted for the hold up. These men are supposed to be the ones who planned to rob the Ore gon Short Line train at Ontario. (Forest Ferrons is believed to be a young man who was, for a number of years a resident of this city, where he was engaged as a waiter In a lunch-counter. : He is known to have spent the past year along, the Oregon Short Line In Eastern Oregon.) " LINE OF STEAMERS. SCHEDULED TO RUN BETWEEN ' iMANIIiA AND PORTLAND. Arrangements Completed for Commer cial Connection Between Oregon and the Philippines. PORTLAND. Septi 25. H. R. Lew- Is, of Portland, now In Manila repre senting the Philippine Trading Asso ciation of this city, writes to W. H. Chapin, secretary of the association. that a steamer line between Portland and Manila, via Honolulu, is practi cally assured. He states that the aro- moters of the line have decided to come to Portland with their first ship. wmen was scheduled to sail frbm Ma nila September 25th. and If a sufficient cargo can be secured, a line will be put on. A Word to Mothers. atotners of children affected with crcup or a revere cold need not hesi tate to . administer Chamberlain's cotrgh Remedy. It contains no-ol! at w narcotic in any form and may oe given as confidently to the. babe as to em adult. ; The great success lhit has uttepded Its . use in -the treatment of cold and croup has won fur it the approval and praise it has r.ceived thr.ut.hout th4 United. States and in mai-y rc:gn lands. For sale by J. tu l.unn. Druggist. CONTRACTION OF LOANS. SNew ''' York, Sept. 23. The depleted condition of New York 'bank reserves has necessitated a very large contrac tion of loans and. has thrown a burden oc forced liquidation on .the market. The demoralisation of Brooklyn Rap id Tsansit has added to the depression In the market and has Increased the speculative excitement Immeasurably. Speculative conunjtments on the bear uu were mucn over extended during the early part of the week and ' the efforts -of the large short Interest to cover, contracts caused some violent recoveries. Net changes of the week are, la fact, small, outside of a few industrial stocks, and show a fair pro asortlott of gains. The coalers are higher and the few other railroads show amaH 'gains. Fluctuations dur ing the week have been very wide, but the last prices are materially above the lowest. . BEECHAM S FILLS cure Sick Head III! Siui BiS Chamberlain Weary the Delay of IN THE NEGOTIATIONS England -Demands Eepresentatlon for the Foreign Residents in tbe Transvaal Bepnblie. LONDON. Sept. 25. The officials of the foreijra office this . evening grave out the text of the letter of the secre tary of state for the colonies, Joseph Chamberlain, to the British high rnmmlsfianer in South Africa. Sir Alfred M liner, dated September 22d, The British reply expresses regret that her majesty's offer of September 8th, had been refused and cays: . The object her majesty's govern ment toad In view in the recent nego tlattons has been stated In a maivier (which cannot admit of misapprehen slon. vis: to obtain Immediate repre sentation for the outlanders as will enable them to secure for themselves, that fair and Just treatment which was formally promised them In 1881 and which her majesty intended to secure for-them "when she granted privileges of self-government to the Transvaal. No conditions less compre hensive than those contained in the telegram of September th can be re lied on to effect that object. The re fusal "of the South African government to entertain the offer thus made, com ing as It does after four months of protracted negotiations, closes five years of extended agitatio,n and makes it useless to further pursue the dls cusslon on the lines hitherto followed. and the Imperial arovernment Is now compelled to consider the situation afresh and formulate Its own propos als for the final settlement of the is. sues which, have been created In South Africa by the policy constantly fol lowed for many years by the govern ment of South Africa. They will com munlcate the result of their delibera tions in a later .dispatch. . i Continuing the reply says: "As to the use of the English lan guage In the volksraad, the Imperial government regards Ahia as reasona ble, and Is astonished that tbe govern merit of the South African republic should deem It unnecessary a,nd make a point of denying that the govern ment of the South African republic ever proposed the - same to the Brit lsh agent, BOERS ARE EXCITED. London, Sept. 25. A special dispatch from Pretoria says, that members of the volksraad. -believing that the BrHtish notes are Intended to grgn time for the concentration of troops. urge the government to adjourn (the raad immediately and to send Great Britain a note, declaring that further mobilization will be regarded as " an unfriendly act. Trenches, earthworks and sandbag' defenses are being erect ed In all available approaches to tbe capitoL TROOPS AT DURBAN. Durban, Natal, Sept. 25. Seven hun dred and fifty Tnen of the Leicester shire regiment, 750 of the Royal Dublin f uslleers. 200 . mounted Infantry and the Eighteenth hussars have arrived at Dundee, from Lady Smith. - '- , . (A QUICK MOVE. Platermarttzburg, NataLf Sept. 23. The troops, that have been moved from Lady Smith to Dundee, will form a new company at Gle,ncoe, their places being filled by others from India. The movement was executed so smartly and-unexpectedly, that the boer spies were unaware of it until it was actu ally accomplished. : . "He That tAny good Would Win" Should be provided with good health. and everyone who would have good health should remember that pure, t1sti .lsuxl m tK. firm niil.lt. 1TM. Sarsaparilla. Jar crlvinar aood blood and ' good health, has helped many a man to success, besides giving strength and courage to thousands of women who. before taking It, could not even see any gooa lire to win. HOOD'S PILLS are gentle, yet effect ive. EFFECTS OF TORNADO. Millions of Dollars Destroyed Many Lives Lost., and Washington. Sept. 25. Consul Amyee. reports to the state depart ment, from Guadaloupe, that the loss of property from the recent tropical hurricane amounts to at least 35,000, CO0. Forty deaths and over 200 seri ously wounded are reported from va rious parts of tbe Island. The city Is a mass of wreckage, while the harbor front Is Hned rwlth the debris of large and small boats. The consul says the fruit crop is a total loss, a,nd that famine threatens the Island. The Latest Yarn. A Pittsburg drummer tells this new yarn: I always carry a . bottle . of Kemp's Balsam in my grip. I take cold easily and a few doses of the Balsam always makes me a well man. Every where I go I speak a good word for Kemp. I take hold of my customers I take old men and young men. and tell them confidentially what I do when I take cold. At druggists, 25c and 60c Mustaid Plaster In maklnar a mus tard l later no water whatever should be nsed, but he mutard should be mixed with the white of an egg. The result will be a plaster which win draw teifectly but will not produce a imsier, even upon the skin of en In fant, no rr.atUr how long it is all wed to remain upon "the partJ The" Kidney ;Complexion The pale, sallow; sunken-cheeliM distressed locking i-eople ycu &7 ilft meet are efHicted with "Kidney Ccm. plealcr- Their kidneys are turning t- a para nip color. So is their complexion. Th-jy may' also have iniieosll. n f suffer from slteplufaness, rheumat am urviatni, ui am uuuuif, nervous -exhaustion and sometimes the h-a-t an! badly. , " " The cause is weak neye. unhealthy aia. Usually the eufferer, from klJney dise ase dees tot find out what the trouble is until it is almwt too late because the flr: symptoms are to like vc'.ld elckness that they do not think they nol a medi-in or a decter until they find themselves sack in bed. ur. iwuners bwjmr root will buUd . . ucii wrBK SDtl di reused kidneys, ) purify thvir 0. eased, kidney polcned hhx-d. clear their complexion and son they MiU enjoy better health. You can get the regular sIm at the drug store, at filty cents ant one dol lar, or yuu may first prove for your self 4 he wonderful virtues of thix great discovery, Swair.p-Rrt. by senUing yout address to Dr. Kilmer & Co , Bingham ton. N. for a' sample bottle and a book that tt lis all abr.ut it, bot't sent to your abm..Tv:teiy; free by naiL When wilting kindly i. niton that you read this liberal offur in the C-regon Statesman. DESERTED FOR LOVE A Soldier Mcts LKath for FoHjwlnj a Filipino Woman. Chicago, Sept. iS A rpw'Itl to the Tribune from Kenosha, Ws., Bay,: a report received ht,re today-states thtt James F. Hayes, formerly a well known resident of this city, and more itcenlly. a member ft company II. Tweniy-s cend infantrjy r-H been thot as a des3Ker, in the Philipines. . Hayes had been a member of the regular army "off and tn fcr nearly ten years. He resigned bis post in. the army In 1897 And came to Kenorha. When his Id icgiment was ordre4 to the Philippine Hayes ja'ned it at San Francisco. For stveral weeks he had been fighting against the rebels ia the Interior, and whila there he fell in love with a native c man, to whom he afterwards was married. She urssl him to leave the army, and he finally left and went to live at her home. This desrrtion is si.picscd to have re- surted in, the arrest and death of Hayi-s. " OREGON STAGE FOBBED. Registered Mall Taken Between Wt-at- fall and Ontario. IBodsc, Ida Sept. 23. The stager be tween Westfall, Or., and Ontario. Or was held up last night, and the regis tered mall taken. There were three robbers. THE SALE MADE. Now York, Sept. 2X Positive Infor mation was received tonight, through persons Interested, confirming the sale of the Crocker holdings In the South ern Pacific company. The amount paid for the. block of stock was about $13, 000,000. - i , YELLOW FEVER. Key West. Sept. S3.--The new cases of yellow fever number forty, and the deaths number thre. CASTOR I A . For Infaoits and Children. Tto Kind Yea Hara Always Bougtt Bears the Signature of vi.tt cu. JORDAN'S or.. , -i.aWU.l Ul ftilt.aii.4lj vy" iLLurs cj. tat C a 7 B. J. Ztl 1 vT I r . S W mn mmlnm.'r Mim, m-v silm ll f -)nmw4 bull Ww ttdrrfiili( jnt HVftwl, E B . 1 BOW , .vl .! 4IMM, . Iff . Tt rraot mmw ef th. 111. r . ttmm t. ihm fi. jotcitA s-privatk mwraav: , si.siy sism pitiB s sssrtT sot -pi f hi senttt.t-M. j i w "w-raiiMiMir mf tarrl atirara 4 a mi.,.i m,,. ( JERU1TA l BaaTeres VITAL rY, IOST VIOUW . 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