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NEWS 07 THE WOULD. SFANISH-AMERICAN ISLANDS. A dispatch to the war department from General C*tis states that General Snyder routed the Filipino forces near Cebu. Tihe number of enlistments has reached 11,067. Generals MacArthur, Wheaton and Wheeler captured Paraic. Elections for officers of the Cuban national league were held in Havana. A case thought to be smallpox ap peared in the South Dakota regiment in San Francisco. Edward J. Cantwell and Miss Liddie Sisco were married in Paterson, N. J., after he had enlisted for the Philip pines because of a quarrel. Three of the Spanish war vessela smashed by Dewey at Manila have been repaired at Hongkong and soon will be added to our fighting ships. American warships bombarded Olan gapo, and a landing party captured and destroyed a Krupp gun which had been in possession of the insurgents. General Ludlow has issued a procla mation to the people of Havana warn ing labor agitators and denouncing the proposed general strike asan iniquitous conspiracy. A vestibule train of ten coaches left Chicago, carrying the Dewey invitation committee to New York, where it in vited the admiral to Chicago for the fall festival. Captain Sigsbee of the battleship Texas was hastily summoned to Ech both Beach, Delaware, by the death of his daughter Ethel, who died suddenly of heart disease. Dispatches from General Otis say that the Inhabitants of Uegros and Sulu, two of the Philippine Islands, are about to acknowledge the authority of the United States. Admiral Dewey was given a thunder ous welcome by his comrades in arms as the Olympia took her place at the head of the column of warships in New York. Millions welcomed the admiral. Dr. John Feuss, contract surgeon in the army, committed suicide on the transport Burnside. He feared court martial on the charge of suppressing information concerning yellow fever in Cuba. Englishmen who reached Manila yes terday from the Filipino lines say that the American prisoners held at Tarlac will be released immediately. Lieutenant Gilmore also will soon be released. Filipinos captured our gunboat Ur danta twenty-five miles from Manila and killed or made prisoners of Naval Cadet W. C. Wood and nine of the crew. Wood was killed, it has since been learned. Despite statements of war depart ment officials that General Otis will be continued In command of the army In the Philippines, it Is believed Presi dent McKinley In not entirely satisfied with the record he has made. The Ohio national guard participated In the New York Dewey celebration. Governor Buahnell and John It. Mc- Lean ngreelng to meet the expense of the trip In case there should be any difficulty in getting the money from the state treasury. DOMESTIC. Chicago September wheat, 74 5-Bc. Kill McCoy whipped Jack McCor mick. Rev. Joseph Iml, aged 77, is dead at Cascade, lowa. Jared 11. Flagg. Sr., the artist, died at New York aged 80. The national irrigation congress met at Missoula. ‘Mont. Fifteen thousand visittni the Yellow stone national park this season. The town of New Madrid, forty miles below Cairo. 111., was wipes! out by Are. Tiie hake Carriers’ association de cided to raise the wages of 10,1)00 em ployes. Captain Francis S. Haggerty, U. S. N., retired, died In New York, aged 90 years. It is announced that President Mc- Kinley will be in St. Paul Oct. 12 without fall. Stanley Pearson, superintendent of Southland college, is dead at Helena. Ark., aged 50. Mrs. George Farrar of Long Hill, Conn., attended by faith enrists, died freau tuberculosis. President Diaz of Mexico cancelled his proposed vlsrt to Chicago because of his wife's illness. Booker Washington says the negro problem will he solved by the negro if he is given a chance. David B. Alexander, who helped lay oiK the town of Effingham. 111., Is dead at Los Angeles, aged 81. The wedding of Julia Grant to Prince Cantacurene of Russia at Newport was notable for its social splendor. Thomas Kelly, member of the Mid dletown (Conn.) high-school eleven, was killed in a football game. New York retail boot and shoe deal ers have formed an organization for the purpose of raising prices. Dispatches from Calumet ami Hougihton. Mich., say the first snow of the season fell at those places. W. Cummings, president of the State bank of Effingham. Kan., was found dead In bed. He was 65 years <Ud. Kx-Secretary Sherman and wife left Ohio for thedr Washington home, whore they will spend the winter. At Newton Falls, Ohio, John Carson, a farmer, aged 65, was stung to death by bei while working in his apiary. Rev. Thomas A. Cela> formerly a j Methodist preaoher, Joined the j Roman Catholic churehf at S>:. Joseph j Mich. J Joseph Black, forjW'r consul to Bud apest. and one dB Cleveland's best known business tnpt. is dead, aged 62 years. __ .Tames J. master of Clyde, Kan., was arrested charged with filching government funds. lAvosier Spence, of Martin’s Ferry, 0., was nominated for congress by the democrats of the sixteenth Ohio dis trict. Mrs. Charlotte Bacon, Kenosha, Wis., one of the original settlers of southern Wisconsin, died, aged 86 years. Fire did $50,000 damage in the nine story Robinson building, bounded by E. Broadway, Division and Gouverneur streets* N. Y. Michael 8. Corbett, Detroit, died of consumption aged 41. He was Detroit manager of the Western Union Tele graph company. Sylvester J. Curtis, who has jus* died in New York, divided the greater portion of his fortune of $2,500,000 be fore his death. Consul Willshire Butterfield, Omaha, Neb., formerly of Madison, Wis., author of several widely read histori cal works, is dead. A tornado demolished Jackson s felt mill near Paterson, N. J., wrecked many small buildings and uprooted hundreds of trees. Wall street expects $30,000,000 will find its way into New York banks as a result of Dewey week and the inter national yacht race. Senator Fred A. Busse of Chicago has been elected a member of the state board of agriculture, to succeed Wil liam Seewart, resigned. John Downs, of Danbury, Conn., cried to his mother that he was going crazy, then jumped down an eighty foot well and was killed. Mrs. Susan A. Winold of Massillon, ()., is in New York looking for her two children, who she says were kidnapped by her divorceu husband. President imoden, of a “wild cat bank at Kansas City was convicted of forgery and sentenced to prison, after an extraordinary criminal career. Justice Gaynor told the Mazet com mittee in Ne.v York he was offered and refused $50,000 in stock by the Ramapo company to become its president. Mayor Carter Harrison of Chicago and Mayor /..eigenhelm of St. Louis have to enter a corn-hnsking match at the Peoria corn carnival. At San Francisco thirty days further stay of execution was granted to Mrs. Cordelia Botkin. The appeal to the supreme court is not yet perfected. German Lutheran ministers in con ference at Mount Olive, 111., have de cided that life insurance is sinful be cause it is a “species of a game of chance.” At Pittsburg A. P. Stephenson, a prominent and wealthy merchant, tried to kill his wife and then com mitted suicide. Mrs. Stephenson was uninjured. At John Croma's wedding feast in Plymouth, Conn., the bride disap peared, so did the best man, whom Cronia has sued for alienating his wife's affections. Olivette Nelson, who came to this conn-try as a stowaway to join her sweetheart, Andrew Guttormansen. was marrjed to him in the barge of fice at New York. Designer Fife was relieved from command of the cup challenger Sham rock and Skippers Wringe and Hogarth restored to sail the yacht in her races for America's cup. At Sioux Falls, S. D., a threshing engine exploded on the farm of Henry Brandt, killing Brandt, and fatally In juring Fred Taince and seriously burn ing Robert Smith. A Virginia girl, wronged under premise of marriage, took poison. A few minutes before death she named the man. He killed himself before officers could get him. Attorney-Generaf Griggs states that according to supreme coup; decisions, congress cannot control the business of trusts whose operations are con fined to one state. A large five-story brick building In Filbert street. Philadelphia, occupied by the Maccy Furniture company and Reliance Storage & Warehouse com pany, burned. Ixiss SIOO,OOO. New York supreme court justices testified before the 'Mazot committee that judicial cadidates paid from $lO.- 000 down to the organization to which they owed their nomination. An effoo. will be made at the next session of congress to secure an in ceased appropriation for the naval militia, and also to place these organi zations under national control. William Griffenatetn, the founder of Wichita, died at Shawanee, I. T. He left Germany as a political exile anil landed in 1850. He waa a well-known Indian trader and frontiersman. The governments of the United States. Gnat Britain and Germany are considering claims for losses growing out of the bombardment in Samoa by the British and American naval forces. Senator Wellington resigned the chairmanship of the Maryland repub lican committee in a speech in which he denounced Gov. l.owdes, republi can. who is a candidate for re-election. Rear-Admiral Sampson did not in vent the system of superimposed tur rets used on the battleships K'iusarge and Kentucky. The turrets were de signed by Lieut. Joseph Strauss, tu ihe navy. The first of a series of strikes which art* expected to involve the working iron mol tiers in Milwaukee took place jut the Filer & Stow dl Foundry. The j grievance is the f&iltttv to recognise the union. It was announced that the Manhat [ tan Oil company has been purchased |by the Standard Oil company. The Manhattan company was the largest competitor of the Standard in the Lima field. Two men were killed and burned to a crisp in a fire which destroyed the varnish factory of Joseph A. Smith A Cos., at Newark. N. J. It is supposed kettle in the milicing room boiled over, and an explosion and flames followed An innova-tk n in American news paper methods has been made by the Germania of Milwaukee, which an nounces that it has employed Dr. Duemling of the Lutheran college at Laporte, as censor. Lieutenant T. W. Ryan has been de tached from che New York navyyard and ordered to command the Viking. Lieutenant W. H. Faust, U. S. N., has been recired. The collier Nero has ar rived at Yokohama. Mrs. A. A. Merrill has been elected treasurer of the Fairfield, Maine, Sav ings bank, to succeed her husband, the late Simon Merrill. Mrs. Merrill is the second woman in the state to he elected treasurer of a bank. The selection of Archbishop Chapelle of New Orleans as apostolic delegate for the Philippines, gives general sat isfaction in Catholic church circles, and is considered a mark of special tavor on the part of Che Vatican. A general street car strike in Cin cinna'i is feared. A committee of street car men called on President John Kilgour of the Cincinnati street railway, and presented demands for 20 cents an hour and 10 hours a day. Robert W. Eaton, cashier of the Fayetteville (N. Y.) National bank, convicted of making false reports to the comptroller of the currency, was released from prison on a special com mutation granted by President McKin ley. Rev. C. S. Dudley for five years pastor of centenary M. E. church at Beatrice, Neb., was transferred by Bishop Warren to be pastor of the Oakland M. E. church, Chicago. Dr. Dudley expects tcTreach Chicago about Oct. 10. At Chattanooga, Judge Estill con vened a special term of the grand jury for the purpose of Indicting Julia Mor rison, who killed Actor Frank Miss Morrison, it Is expected, will be tried at the present session of the criminal court. The Prison congress elected S. W. McClaughey of Illinois, Rev. Dr. Hen derson of Chicago, Rev. J. Milligan, Pennsylvania; Gen. R. Brinkerhoff, Ohio, and the president, Edward S. Wright, delegates to the international congress in Brussels. At Hastings, Neb., Miss Viola Hor locker, charged with attempting to murder 'Mrs. C. F. Morey Mayall by sending her poisoned candy, was ar raigned in court and her case continued until the December term. Her bond for $5,000 was renewed. At Charleston, 111., John Lawyer, Jr., and Ed. Jones, farmers, quarreled and Jones was slashed in the neck with a pocket knife dying in less than five minutes. The Lawyers are well known people. Jones was a farm hand. Lawyer was arrested. Colored men in Chicago tried to lynch James Washington, a detective, because he ran down and surrendered to the Tennesee officials Edward Cur tis, an escaped convict. The police rescued Washington from the lynchers after using their clubs freely Dr. Herman Wadsworth Hayely, 35 years old, inspector of luitin in Wes leyan university and a member of the faculty, committed suicide at Boston. He was one of the finest classical scholars in the country. Irately he had been haunted by a fear of losing his mind. Nine persons were badly burned, one probably fatally, in a lodging house in the South End, Boston. The fol lowing are at the city hospital: Mrs. Rena Butler, who is on the danger list; Miss Sarah B. Lovelace, Miss Lillian Tyresell, Hewitt Lovelace, Waverly Greene, Chesterfield Stewart. At Toledo, it is said Mayor Jones will tile with the secretary of state his petition as a non-partisan candidate for governor of Ohio. There will be 50,000 names on the list, and this number, it is claimed at the Jones headquarters, will be Increased to 100,- 000 by the middle of October. The Rodgers ranch, in Beaver county. Okla.. and the Childress cattle ranch, in the panhandle of Texas, con taining 200,000 acres and upon which 300.000 cattle are now grazing, have been purchased by R. L. Hillison of Fort Worth, Texas. Tor the Swift Pack ing house interests in Chicago. Rev. John M. Life, chaplain of the seventh Ohio volunteers, was found guilty by the Ohio Methodist confer ence of conduct unbecoming a minister of -the gospel, in using disrespectful language to Rose Lee Burch, daughter of the lieutenant colonel of the regi ment, and was expelled from the min istry. • At Kansas City, fourteen prinlcpal merchants have been notified to appear in court charged with violation of the law for the regulation of department stores, in that they refused to furnish statements showing the lines of goods sold and the volume of business trans acted. The constitutionality of the law will be tested. Captain Francis S. Haggerty. IT. S N., retired, died in New York, aged 90 years. His first service was on the schooner Experiment at Charleston. S. C.. during the nullification excite ment of 1533. Asa lieutenant he went with Commodore Ferry on the Japan expedition of 1852-55. and he served through the civil war. An Omaha-St. lands train load of excursionists returning from the exposition was wrecked on a bridge over the Platte river and miraculously escaped injury. The track spread just before the train passed from the bridge and the rails were torn tip. The bridge partially gave way and tne en gine and two coaches toppled over and fell a short distance, landing on some of the under timbers. FOREIGN. It is persistently rumored at Simla that Abdurrahman Khan, of Afghanis- tan, is dead and that a war of succes sion has already begun. Dreyfus is said to be writing a book. The Venezuela rebels continue to gain. Renewed rioting has occurred at Ferrol, Spain. A total of 35 lives were lost in the recent Newfoundland gale. Additional landslides in India have caused the loss of many lives. John Spencer Clarke, the veteran Baltimore actor, died in London. John Sleeper Clarke, the celebrated actor and theatrical manager, is dead at London, aged 64 years. It is generally believed in London that there will be war with the Trans vaal before the end of October. The steamer Adula, bound from Kingston, Jamaica, for Baltimore, was wrecked off Point Morant, Jamaica, and five lives were lost. There has been a recrudescence of bubonic plague in Alexandria, Egypt. Two cases have been officially reported, one of which proved fatal. The Paris Figaro says that Max Regis, the notorious Jew-baiter, after hiding in the suburbs of Algiers, em barked for Alicante, Spain. The governor of Laurenzo Marques asserts that he has no information respecting the reported lease of Dela goa Bay by Portugal to Great Britain. The Australian military command ers will meet in Melbourne to prepare a scheme for the dispatch of a United Australian contingent to south Africa. At Durango, Mex., Lew Houk, a once notorious Ohio gambler and crim inal, died. It was his boast that he once beat the Prince of Wales at bac t ill and L. The district of Adin in Asia Minoi was visited by an earthquake on Sep tember 20, and, according to the latest advices, over two hunderd persons per ished. Earthquakes, floods and landslides are reported to have caused great dam age at and near Darjeeling, India. Twelve Europeans and sixty natives were killed. The Colombian government issued a decree yesterday closing Colombian ports to ships having the bubonic plague on board or arriving from infected ports. The latest British note to the Trans vaal states that Great Britain must abandon the recent basis of negotia tions and proceed to formulate her own proposals. At St. Johns, N. F., the loss of an other schooner is reported as the result of the recent gale. She foundered with six men, bringing the total loss of life up to fifty-three. Knezevic, convicted of the attempted assassination of King Milan, was pub licly shot yesterday in Belgrade. Paisitch, one of the leaders of the conspiracy, has been pardoned by King Alexander. Deputy Millevoye has challenged M. Ijabouri, who was counsel for Dreyfus, to take the responsibility for the authenticity of an interview published by a New York paper, and says that if Labori acknowledges the statements reputed to him in the interview as true he asks reparation at arms. EXPORT OF GEER. Ust.tc! ‘tales Sportsmen C'nn Now Take A way Their Kill. Last session an act was passed by the Canadian Government, mainly at the in stance of the Canadian railway com panies and the gutue wardens empower ing the Government by an ordei'-in-coun cil to permit the exportation of doer from Canada. This authority has been arted upon, and the following regulation pro mulgated by tile Minister of Customs: “Deer when shot for sport under pro vincial or territorial authority in Canada, by any person not domiciled in Canada, may be exported under the following con ditions and limitations: “The deer may be exported only at the customs ports of Halifax, X. S.; Yar mouth. N. S.; Macadam Junction, X. B.: Quebec, Que.: Montreal, Que.; Ottawa, Ont.; Kingston. Ont.; Niagara Falls, Ont.: Fort Erie. Ont.: Windsor, Ont.; Sault Ste. Marie. Ont.; I’ort Arthur, Ont., and such other ports as shall from time to time by the Minister of Customs be designated for the export of deer. “The exportation of deer in the carcass or parts thereof (except as to cured deer heads and hides of deer), shall lie permit ted only during or within fifteen days after the ‘open season’ allowed for shooting deer under the laws of tile prov ince or territory where the deer to be ex ported has been shot. “No person shall in one year export more than the whole or parts of two deer, uor shall exportation of such deer be made by the same person on more than two occasions during one calendar year. “Deer in the carcass or any part there of which has been killed in contraven tion of any provincial or territorial law shall not be exported, uor shall any deer in the carcass or parts thereof be exert ed without tiie permit of the collector of customs accompanying the shipment. “A person not domiciled in Canada, who has shot Jeer for sport and not for gain or hire, under provincial or terri torial authority may make an export en try in duplicate of deer in the carcass or parts thereof so shot by him and allowed to be exported -upon subscribing and at testing before a collector of customs a declaration. “The exporter shall produce his license or permit for 'looting deer under provin cial or territorial authority to the collect or of customs before the exportation of the deer and the collector shall indorse thereon a description of the quautitv aed parts entered for exportation. "The collector of customs at any cus toms port of entry designated for the ex port of deer, upon receiving he said ex port entries duly completed, may there upon under the seal of the custom house, issue his permit for the exportation of the deer, if satisfied as to the identity of the sportsman and that the exportation is not prohibited." The greatest deer country in America lies iu the "llighlanda of On’ario" and large numbers from the I’nited States annually make this locality their rendea tous. The new laws will be appreciated by American sportsmen. GENERAL JOE WHEELER PRAISES PERUNA, The Great Catarrh Cure JOE WHEELER’S CHARGE AT SAN JUAN HILL. Major General Joseph Wheeler, command ing the cavalry forces In front of Santiago and the author of "The Santiago Campaign." In speaking of the great catarrh rem and Pe-ru-na, ray*: "I Join with Senators Sulli van Roach and McEnery In their good opin lon of I’e-ru na. It is recommended to me by those who have used it as an excellent tunic and particularly effective as a cure for catarrh." United States Senator McEnery. H( n. S. D. McEnery, United States Sen ator from Louisiana, says the following In regard to Pe-ru-na: “Pe-ru-na is an excellent tonic. I have used It S’lfHclently to say that I believe It to be all that you claim for it." —S. D. Mc- Enery, New Orleans, Louisiana. United States Senator Sullivan. “I desire to say that I been taking Pe-ru-na for >ome time for catarrh, and h ive found it an *xcelieiu medicine giving me W. 3*52 /lira HfilKF TRj MADISON JT -zh y c*Aao ft®- for a PAIR OF £LE 9100b cant lace curtains. it/ fm Ip |j|||p^l||E^|p V OUR MAMMOTH CATALOEUE !." wn'ch i. ■i—— m listed at low est wholesale prices everything to eat, wear and use,' is furnished on receipt of only lOe. to partly pay post age or expreseage, and as evidence of good faith— the lOc. is allowed on first purchase amounting to SI.OO or above. Our monthly grocery pric - lisi free. “A Good Tale Will Bear Telling Twice.” Use Sapoliol sa a Use ■a ■ SAPOLIO WINCHESTERS. Send your name and address on a postal, and we will send you our 1 56- page illustrated catalogue free. WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. 180 Winchester Avenue. New Haven, Conn. W. L. DOUGLAS 53&53.50 SHOES “ft 1 '” 1 t Worth $4 to $6 compared with other makes. Indorsed hjr over 1,000.0U0 'wearer*. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES THK km W. U Do*lu' ■*■ an<l prir* sUaped nn ■ Take no substitute claimed j to l*e as pod. I.ardent maker*. , of and t 3.50 shoes tn the j wt rid. Your dealer should keep j them—lf not, we will tend you a pair on receipt of price. State kind of leather, sire and width, plain or cap toe Catalogue l> Tree. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockton. Man. WIS PUB UNION 23 —40 more relief than anything l have ever taken. —W. V. Sullivan, Oxford, Mias." United States Senator Roach. "Persuaded by a friend, 1 have used Pe ru-na ns a tonic, and am glad to testify that It has greatly helped me In strength, vigor and appetite. 1 have been advised by friends that It Is remarkably efficacious as a cure for the almost universal complaint of catarrh. —W. X. Roach, Larimore, North Dakota.” A free book on catarrh sent to any addresa by The Pe-ru-na Drug M’fg Cos., Columbus, Ohio. The microbes that cause chills and fever and malaria enter the system through raucous membranes made porous by catarrh. Pe-ru-na heals the mucous membranes and prevents the entrance of malarial germs, thus pre venting and curing these affections. Constantly haunting the markets of Europe and America with ready cash to buy with brings us bargains only possible with houses of the largest capacity. To our pat rons this often means two dollars’ value for one dollar in money. Here, for Instance, Is anofferlngex traordinary in ißce curtains, fit to adorn the window of anv household. They arc American net In a beautiful scroll design, an exact reproduction of real Irish point, which, v. hen hung at your window is scarcely distin guished from the original imported article. They are -it! inches wide and BV4 yards long, and we furnish them' In white or ecru, ant! if this bargain does not Gome up to your expectation aj. w@ will cheerfully gi A as - the money. K,i;l a M Our price per pair ~& ft 39 _ yUU D Dr.Bulis the best remedy for vUUgll Consumption. Cures C%/ ■■ rx Loughs, Colds, Grippe, OVrUp Bronchitis, doarse , * ne*s. Asthma, Whooping- WJ. Croup Small doses; quick, sure results. Dr. bull & /hits curt Constipation. Trial , 20 forsc. A'-CUTQI Handpaintod work! Sells rapidly. AKT N^Hg I 11.. Ksh. Coon. lAn |P Q The Peri,.lira] MenthlyflE L..' UI LOi uover fails : c .nviuce uiiHH i.a. MM l()KKClli:i lt..\ 7<>. Milwaukee. \Vi. RENSIOM ! v'.Vsh ihJS W* SuccessfullV Prosecutf||§| ■ I ■ M'-ttßl p’ i n-r T P. 3 ' ' 1 llir urrn 1 i'*r*.nnnlrj^BfiM Mir Nr rII •. -v. r VI L lILLU c— A drew. W&E&Mm, un.vnit i\UMr,T (SB San Dieico, < alir>rnliJ^Hj||i| APPLICATIONS - ’ln a• t.> v. i• uiVH " 5 ■ *’ /Barters m Ts scientitiralUMWß| v •• •