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NEWS 0? THE WOULD. THE TRANSVAAL WAR. The boer Gen. Cronje is reported ad vancing upon Kimberley. Reports from Kimberley say that the city is isolated but safe. The boers are charged with attempts to incite the blacks to an outbreak. Gen. Kock, the boer division com mander, and his son are killed in bat tle. It is reported that Oom Paul has de cided to surrender. Micnael Davitt resigned from parlia ment as a protest against the war. Field Marshal Wolseley is apparent ly convicted of “doctoring” official re ports. Hemmed in by boers at Kimber ley, Cecil Rhodes asks for reinforce ments. Parliament almost unanimously voted the war funds asked by the gov ernment. Gen. Kock, the second in command of the Transvaal army, was killed at Elands Laagte. Col. Baden-Powell, at Mafeking, is said to have captured Gen. Cronie and killed 500 boers. The eighteenth buscars, thought to have been cut to pieces or captured by boers, reached Ladysmith. Queen Victoria wired to her war minister that her heart bled for the dreadful losses in the war. Mr. Balfour evaded a question in the house of commons as to the possibility of an anti-British coalition. Paris newspapers say the great pow ers of Europe are preparing to inter vene after j.he first few fights. Elands Laagte was only retaken from the boers after determined fight ing and heavy losses on both sides. Apprehension is felt that the British have received a serious check in the renewed fighting at Glencoe and Dun dee. The British camp at Glencoe was at tacked again, this time by the main army of the Transvaal under Gen. Joubert. Mr. Chamberlain will be pressed to produce the Hawkesley letter, which is said to implicate him in the Jama son raid. It is rumored that the pending British naval preparations are due to Russia’s intention to seize a xiort in the Persian gulf. Lord Wolseley, British commander in-chief, gives out a reassuring state ment regarding the military situation in Bouth Africa. The Transvaal and Orange Free State governments have issued proc lamations annexing large areas of British territory north of the Orange river. The battle at Glencoe lasted eight hours. British casualties as officially reported: Eleven officers and 31 men killed, and 21 officers and 151 men wounded. Patrick O’Brien, Parnellite, was suspended from membership in tho house of commons for declaring that Joseph Chamberlain’s hands were stained with blood like a murderer’s. London despatches indicate that Gen. Yule was forced by the boers to aban don Dundee and Glencoe, and that his column and the forces of Gen. White at Ladysmith are In a precarious sit uation. A boer army, reported to be 9,000 strong and under the command of Commandant-General Joubert and President Kruger In person, began an attack on Glencoe, Natal. The British fell back. President Kruger is thought to bo preparing to blow up Johannesburg, which is in the center of the gold mining region controlled by the Brit ish. He has issued a proclamation ordering his countrymen to leave the city at once. SPANISH-AMERICAN ISLAN L)S. Rebels attacked the Americans at Iloilo. Bishop Doane indorsed President McKinley’s Philippine policy. Admiral Sampson was presented with a sword by New Jersey. Mr. Chamberlain says that America’s war with Spain was justifiable. Col. Frost denies that American soldiers looted churches In Luzon. Gov. Roosevelt at Cincinnati de nounced anti-imperialists as traitors. Major Guy Howard, son of Gen. 0. O. Howard, was killed in action by the Filipinos. Major Cheatham’s force at Celamba, Luzon, routed a body of intrenched natives. The transport Senator, about which fears were entertained, arrived at San Francisco. General Otis states that hostile Filipinos have been driven out of Negros island. Admiral Dewey may be asked to name the site for the permanent arch in his honor. An American scouting party at Santa Rita. Luzon, killed six Filipinos and , captured eight. Rebels at Calamboo were fearfully | pun'shed for continued attacks upon the Americans. Gen. Funston will return to the Philippines. Mrs. Funston remaining at her home in California. Filipinos continue to concentrate near Iloilo. Island of Panay. and Im portant lighting Is expected there. A decided sentiment in favor of in dependence was shown at a meeting of leaders of the Cuban army element In Havana. . Cuban opinion Is against the procla mation of the civil governor of Ha vana, Gen. Rivera, prohibiting cock fighting. Gen. Funston. in a lecture In ’Frisco, said the friars should be driven from the Philippines and church property confiscated. (Messrs. Denbv and Worcester, Phil ippine commissioners, will declare in their reports, it is said, that Gen. Otis is a failure. The National Boot and Shoe Manu facturers’ Association, formulated some time ago in Philadelphia, was completed. The Milwaukee presbytery decided to rebuke a Fond du Lac preacher for attacking members of the presbytery in a circular. Governor General Brooke prevented Cubans from driving Syrians out of the island under an old Spanish law against “heretics.” Gen. Fitzhugh Lee and other Ameri cans have sailed from Havana for the United States. The general is on a leave of absence. President McKinley has commis sioned Archbishop Chapelle, the Vati can’s apostolic delegate, to offer ptace terms to the Filipinos. Representatives of the Cuban na tional league and national party have decided to hold a joint meeting to dis cuss the future of their organizations. Archbishop Chappelle, apostolic del egate to the Philippines, protests against Gen. Funston’s animadver sions upon the church in the archi pelago. Acting on his physician’s advice, Admiral Dewey has cancelled his en gagements to visit Atlanta and other cities. His new Washington home has been selected. Flag Lieutenant Brumby of Ad miral Dewey's flagship Olympia, ar rived at Atlanta. Thousands of peo ple were waiting at the depot and gave him a rousing reception. General Otis will probably not again admit Filipino officers to Manila, even for the purpose of conference, as it is said their uniforms have an inspiring effect upon disaffected natives. General Funston of Kansas, in an in terview, said that the influence of Kansas politicians had nothing to do with his promotion or with the move ments of the Kansas regiment. In his annual report, Secretary of War Root recommends the increase of the regular standing army to 100,000 men. The secretary also favors the revival of the grade of general and lieutenant-general. The army and navy are reported to be not working together harmoniously in the Philippines. Army officers, in cluding General Otis, are said to be jealous of the navy and not inclined to give it credit for what it has accom plished. Brigadier-General Bates will be raised to the grade of major-general of volunteers; Major-General Lawton will be appointed brigadier-general in the regular army; Brig-Gen. Frederick Funston has been reappointed to the same grade in the volunteer establish ment. DOMESTIC. Chicago October wheat, 69c. President McKinley will go home to vote. Returning Klondikers nearly starved on a steamer. The W. C. T. U. resolves against the Philippine war. A Chicago man confesses to having forty-two wives. Freight and passenger rates are to be advanced Nov. 1. Choynski whipped Dick iMoore of St. Paul in three rounds. Debs threatens the revival of the American Railway union. The box car famine is becoming seri ous in southern California. Senator Lindsay of Kentucky will be a candidate for re-election. The Catholic church troubles at East St. Louis were settled by the Vatican. Martin White, chief of police of Omaha, died suddenly of heart failure. Maj. Eustace Jameson, M. P., may be the next challenger for America’s cup. The new torpedo boat Dahlgren broke the record, running 31 miles an hour. President McKinley designated Thursday, Nov. 30, as a day of thanks giving. The United States troops will be withdrawn from the Coeur d’Alenes Nov. 1. In gold and silver combined the United States leads the world in pro duction. iMtss Helen Gould, accompanied by j her brother, George, was the guest of i the Omaha. Charles A. Dibble, Chicago died of j pneumonia. He was born in Syra-1 cuse in 1842. Col. R. W. Huntington. marine corps, has been retired, to take effect Jan. 10 next. The Universallsts voted in favor of a conference looking toward union with the Unitarians. \V. J. Bryan addressed six audiences on the first of his twelve days of cam paigning in Nebraska. William Altone of Manhattan and Mrs. Lena Sohaplero of Brooklyn were killed by trolley cars. John S. Crosby is to remain on the independent labor t’rket for supreme ■■ourt judge in New York. United States Senator Mallory of [ U’orlda, and a member of the indust rial commission, is ill. The war department is considering the desirability of having a Cuban ex hibit at the l’arls exposition. A Yale undergraduate and a young woman were sentenced to jail for kiss ing publicly in New Haven. The president is overwhelmed with applications for appointments to the military and naval academies. The recall of R. Wildman, United States consult at Hongkong, "for cause.” is said to be imminent. W. J. Bryan will devote the ensuing two weeks to speeehmaking in Ne braska. He is in excellent health. The inauguration of President Ben jamin lde Wheeler, as president of the University of California took place. William J. Bryan closed his Ohio tour. He and Mrs. Bryan saw pick pockets at work and caused their ar rest. The surgeon-general of the navy, in his annual report, advocates an in crease in the medical corps of the navy. It is said that a number of English men are going to put up a big paper mill in the neighborhood of Niagara Falls. In New York Gen. John H. Bailey was sued by his wife for a separation and maintenance on the ground of de sertion. John R. McLean gave SI,OOO to the fund raised in 1895 to help William McKinley out of his financial diffi culties. Notwithstanding the heavy war ex penses, the October surplus of the United States treasury is increasing $4,000,0000. G. H. Christian of Minneapolis, who sold out his holdings to the flour trust., will re-enter the business and put up anew mill. The Michigan telephone company has finished laying its cable across the straits of iMackinac. The system works perfectly. An insurrection has broken out at Panama, and martial law has been declared. A warship will be ordered there at once. Anto.n Heusler, charged with deal ing in counterfeit foreign perfumes, was arrested in Milwaukee by intf mal revenue officers. John D. Rockefeller has donated $225,000 to Cleveland to construct arches to connect Gordon and Rocke feller parks. It is reported that several more men have been ambushed and killed in the Baker-White and the Griffin-Philpot feuds in Kentucky. Secretary of the Navy Long has or dered the naval bureau chiefs to begin at once the preparation of plans for three new battleships. Forty Cincinnati houses on Epworth Heights, the Methodist camp meeting grove, were destroyed by fire. The loss will reach $50,000. In New York Henry Heintz has sued the Havemeyers for $225,000, claimed To be due for services in form.- ing the sugar trust. Wireless telegraphy at sea is to be tested for the benefit of the navy department on the warships New York and Massachusetts. Rear Admiral Sampson, commandant at Charleston navy yard, was given a reception and banquet by the Massa chusetts board of trade. The Dawes commission has com pleted its enrollment of the Chickasaw Indians. The enrollment shows 17,000 Indians and 4,000 freedmen. “Buffalo Bill” had sixty miles of telephone wire strung to keep Gen. Miles in communication with the out side world while hunting. The Central Woman’s Temperance Union have decided to undertake the establishment in Columbus, Ohio, of a home for inebriate women. At Kansas City Major S. Q. Robin son. who was chief surgeon of Gen eral Lawton’s division at Santiago, is seriously ill with kidney troubles. New York theatrical agents closed a contract with Princess Chimay and Itigo. the Hungarian gypsy violinist, for their appearance in New York. The Lombardi Italian Grand Opera company, which disbanded in Kansas City was reorganized with Coliamarini, priina donna, as its financial backer. At Three Oaks, iMich., the unveiling of the Dewey cannon has been post poned until next spring, at which time it is hoped the admiral will he present. The Kansas City & Colorado rail way has been sold to the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railroad company for the amount of its bonded indebtedness $225,000. Mrs. Stoekwell, wife of a New York jeweler, was robbed of jewelry valued at $50,000 and $25,000 in money at the Savoy Hotel in ixindon. The thieves escaped. Supt. Metcalf of the money order system left for Mexico to complete the money order agreement recently en tered into with that country, to take effect Jan. 1. The election of William Rockefeller to the executive committee of the New York Central is said to mean the ab sorption by that railway of five New England roads. The governor of Idaho has made an earnest appeal to President McKinley not to withdraw the Federal troops from that state. He fears the lawless ness of the miners. The withdrawal from the ticket of Joslah R. Adams, republican candidate for judge of the supreme court in Pennsylvania, it is thought may injure the whole ticket. On a wager of sl, Fischer Nauss baum of New York, stood for twelve hours in a chalked circle without once moving his feet from their position assumed originally. John Gruver and (Mrs. Mary Sheets, each more than seventy years old, were married at Philippsburg. N. J. Children, grandchildren and great grandchildren were present. The fact that Russia has opened to foreign exploitation the gold lands of | Siberia is announced in a report to the i state department from United States I consul Pierce at St. Petersburg. I A tabulation of the students in the j Harvard university shows fhat this year there are 4.067 students attending the branches of the university, an in crease of 167 over last year. Ex-Treasurer Frank Porker of Ver non county. Mo., has pleaded guilty to a shortage of $26,000 In county funds. Sentence was deferred. The bondsmen will have to make the shortage good. Miss Esther L. Burns, who eloped with H. H. Holdelmann from Waukee l ney, Texas, became a raving maniac as the clergyman was about to per form the marriage ceremony in Den ver. Herman Hundhausen of Herman. Mo., who has been on trial for compll cation in the murder of Walter F. Koeller, Sept. 2, in Chicago, was sen tenced to twenty years in the peniten tiary. i The medical officers of the British army are using a vaccine with great success as a protection against typhoid fever. It may be adopted by the medi cal authorities of the United States army. First Assistant Postmaster General Perry S. Heath in his forthcoming re port will recommend that congress shall fix the salaries of assistant post masters at 50 per centum of that of postmasters. The Rio Grande river is on a boom and is threatening the builders at Fort Brown. The department of Texas has made an emergency appropriation to protect the reservoir against the en croachments of water. The sixty-second marriage anni versary of William Veatch and wife was celebrated at their home, eight miles west of Carmi, 111. He is 86 years old and came to Illinois in 1815. Their descendants number 92. Successful tests were made in the furnaces of the Chicago City Railway Cos. of coke reduced from coal mined at Danville, 111., showing conclusively that the product can be used for smelt ing and blasting purposes. Work will be resumed at the steel plant on Brekker island in Buffalo, which has long been idle. It is ex pected that the blast furnaces and steel mills will be started immediately. Sixteen hundred men will be employed. The Great Northern will spend several hundred thousand dollars in improvements in Spokane. A double track will be constructed through the city, much of it being elevated on a steel trestle, in order to avoid grade crossings. Nelson Ferris. Mishawaka, Ind., died aged 85. He had been sheriff of the county and a member of the legisla ture, and owned large land interests in Michigan and Indiana. He was father-in-law of Adjutant General James Gore. The 20th annual meeting of the Woman’s Home Missionary Associa tion was opened in Boston. Several reports were presented, that of the treasurer showing cash receipts of $34,295; cash expenditures, $29,158; ex penses, $4,175. It has been learned that the parties who recently held up the Chicago & Northwestern train near De Kalb, had previously purchased two pounds of dynamite which they shipped to a small town in Indiana. Detectives be lieve they have a clew to their iden tity. The trial of Hugh Henry Hammond, who shot John T. Shayne, the wealthy furrier last March, while the latter was dining with Mr. Hammond’s divorced wife at the Auditorium Annex, was be gun before Judge Hutchinson in Chi cago. The day was consumed in the selection of the jury. No trace has yet been found of the two bandits and murderers who es caped from an island in the Missouri river near . Atchison being searched for by 500 armed men. Gov ernor Stanley has offered SSOO reward for the capture of the men. This brings the total reward up to SI,OOO. FOREIGN. Fatal riots occurred in Moravia. At Santos two fresh cases of the bu bonic plague have occurred. The revolution in Colombia has spread to serious proportions. France and Russia are suspected of projecting mischief for England. Mrs. Sophia Mannington, Morrison, ill., a pioneer, is dead, aged 97 years. A gigantic system of official fraud and corruption is unearthed in Russia. One million dollars will be needed to perpetuate the Dewey arch in New York. General Castro has taken charge of the Venezulean government and formed a cabinet. The Peruvian congress has been con voked to meet in extraordinary ses sion, to sanction the budget. Martial law is gazetted in Barcelona, Spain, w’here the government has sus pended the constitutions, guarantees. Princeton University celebrated its 153d anniversary. Whitelaw Reid de livered an address on the Philippines. Russia has agreed to submit to arbi tration the claims of the United States for damages because of sealing seiz ures. Edward C. Lawton. Morrison, 111., Lieutenant Company I, Sixth Illinois Infantry, was buried with military honors. Contractor John O’Brien says there is $1 000.000 profit for the man who gets the rapid transit tunnel job in New York. Gen. Capriano Castro, the insurgent leader in Venezuela, has entered Car acas. President Andrade's where abouts are unknown. Peter Belsley, Roanoke, 111., died of heart disease, aged 58 years. He was president of the Roanoke Coal and Mining company. Grant Allen, the author, who has been in ill health for some time past, is dead in Ixmdon. He was born at. Kingston. Ont., in 1848. Otto L. Rosman, Montezuma, la.. | formerly grand master of the lowa Oddfellows and representative to the supreme lodge, died of apoplexy. The prince of Wales received former President Harrison in audience at Marlborough house. Mr. Harrison was accompanied by United States Ambas sador Choate. Canada has agreed to arbitrate the Alaskan dispute, surrendering to the United States Skaguav and Dyea pro viding this country gives to the dimln ion Pyramid harbor. The critical condition of the cotton industry is exciting considerable at tention at Bombay. Owing to the over-production of the mills, it is feared the decision to partly close down comes too late to save the situ ation. Six new cases of yellow fever at Key West, Fla., were reported to Sur geon General Wyman' of the marine hospital service. At Miami, Fla., 19 cases in all are reported. The greatest sale of wool ever made in Indiana was closed when McClure, Graham & Roundtree sold to the Manchester Mills company of Man chester, N. H., over 300,000 pounds. The government of Guatemala has accepted • the proposition of the United States governfhent to adjust by arbitration the claim of Mr. May of Tennessee, aggregating about $125,- 000. The New Orleans board of health re ports two new cases of yellow fever and two deaths. A sporadic case of fever at Baton Rouge was discovered four days ago, but no new cases have occurred there. W. E. Russell, a Chicago business man, drowned himself by jumping into Lake Michigan from the steamer City of Louisville, when it was twelve miles out. He has been despondent owing to continued ill health. Governor McLaurin of Mississippi has pardoned James Summers, ex- Pinkerton detective, who voluntarily returned to prison several weeks ago to serve out an unexpired term for robbing the Southern Express com pany of $5,000. H. B. Christie and W. O. Criek, Lon don brokers’ clerks, charged with stealing 10,700 pounds in Buenos Ayres bonds, and fleeing to Canada, pleaded guilty yesterday and were sentenced to three and four years’ imprisonment respectively. The St. Petersburg Tageblatt learns that rumors are current here that the nineteen Russian men-of-war in the Pacific will shortly be reinforced uy six ships from the eastern squadron. The Tageblatt sees in this a connec tion with tne rumors of the Chino- Japanese alliance. The navy department will not send a man-of-war to any of the Colom bian ports until further advised as to the revolutionary movement there. The Marblehead is probably some where off the coast of Honduras, and is within a day or two of the cable station if she should be needed. Capt. Sigsbee is to be relieved of the command of the Texas about Dec. 1, and assigned to duty in the navy department as chief of the bureau of naval intelligence, relieving Com mand of the Texas about Dec. 1, and Assigned to duty in the navy depart ment as chief of the bureau of naval intelligence, relieving Commander Richard C. Clover. HOW THEY RUN GOVERNMENT. Striking Illustration of Methods in Vogue in Guatemala. “A quaint little experience I once had in the interior of Guatemala,” said a former resident of that repub lic, ‘‘furnishes a tip-top illustration of the way they run governments in Cen tral America. I had occasion to visit a small garrison town in the coffee belt on some business and found the commandant in a state bordering on distraction. We took dinner together and he told me his tale of woe between courses. His soldiers, it seemed, had been without pay for over three months, and as the government made no effort to provide them with rations, they had subsisted on beans, tortillas and coffee furnished on credit by the old women of the village. Naturally, the credit had worn itself out, and two days before I arrived all the old wo men went on a strike, since which time the garrison had been practically without food. Needless to say, the soldiers were desperate and they had determined to desert en bloc and go back to their homes. “I advised the commandant to tele graph the facts immediately to the president, and at last he screwed up enough courage to send the message. As soon as it was received the presi dent sent word to a wealthy planter requesting' him to dispatch some cash instanter to the commandant. The planter gave the messenger a SIOO bill and rushed him off on horseback for the village, which he reached at daybreak the next morning. When the poor commandant saw the remit tance he nearly swooned away, for under the circumstances SIOO was about as much use to him as 100 brass elephants. Nobody in the whole de- | partment could change it, and he was in the depths of despair until I sud denly appeared in the role of good fairy. I happened to have 100 $1 notes in my saddlebags, and I handed over the bundle in return for the bill brought by the courier. The com mandant grabbed the package and kissed me violently on both cheeks. Glory hallelujah! The country was saved! Each soldier got a dollar, which he paid on account, and the credit of the government was restored. The garrison howled with joy, and the old women shed happy tears in the coffee which they at once proceeded to boil. It was a touching scene. If ever 1 go back to that place again I will be treated like a prince.”— New Orleans Times-Deinocrat. MAXILA BLOODY KATIPUNANS. In 1894 the formidable and bloody Katipunan society was formed, under the leadership of Marcelo Hiiarioo Del Pilar. Its object was to secure the freedom of the Philippines by putting to the sword all the Spaniards in the archipelago. Manila, of course, was the seat of the supreme council of the Katipunan, and its branches or chap ters were established in all the pro vinces and principal towns of the is lands. Every member on being initiated into the society received a name by which he was always thereafter known to the other members, and all were masked. In this way no one knew the identity of any other member, and even a man’s next-door neighbor or his brother or partner in business might be seated next to him nightly at the Katipunan lodge and he would never be the wiser. On initiatiyti the new member took a bloody oatlLand subscribed to it by dipping his the blood drawn from an incisingin his left arm. This idea is said tojhave been derived from a painting ✓'"caHed “Pacto de Sangre,” executed in Madrid by a famous Filipino painter, Juan Luna. After the revolution broke out in 1896 the members of the Katipunan could always be idenitfied among the dead and prisoners by the scars. A symbolic chart was in the posses sion of each member, and by that he could find the Katipunan lodge in the provinces or towns wherever he might be, and identify himself by means of it. As an example of the names borne by the members General Ricarte, now in the insurgents’ army, was known under the name of "Vivora,” meaning viper, poisonous snake. The present General Pilar, of whom so much is heard in the uprising against the Americans, is not the Pilar of Kati punan fame, though it is generally taken for granted he is. The present Pilar assumed that name some years ago, but his characteristics are such as to easily lead one to believe that he and the Pilar who originated the Katipunan are one and the same. In the biography of Dr. Hawtrey, a famous English schoolmaster, there is a description of his unkempt appear ance, with a comment which has been greatly quoted. It is said that he was scolding, for being late at morning lessons, some boy, who replied that he had no time to dress. “But I can dress in time,” said the doctor. “Yes,” replied the boy, “but I wash.” 44 Duly Feed Man and Steed.” Feed your nerves, Also, on pure blood if you would have them strong. Men And women who Are nervous Are so becAuse their nerves are starved. When they make their blood rich and pure with Hood's Sarsaparilla their nervousness disappears because the nerves are properly fed. cf{bod<i |bm,sam| It Cures Colds. Coughs. Sore Throat, Croup. In fluenza Whoop. ngCough. Bronchitis and Asthma A certain cure tor Consumption in first staqes, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use a{ , Y k 0U r WI J f ee the excellent effect after taking the first dose Sold by dealers every where. 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