THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURd, PA. BATTLE ON LEDGE WTH 10 Jikiri' Outlaws Wiped Out Only After Desperate Hand-to-Hand Fighting COMBATS IN EXTINCT VOLCANO t: jght Saftty In Cave Driven Out by the American Fire, Jikirl Tries to behead Lieut. Wilson, but Is Shot Down. Manila, Philippine Inlands. While uotailed accounts of the last light of Jikiri, the Moro out'.aw chieftain who was killed and his band exterminated In a pitched battle near Patian, on the Island of Jolo, have not been re ceived, several brief dispatches and a letter or two from American officers who fought against the outlaw give a fairly complete story of the fight. Hunted from place to place by the regulars and constabulary, who had been in close pursuit, Jikiri, with sev en followers, two women and one child, took refuge in a cave that pierced the side of the crater of an extinct volcano. Here the outlaws gathered to make their last stand. As the soldiers came up the scouts lo cated the party, and the troops work ed their way around the place until it was entirely surrounded, and there was no chance of escape. Capt. George L. Ryram of the Sixth Cavalry, who commanded the attack lug force, then ordered a white flag displayed, and through his Interpret er called upon Jikiri to surrender. The outlaw refused and also declined to accept a safe conduct for the women of his party, who remained with the band and bore their share of the fight ing. Capt. Byram ordered up the guns and a terrific shell fire was opened on the cave. The missiles broke above and around the opening, but the ledge protected those inside from the fire of the guns, and little damage was inflicted. Storming parties worked their way up the steep slope, and finding footing on the ledge endeavored to rush the larger entrance to the cave. The fighting for a few minutes was deper ate, but the outlaws drove their as sailants back by a savage spear charge. The soldiers were not to be T.pletely routed, however, and, tak ;ip their posts at the end of the Xa. poured a terrible rifle fire into ' s mouth of the cave, the bullets Being from the rock walls and .owing showers of Bharp splinters k. rock among the besieged. Jikiri himself signaled out Lieut Arthur H. Wilson of the Sixth Cavalry, who commanded one section of the attacking party. Dashing from the cave the outlaw flung himself upon the American before Wilson could raise his pistol. With one hand grip ping the officer's hair the bandit slash ed at his neck with the heavy native knife he carried, endeavoring to be head him. Lieut Joseph A. Baer of the Sixth Cavalry, saw his comrade's peril and dashed to his aid. As jikiri swung back the knife to strike again, Baer shot him dead and Wilson dropped to the ground. It is feared that Wilson will be incapacitated from further service in the army, as the muscles and cords of his neck were severed by the bandit's knife. Writing of the fight, American offi cers say that In the desperate hand-to-hand encounter on the narrow ledge some of the assailants may have been wounded by their own lire. In their anxiety to save each other they were forced to shoot quickly, using high power rifles at close range, which were doubly dangerous, as the bullets will ploy through several men. Hundreds of friendly Moros saw the fight at close range. They perched among the rocks where they could see the ledge, and not a movement of the combatants escaped their eyes. Many of them believed that Jiriki bore a charmed skin, impervloua to knife and bullet. They could not be con vinced that he was dead until they saw and felt his body. MADE BUSINESS OF MURDER. Indian Implicates a Band that In cludes a Mexican Ex-Judge. BS Paso, Tex. An Indian under ar rest ai Torreon confessed that he and several others, including an ex-judge of one of the Mexican inferior courts, belonged to a band which made a business of murder and highway rob bery. Among their victims were three mail carriers, murdered and robbed at different times in the last few months. The crime for which be was arrested was the murder of three men, one of them a mail-carrier on tbe Du rango trail. Immediately after tbe Indian's confession, a strong force of rurales left for the scene and cap tured the entire gang, also recoTering much of their plunder. All tbe gang are In Jail at Torreon. Canada Toe Strong for U. 8. to Whip. Winnipeg, Man. General Otter, commaader of the military forces oi Canada, in an interview said: "The United States could not beat Canada in a twenty-five-year war. If tbe ever started it would be another Phil ippine war, and Canada would win. "Incidentally." said Otter, "Lord Kitchener would make a better man ager of a department store than commander in the position be now ee i JUMPER KEAMRBLOOM DEM Horse Attempted to Leap Paddock Fence and was Injured 60 He Had to Be DesHoyed. Great Barrington, Mass. Heather bloom, the champion high Jumping hoivo, with a record of 8 feet 6 Inches, ir.ai'e in Chicago, reached his limit trying to leap the paddock fence wiiuh was rpecially built to keep hl:n in his pasture. He was so badly injured that In mercy he was shot. In tills tragic manner Heatherbloom ended his noteworthy caruer. No other animal in the world ever equal W the upward flight which he tic to:, T-Mshed with 1."0 pounds of man cm his back. In all his record break ii.g Jumps he had Dick Donnelly in th.- saddle. Heatherbloom's record leap com pletely places in the shade the tales of prodigious Jumps made by kan garoos when pursued. It Is neaijly two feet above Harry Porter's great re cord of 6 feet 6 3-4 inches, though Porter had the advantage of having but two legs to get over the bar. Heatherbloom was called the "Super-horse." He was about fifteen years old and was sired by the thor oughbred stallion Philosophy, by Longfellow. He was a brown gelding with a white stripe down his face, with the right fore ankle white and the two hind legs white to the ankle. II-? stood 16 hands 2 inches high, or 0 fvet 6 inches. It will be seen from the.-"1 measurements that when he ur.i'.e his great record he cleared three feet over his own height. 1 IiTiherliloom in a way was a pent '. and like most of that Irritable t::l 0 he had his moods. With him ! 1 ins; was a sport and he was only !::; l"::cl to Indulge in it when in the h-..:.-.(ir. I'nless he felt so inclined he ".:1 not leap a five-foot fence. But v.-;.- a he felt like Jumping he would v ti e fence like a bird and go uiotuul the ring afterward, I::: mg over a groom or two out 1 '., per good spirits. Dick Donnelly 1 tii.iv the whimsical nature of the '.-,1 ,:: hotter than any other man. and cir.'.l induce him to jump higher than any other rider. But when He-itherblooin felt like jumping any o::e could ride him. Miss Belle Hcr. h proved this by winning a blue ribbon on him in the hiph jumping clr. s at the Monmouth County Horse t!u) v on July 2", lOOTi. i!o";herhloo:n was owned by How ar.l W!in:i of White Plains, X. Y. ?!r. WilU'ts valued him at more than J-sC'i'), and only last spring refused an offer of that sum from Barnuui's c!:vus. IN TBEJUBLIC EYE Justice William J. Gaynor, of Brook lyn, is being groomed for the next Justice William J. Gaynor. Mayoralty race in New York. It is sa.J he lias the powerful backing of Tammany Hall. OEAF, DUMB AND CAN'T EAD. Fr'soner in New Ycrk Unable to Plead to Indictment. yew York City Deaf, dumb and ur.b'.e to read or write Abel Simon, IV year.j old, of 137 Brook avenue, the T.v , :'X, was a stumbling block to legal pre odure in General Sessions when i:t was asked to plead to an indict ;.;.:.; for stand larceny in the second V crce. He was charged with taking a 1. tr-.iond ring worth $l'S from the 1 'ry store of Samuel Haskilevitz, 4 5 Sixth avenue. la vain did Assistant District At tc .Marshall plead with Simon to j.-'. A court attendant who knew f. i.r.t'er alphabet went at the boy vi::i fingers wriggly extended, to v. lU'u the boy responded with alien firterlng. "The thunders of the law cut but a sorry figure in the presence of an pfilVMon like that," observed Judge RosaUky. "What imprisonment could cut him off more completely from his fellows? The pains and penalties of the law could add nothing to such chains as these." Clean Law Closes Hotels. Topeka. Kan.---Two hotels have been closed by Dr. S. J. Crumbine, secretary of the Kansas Health Board, for failure to comply with a law re cently enacted, which provides that evt : y guest of hotels shall be guaran teed a clean room, clean bedding, clean towels and protection from rats, mice, lice, bedbugs and other pests. Duel with Fireworks. Sioux City Iowa. In an effort to sottle their differences over a girl, William Patten and Wiljiara Melody fought a duel with Roman candles. Aft. r several exchanges without re sult. Patten was struck full in the e. e by a well-aimed fiery missile, and will probably lose the sight of that optic. $360 for a Fresh Water Pearl. lov. a City, la. E. R. Moore, of Cor al i'.'.e, has sold for 1360 a fresh water p.arl which be found In tbe Iowa Riv er near bis borne. Helpful Beauty Hints Proper Use of Cosmetics, All Pict uresque Results Ef.wctive Touch es of Rouge for Checks ar.d Uar Lobes Whitening Lotion lor Necli and Shoulders Hair Treaiasnl. The use of cosmetics, so ions an acknowledgedly important part of Eu ropean woman's toilet, ha. always j been strongly disapproved of In Ameri ca. Public opinion Is, however, undergo ing a gradual change in this respect, probably brought about iu part by 'he general harmlessness of the articles used. In the past much was heard of the poisoning of actors and adiest-es (for many years the only large consumers) by white lead, which wus a principal Ingredient of paints used on stage. Nowadays all paints, powders and halrdyes that are bought from a re liable source, are as carefully and healthily compounded us prescriptions ordered by a physician. As a matter of fact pure face paint Is not injurious wheu properly remov ed. Any one who has a large number of acquaintances among theatrical people will tell you that as a rule their skins look as smooth and line in private life as when seen cn the stage. This is largely due to the fact that professionals have learned to remove all the makeup carefully with a good cream before retiring, and to take ns much care of their face as they do of their clothes. Also to the fact that cosmetics are more carefully prepared than formerly. Now that the use of rouge has come so decidedly into fashion It may ba helpful to explain tiie pro;.tr li.u.iu.l of using It. In the good old dr.ys of shaded can dles and even In the more recent o;.-.-. when gas was used, ou! a Lwriy g.,od complexion passed united very wel. by artificial light But under the u;i compromisiugly truthful electric globes, one must be a beaa'y to !i.: only fairly well, for this panic ...r form of illumination c-nsts a !'.(;:. .1 tinge over all skins. To g.:.u J -..., ti-.t this unbecoming eh'e- t a to;un u; rouge will be most saliilacio.y. We are passlny through or.e ul those periods in the history of fashiou. that deuiauds that we all look pic turesque and "if we can't look pic turesque we must look as picturesque as we can." Now for a few directions as to the best method of making up the face. The color can be little deeper in the center of the cheeks and then should be blended off lightly all over the cheeks. The tip of the chin should al ways be tinted as well. After you have done this you will observe that this gives a natural appearance, and does not look blotchy or "painted." If the ears look very white by contrast, tint the outside edges and the lobe very delicately. This detail is one whose neglect has been the cause of many failures. The lips, ii pale, should be reddened also and don't make the mistake a person I know did, of putting nail salve on them, and thus removing all the skin. After you have finished with the rouge, powder the entire face. Rouge must be very sparingly used and so thin a coat applied that what natural color you have will have an Opportunity to show through. Noth ing adds so much to a face as play of coior, and the changing dimple. Some dermatologists offer to make a permanent dimple, but it Is most emphatically to be avoided, for iu un certainty is its greatest charm. A whitening lotion for the neck and shoulders is more lasting than dry powder for use in the evening when a decollete gown is worn. It Is much more satisfactory than powder as it does not rub off. A girl of piquant type of beauty may dare to put a tiny bit of black court plaster at one side of the chin or on the cheek near the eye. but not the fair, placid lady for It would look most Incongruous. Whatever is put on the face during the waking hours, must be removed before retiring, and then no 111 effects can possibly follow. This is best done with cleansing cream, which frees the pores from all foreign substances. t A Simple Hair Treatment. A woman o. sixty-five years, who bas a head of hair few girls could boast. Bays the secret of It is ber con stant brushing. She has ber bead shampooed much less frequently than is the present fashion, but preserves a clean Bcalp by both wet and dry brushing. Twice a week she dips the brush In water and works all over the scalp with it, following it up by a dry brush. Once in ten days or two weeks she subtltutes wltchhazel for water, Tbe alcohol in it acts as a cleaner and cuts the oil in the hair, Tbe only other treatment she be lieves in is singeing the ends of tbe hair every six weeks. She does this herself by dividing the bair into tighly twisted strands, while she goes over w1-h a long wax taper used in a gas lighter To Whiten the Hands. Whenever you bathe your bands dry them very thoroughly. Before retiring spread this paste all over tbe hands and draw on a pair of loose, white cotton gloves, leave on over night and bathe in tbe morning with warm water, then rinse off with cold. Tight corsets will make tbe bands red, so if you are In tbe bablt of lac ing yon must loosen your stays before you can expect to have white hands. 'i ! R.7T V." j Of Interest to vVomsn r.c:.lrr3 ,J OQ'JALI.3 AMD V ..' i Intimate Connection 2vor- " -.-..i Two Everts in n Bay'a I if' The Idea that babies s .(;. .'1 v tirt ure, as a niat'er of habit v.: 0.1 of pure cussedness. Is bo;h n driu.Ou and a base slaniler on the d:.!)y. Dr. Woods Hjtehlns-n. Wh.'i.v baby squalls, he say., it !x grown-up's fault. A fanner would hear his cherished hcfjs ,iyj . a .'':o cii- Ing In their fattening pens wieM promptly "call down" the hired t:nr whoso duty it was to feed tl.em. A baby does not want very -it at a time, but he docs like it rc-s- 1:.'. And when you have once, by a lii".!o careful observation, "struck hia ;,.i :" as to amount and frequency - r." 't two ounces every two hours i a f ir average to begin with then his l'.'.'.le life will be one peaceful so j;ict- e o' eating and slecpinr;, nlpepir"; ami c r Ing. but all the time growin.;. v,.!; a little fuss or disturbanre. as a 1,11;, makes when It Is pushing up it; ;;c: pencil through the brown cmh. The regularity recoiinncin.- i u".'M be the baby's kind of r n li.i; ;". . ;t that of the grown-Ui:s wii.i h lv li.a: In charge, the doctor expin '.s t-.. ;r": "He is no railroad train that re:.w.t- an eating station on s.'.ic'r'.i Just every two houre. Tr y . know anything about deck; v.! came from. Bat ! e lirs a : acting dinner gong in his little 1 which serves his jii:; , nhc.i e.c.i. and will rise to the po;e:i. y of horn or fire alarm if y-jj ; 1 :. t. attention to It pncnpiiy. !!'-. : !. .; : regularity is a nicely b:iia;., ; -i ; .. . of sleeping till he is l.i';.t;:-y n.t t: feeding till he is sleepy, v.:ih u -. disregard for the hands of the do-.-u and even for the dif!'ere;ic j L.nvMr, day and night. As his fuel le: ,.: limited in size, and the deyrve of ( in centration of the fuel adu;!:.!-;.--el does not vary much, it will take' bin Just about so long to burn up c-.cii charge, so that he will tap the r'.o::;; nt pretty regular int"fvais. i-.it the'.--.-will be nothing machine-like or suh .r-ban-time-table-like about this regular ity. If he should awake tiilee:i i :ia uies before the sacred hour and shov.' by unmistakable minor slgtjs thsc tu is ready for business, feed him at once. He should never be allowed to go to the length of crying. The cry is a signal of distress, and a baby that cries much has bei n unlucky iu its parents or its nurse. The idea that babies cry Just to expand their lungs or to develop their voices Is a nurse's tale. A child that never cries is as healthy and as happy as a nation that has no history." WIFE AWARDED S100 A DAY. Judge Dow'.ing, cf New York, I;; set a new record in the mattsr cf : lowanccs to wives in sepnr'.ticn cjK In the famous case of the Hs'.r. Goulds, recently on trial, ho awvit Mrs. Could $36,000 a year, iZ,?0j month, or J100 a day. Hints to House'ieepf n. Very strong tea will stop the bidd ing from a cut. Equal parts of milk and lukcvaa: water is a good solution for span-jir.;-. plants. Spoons are sometimes used with firm puddings, but forks are the Let ter style. A little vinegar in polish will I found to obviate the dead, oily -ode so often noticed after cleaning fr.nj ture. Kor large shoes which slip at the heel glue a shaped piece of velvet to the inside, bottom and side of tla; heel, and it will cling to the1 stock ing. To prevent a lamp from smoking soak a new lamp wick two or three hours In vinegar. Dry well be'ore using. If you follow this recipe your trouble with your lamps will cease. Lamp wicks in lanterns or carriage lamps that are not in daily use should be treated in this way. Too much salt in gravy may be counteracted by putting a pinch of orown sugar iu it. After using a bowl of cold water starch. It should be allowed to settle. Then pour off the water and dry the starch in the oven at night or on the stove. It will be reduced to a cake and can be powdered and be used over again. Never throw away old gloves, par ticularly old white gloves. They are most useful in protecting the hands while dusting, sweeping or wishing dishes. As' women often complain that they feel clumsy In doing tholr work with gloves on, by simply cr-t-ting away the finger tips this senna sntion Is overcome. Tinware may be brightened and cleaused from smoke by rubbing with a hot solution of common baking 6od:i and water. To color white cotton yellow, use green peach leaves and alum wall lUe-jed. together in water. r:: 1 ! fe Pi ''K. V -rt'Q KOWMU, CO-.1.D Will Acgclable Prcpnralionror As similating tlicFoodandRcfiuIa ting die Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digcslion.Cr-eerfu ncssandRest.Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. 'OT TfAHCOTIC. AmyJbn Seal' Mx.fmn Hi ftrtmalrSUd 1 rmvm Apcrfecl Remedy forConstipii Tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Fcvrrish- ncss find Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature cT NEW YORK. I EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. BIG OFFER To All Our Subscribers The Great AMERICAN FARMER Indianapolis, Indiana. The Leading Agricultural Journal ot the Nation. Edited by an Able Corps of Writers. The American F.irmpr i tlif lished. It fills a position of itT.3hZ. nJ?h?EaC States1" nllTfr1 PeP,leJn CVer-V Section of the Uni J btates. It gives t.:e farmer and his family something to think about aside from the humdrum of routine duties. Every Issue Contains an Original Poem by SOLON G00DE WE MAKE THE EXCEPTIONAL OFFER OF Two for the Price of The Oldest County Paper and THE American Farmer BOTH ONE YEAR FOR $I.OO This unnarallelerl nffr ic THE COLUMBIA Forcible Facts. Olie-rilxth Of tll ilnnfliu fr,.. - - J ....in uiarnw are due to consumption. Xinetv-eiirht percent, of all those who have used Dr. Pieiee'u Golden Medical Dweoverv for "weak IunKs," have been p-rlectly and permanently cured. Dr. Pierced Golden Medical Dixoovery is not ad vertised to cure consumption in iu ad vanced stages. No medicine wili do that. The "Discovery'' does cure ob stinate, lingering or "hutiK-on-couKhg," and all those catarrhal conditions of throat and bronchial passages which if not properly treated end in consump tion, fake the ''Discovery" n tinle and if given a fair and faithful trial it will seldom disappoint. Free. Dr. Pierce's great work, The People's Common Sense Medical Ad viser U sent free on receipt of stamps to pay cost of mailing only. Send 21 oue ceut stamps for paper covered book, or 31 stamps for a copy in cloth binding. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, S. CASTOR I A For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Ml For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years TMI OCHTkUK OMMHT. NCW TOK CfTT. nnh, t ;f... -c t One: THE COLUMBIAN mn n ... iwm., -""'""i ji, i A comparatively new species of beetle, which infests the potato vines and stalks with the larvae, and is known as the borer, has de stroyed almost the entire potato crop in Northumberland county. The discovery of this destroyer of the potato crop is attributed to J. H. Klase, a scientific farmer, who resides at Snydertown. This well known farmer states that he plant ed a half acre of early potatoes. All died from the destroying effects of the beetle, which bored into the stalk and deposited its larvae in tbe stem. A R:!i vcr. r - Ely's Grc: It (JUlcklv Ml. o-I'Mt Oie i-e,i (.. 0,, It fll.'HU , H heal ; v the i";.-, ; v. , braue je-iuii i awiiy aCoM in 1 'jv.-i. 'iiVi ' ' 1 TV .'r m C..t.r.-'b ilrivM 10 Head quickly, liostore- cue a-u ,.1 :n 50 cU. at lVn-.isu or by mnil. Liquid Uream r.nlm f..r use iu atominrs 75 cU. Ely UrtUcrt, Co Wnutu Street, Kew York, I Signature Atf n