anaheim-gazette 1898-06-30
Searchable text
Anaheim
VOLUME XXVIII.
CLYDE H. NICKEY,
Tinning and Plumbing
Plumbers' Supplies and Pump Cylinders on hand. Tapoons made to order.
Pipes and Pumps Repaired. Repairing of All Kinds Done.
Shop in Rear of Miller & Nagle's Hardware Store
CENTER STREET ANAHEIM.
DR. F. H. HOUCK
DENTIST.
OFFICE NEXT DOOR to P. O.
(Federman Block, up stairs.)
HOURS 9 to 8
ANAHEIM CAL.
I. L. Menges,
DENTIST.
Metz Building, Anaheim.
feb24
S. G. WILSON, M. D.
Office and Residence: Over H. A. Dickel's Store.
CENTER ST., ANAHEIM.
G. S. EDDY, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
OFFICE—First door East of Boston Bakery.
Residence—The Witte residence on Center St., opposite Catholic Church.
CALLS ANSWERED AT ALL HOURS.
ANAHEIM CAL.
A.W. Bickford, M.D.
CITY MEAT MARKET.
KEeps on hand all kinds of
FRESH AND SALTED MEATS.
Fresh and Smoked Sausages,
Hams & Bacon, and the Purest Lard of Our Own Rendering
Highest Market price Paid for Fat Stock
PLEASE GIVE ME A CALL.
VEIT BENTZ.
Anaheim Bakery,
PETER SYRE, PROPRIETOR.
FRESH BREAD, CAKES & PIES CONFECTIONERY, ETC.
Wedding Cakes a Specialty. Los Angeles and Cypress Sts.
ANAHEIM BREWERY
Dickel's Store.
CENTER ST., - ANAHEIM.
G. S. EDDY, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
OFFICE—First door East of Boston Bakery.
Residence—The Witte residence on Center St., opposite Catholic Church.
CALLS ANSWERED AT ALL HOURS.
ANAHEIM - CAL.
A.W. Bickford, M.D.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON.
Office Opposite Postoffice.
Residence near Christian Church.
ANAHEIM, - CAL.
E. B. Merritt & Co.
FURNITURE
Dealers.
CENTER STREET. OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE
Paul A. Derge.
Graduate in Pharmacy.
DRUGS, MEDICINES,
Perfumes and Toilet Articles.
BEST 5-CENT CIGAR IN TOWN
MEDICAL HALL,
KOLL BLOCK.
PUBLIC TELEPHONE OFFICE.
C. E. GROAT.
Practical....
Cement Contractor.
Irrigating Ditches, Reservoirs and Sidewalks a Specialty.
Office, 216 West First Street Telephone Main 927. Los Angeles, Cal.
Anaheim orders promptly attended to may 26-28
L. NEMETZ,
Carriage Painting & Trimming
New Buggies for Sale.
Shop on Center street, near the opera-house.
Anaheim, Cal.
RICHARD MELROSE
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
AND
NOTARY PUBLIC.
enter street,
Anaheim, Cal
Special attention given to PROBATE matters.
J.M.Griffith Company
A CORPORATION
LUMBER DEALERS
Neer Railroad Depot, Anaheim, keep constantly on hand Doors, Blinds, Windows, Mouldings, Posts, Shakes, Shakes, Lath, Hair Plaster of Paris.
ANAHEIM GRIST MILLS OPERATING ON FRESH BREAD, CAKES & PIES CONFECTIONERY, ETC.
Wedding Cakes a Specialty. Los Angeles and Cypress Sts.
ANAHEIM BREWERY
Pure Lager Beer
Made from Pure Malt,
For Sale by the Bottle or by the Keg.
PURE CRYSTAL ICE DELIVERED TO ANY PART OF THE CITY AT ONE CENT PER POUND.
The Patronage of the Public is Solicited.
F. CONRAD, -- Proprietor
CITIZENS' BANK OF ANAHEIM
Hippolyte Cahen President
W.T.Brown; Vice President.
J.Hartung, Cashier
DIRECTORS:
Kaspare Cohn, W.T.Brown.
Riohard Melrose, J.Hartung.
STOCKHOLDERS
Kaspare Cohen, H.W.Hellman, W.T.Brown, R.Melrose, John Hartung, R.Courreges, M.A.Newmark & Co., Pierre Nicolas,H.Cahen.
CORRESPONDENTS:
Farmers-and Merchants' Bank of Los Angeles;
London, Paris and American Bank, San Francisco;
Importers and Traders' National Bank, New York City,N.Y.
EXCHANGE,Santa Ana.
The Weekly Gazette.
Established 1870.
SUBSCRIPTION,- $1 50 Per Year
Six months.... 1 00 Three months.... 7 00 Payable invariably in advance.
Transient advertising rates,$1 per inch per month.
The Gazette is issued every Thursday morning and is sent to subscribers by the early mails. It is delivered by carrier in Anaheim on the morning publication.
Entered a the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter.
Items of news and correspondence on all live subjects are solicited by the editor.
RAILWAY TIME TABLE.
Time of Arrival and Departure of Trains.
SOUTHERN, PACIFIC RAILROAD.
Trains on the Southern Pacific pass Anaheim as follows:
To Los Angeles. From Los Angeles.
Daily.....7:54 am Daily.....9:45 am Daily.....4:25 pm Daily.....6:01 pm
Daily trains connect at Mirafores with train for Tustin, and at Studebaker with Whittier trains.
In effect May 30th, 1897. Street cars connect with all trains.
Los Alamitos Trains: Leave for-9:48 am 6:03 pm. Arrive from-7:52 am 4:25 pm.
SANTA FE ROUTE.
Trains on the Santa Fe route leave Anaheim for points named:
Los Angeles-7:55 am 10:25 am 5:10 pm Pasadena, Azusa, Redondo, San Bernardino-7:55 am 10:25 am
San Diego-9:36 am *2:50 pm Santa Ana-9:36 am *2:50 pm Santa Ana-9:36 am *2:50 pm San Bernardino and Riverside-9:36 am
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
AND
NOTARY PUBLIC.
enter street,
Anaheim, Cal
Special attention given to PROBATE matters.
J.M. Griffith Company
A CORPORATION
LUMBER DEALERS
Neer Railroad Depot, Anaheim, keep constantly on hand Doors, Blinds, Windows, Mouldings, Posts, Shakes, Shingles, Lath, Hair Plaster of Paris.
ANAHEIM GRIST MILLS OPERATING ON Wednesdays and Saturdays of each week
Grain, Feed, Meal, Etc. of all varieties. Corn shelled and shipped.
W. T. BROWN, Agt.
N. HART'S PLACE.
SCHLITZ
MILWAUKEE BEER
ON DRAUGHT.
...DEALER IN....
FINE LIQUORS!
AND...
Choice Wines
FOR MEDICINAL PURPOSES,
Fine Domestic and Imported Cigars.
Headquarters for the famous Schlitz, Milwaukee, beer.
Hart's Building, Center St., ... A naheim
PALACE
MEAT MARKET
F. W. Fleischmann,
PROPRIETOR.
Best Meats the Market Affords
Always on Hand,
Also keeps on hand Sausages, Bacon, Ham, Lard, Etc.
Meats delivered to all parts of the city free on charge
Shop on East Center Street.
STOCKHOLDERS
Kaspare Cohen, H. W. Hellman, W. T. Brown, R. Melrose, John Hartung, R. Courreges, M. A. Newmark & Co., Pierre Nicolas, H. Cahen.
CORRESPONDENTS:
Farmers and Merchante' Bank of Los Angeles; London, Paris and American Bank, San Francisco; Importers and Traders' National Bank, New York City, N. Y.
EXCHANGE, Santa Ana.
Exchanges for sale on all the principal cities in the United States and Foreign Countries.
L. GUNTHER.
PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER.
Corner Adele and Los Angeles Streets
H. A. STOUGH.
GENERAL BLACKSMITHING!
All work done in first-class manner, and at prices as low as the lowest.
Horse-Shoeing
Neally and Promptly Done. — Shop in Har' Block, Center St., Anaheim.
To the Traveling Public.
The Southern Pacific Company has arranged for a series of excursions to Santa Barbara this season as follows: June 10th and 11th, July 1st and 2nd, Aug. 12th and 13th, Sept. 9th and 10th. Stop over allowed at Ventura in either or both directions. All tickets good for return within 30 days from date of sale. Fare for the round trip $3 25. Special excursion tickets sold to Santa Monica, San Pedro or Long Beach every Saturday afternoon, and for all trains Sundays, good to return Mondays during June, July and August. Round trip rate $1 30.
Pasturage for Stock.
Pasturage in Westminster; plenty of artesian water; ground always wet; good for pasturage for stock. Apply to S. Edwards. Westminster.
Trains.
SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD.
Trains on the Southern Pacific pass Anaheim as follows:
To Los Angeles.
From Los Angeles.
Daily.....7:54 am
Daily.....9:45 am
Daily.....4:25 pm
Daily.....6:01 pm
Daily trains connect at Mirradores with train for Tustin, and at Studebaker with Whittier trains.
In effect May 30th, 1897. Street cars connect with all trains.
Los Alamitos Trains: Leave for—9:48 am.
6:03 pm. Arrive from—7:62 am; 4:25 pm.
SANTA FE ROUTE.
Trains on the Santa Fe route leave Anaheim for points named:
Los Angeles—7:55 am; 10:25 am; 5:10 pm.
Pasadena, Azusa, Redondo, San Bernardino—7:55 am; 10:25 am.
San Diego—9:36 am; *2:50 pm.
Santa Ana—9:36 am; *2:50 pm; 5:55 pm.
San Bernardino and Riverside—9:36 am; 5:55 pm.
Redlands—9:36 am.
Trains marked with a * are daily except Sunday. All others daily.
There is more catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co. Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from ten drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surface of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Money to Loan.
From $5,000 to $10,000 in sums to suit on real estate or approved security. Apply to Richard Melrose. dec-23sf
Thousands are Trying It.
In order to prove the great merit of Ely's Cream Balm, the most effective cure for Catarrh and Cold in Head, we have prepared a generous trial size for 10 cents. Get it of your druggist or send 10 cents to ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N. Y. City.
I suffered from catarrh of the worst kind ever since a boy, and I never hoped for cure, but Ely's Cream Balm seems to do even that. Many acquaintances have used it with excellent results. Oscar Ostrum, 45 Warren Ave., Chicago, Ill.
Ely's Cream Balm is the acknowledged cure for catarrh and contains no cocaine, mercury nor any injurious drug. Price, 50 cents. At druggists or by mail.
FROM LAKE BENNETT.
Loring Gates Writes of His Trip to the Klondike.
Buys a Seattle Paper to Learn the Latest News About the War—Some of the Boys Would Like to Be Back to Enlist—How they Get Over the Ice-Coated River In the Far North.
Frank Gates has had the kindness to hand us the following letter received some days ago from his brother Loring, who is on his way to seek his fortune in the Klondike:
LAKE BENNETT (B. C.), May 1, '98.
Dear Folks:—I am sure by the time you get this letter you will be wondering whether I am among the living, but I am, just the same. It has been a long time since I last wrote. But, oh my, what lots of experience and hard work I have had since then. I am at a loss to know how to commence to tell you all of the different experiences I have gone through, and still I have enjoyed myself. But I often think of the time when I shall return to you all. We have a couple of Santa Ana men next door to us, and one of them has just received a letter from his wife, telling of the dry winter and of the high price of grain and hay.
We bought a Seattle paper to-day, printed on April 26th, so you see we have the war news. Some of the boys say that they wish that they were back there, so as to enlist. But I think I would rather be in Alaska hunting for gold instead of Spanish bushwhackers in Santiago. I suppose it has caused an excitement throughout the country; but in the long run it does no good.
I forgot to tell you that we were all well and always have been, and eat, oh my, just as though each meal was the last one for a week to come.
We are camped on Lake Bennett, about five miles from its head. We will move a little further up the lake I think before we build our boats; that is if it freezes again. We cannot move on-to-morrow unless it does, because the ice and snow on top of the ice that could have some of your fresh fruit just now.
We have had such a nice place to camp we hate to leave. So good luck to you all.
LORING GATES.
REVENUE STAMPS.
You Must Affix One to All Cheeks Drawn After July 1st.
WASHINGTON, June 22.—Every possible effort is being made by the Secretary of the Treasury to put into operation on July 1st the adhesive stamp tax sections of the war revenue act. It is not thought possible, however, to have stamps on sale in all parts of the country on that date.
The law declares that it shall be deemed a misdemeanor not to affix a stamp to any bank check, note, draft, etc., punishable by a fine not exceeding $200. The law further declares that such unstamped instruments, documents or papers shall not be competent evidence in any court, in fact, void. It is believed that many embarrassments and even losses cannot be avoided.
The force at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing is working every hour of the twenty-four to get out the stamps and an effort will be made to reduce to a minimum embarrassments arising out of the new law. About 750,000 stamps have been shipped to the Pacific Coast, and other shipments will follow in rapid succession. The stamps will be sent to collectors of internal revenue and by them distributed to the deputies. National banks in each town will receive telegraphic requests to handle the stamps for the benefit of the public until other arrangements can be made for their distribution.
The low rate of discount, 1 per cent, allowed to persons purchasing stamps in quantities of $100, it is believed, will operate to make it difficult to secure a sufficient number of local agencies to supply the public needs, but special appeals will be made and the hope is expressed that there will be found in every community a sufficient number of public-spirited citizens to undertake to handle the stamps.
ested in the proposed census of the world, and, it is asserted, promised cooperation and assistance in the wartime China forms the greatest factor of certainty in estimating the population of the globe. Estimates of the number of inhabitants in China vary somewhat by 100,000,000 or 200,000,000, and only be guessed at. So too Afternoon represents an enormous field of my lies and difficulties. Estimates of the population are constantly varying, cause explorers frequently come up knots and centers of population there extent of which is unknown. The careful statisticians admit that their estimates of the population of Africa be as much as 50,000,000 out of it. Of India are the vast lands that Alexander overran in his conquest—Afghanistan, Persia and Turkey in Asia. Many scores of millions may they contain? Many of the uplands of Peru are practically unknown to the civilization, but they can support a great population. No one knows how many people Arabia contains.
Nobody knows how many Eskimo there are dwelling in the lands of eastern ice that encircle the north pearl many of the islands of the vast Pacific swarm with inhabitants living on them bounty of nature, whose free careless life has captivated the imagination of highly educated men like Hert Louis Stevenson, and when he sus is completed, if it proves practical, what will it probably show total population of the globe to be?
FORMER LOVERS UNIT
He Stumbled Over Somebody's Feet at Deck of a Liner, and They Were Hers.
TOLEDO, O., June 12.—Had it been for the recognition by a trailing man, an old acquaintance of him, no one would have suspected when there appeared in neat, legal writing on the register of one leading hotels of this city last Thursday names "Henry L. Delevar wife," these people were the priests in a remarkable romance.
Several years ago there lived in
We forgot to tell you that we were all well and always have been, and eat, oh my, just as though each meal was the last one for a week to come.
We are camped on Lake Bennett, about five miles from its head. We will move a little further up the lake I think before we build our boats; that is if it freezes again. We cannot move on to-morrow unless it does, because the ice and snow on top of the ice that covers the lake is getting very rotten, and a person breaks through to the ice underneath, which is about twelve to eighteen inches below the surface.
Up the lake a little ways from our camp is Clear water. The other day a man, sledload and all slipped into the water. He came very near being frozen to death before he could be rescued.
I will tell you how we do when we have a wind on the lake and the ice has frozen during the previous night. You hoist a sail on a sled and if the wind is strong enough it takes you along at a good rate, but we got here a little too late to be helped much in this way, as the lakes are breaking up two weeks earlier than common.
Yesterday I came from our camp, at the head of Lake Bennett, with 500 pounds on the sled and rode most all the way to camp on the front of the sled, but the ice is too rotten to have good sailing.
Well, we have just had supper, and I feel a little better. Maybe you folks would like to know what we live on. We do not live on climate altogether up here, as it does not stay with a man long enough. Well, for supper weighed beans (regular diet), fried mush, hot bread, bacon, more regulars, rice pudding, stewed apricots and tea. Everything tastes good up here. We have beans and bacon every meal, and they always go good.
Well, I suppose there are a hundred and one questions you would like to ask. I shall tell or try to tell as many of your questions as I can guess at.
Daylight commences at 3 o'clock in the morning and gets dark at 10 o'clock in the evening—a very long twilight in this country and scarcely any moon.
The coldest morning that we have had was eight or ten below zero.
The climate is very much healthier to live in on this side of the pass; a great deal more wood and better water. No mosquitoes yet, but they are sure to come.
The berry bushes are beginning to leaf out and we expect to have lots of berries to use, blue huckleberries for instance; will enclose you some leaves which I have dried. I started off a couple of days ago to buy me a gun. I went to the head of Lake Linderman and found a young man who was selling out to return home; I bought his gun, a '94 model, 38-55, knock-down Winchester and 260 rounds of ammunition, for $20; the ammunition alone is worth $218 at this place. The gun has never been shot and is a dandy. The bullets are steel with led points.
We passed the summit at 12th of April, in a storm.
West Arm of Lake Bennett, May 21, 1898.—I will start once more this storming day, the 21st of May, for it is storming to day to finish or to add to my letter which I started 20 days ago. We had nice weather since the first of May up till today, except a few days of cold windy weather.
We moved on from where I last wrote about 15 miles west to the west arm of Lake Bennett. We moved on with a Mr. Deby and party of Los Angeles, and at
The low rate of discount, 1 per cent, allowed to persons purchasing stamps in quantities of $100, it is believed, will operate to make it difficult to secure a sufficient number of local agencies to supply the public needs, but special appeals will be made and the hope is expressed that there will be found in every community a sufficient number of public-spirited citizens to undertake to handle the stamps.
Relative to the statement by Secretary Gage that it is desirable to have the stamp tax portion of the war revenue bill go into effect on July 15th, it is stated that the Senate Finance Committee is of the opinion that the extension should not be made. A member of the committee says the date fixed was suggested by the Internal Revenue Bureau; that an extension would mean a great loss to the Government, and besides if the question is once opened the bill will be loaded with amendments in the Senate and it would be difficult to secure any action. Many amendments have been suggested, and the House has sent a bill to the Senate, but it will not be reported.
The matter was determined at a meeting of the Senate Committee on Finance. The question of postponement of the date of putting the law into effect came up in connection with the supplemental war revenue bill and was considered as an amendment to the bill. The committee referred the bill to a sub-committee consisting of Senators Allison, Aldrich and Jones, with power to act. They sent for the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, and after a conference decided to postpone indefinitely the further consideration of the bill and the request for an extension of time.
WASHINGTON, June 23.—An almost total stoppage of money order business on July 11 it is said, has been averted by an agreement between the officials of the Treasury and Postoffice Departments that the law does not require stamps to be affixed to domestic orders. It would be impossible, say the officials, to supply stamps by that date.
As construed by the officers the law requires simply an additional charge of the value of the stamps to be made when the money order is issued. The paragraph of the war revenue law in regard to money orders reads as follows:
"And from and after the first day of July, 1898, the provision of this paragraph shall apply as well to original domestic money orders issued by the government of the United States and the price of such money orders shall be increased by a sum equal to the value of the stamps herein provided for."
The latter portion of the passage is taken to mean that stamps are not to be used. The construction of the law will obviate the use of about 32 million stamps each year, that being the approximate number of money order offices having been prepared by the post-office department directing them to follow this ruling. The blank applications, etc., now in use need not be changed, and not until the stock is exhausted will any change appear in money order blanks.
A Private's Complaint.
SAN FRANCISCO, June 21, 1898.
EDITOR GAZETTE.—I will write you a few lines in regard to the Red Cross society, which seems to be very badly managed at the present time. The money which has been subscribed for
He Stumbled Over Somebody's Feet,
the Deck of a Limer, and
They Were Hers.
TOLEDO, O., June 12.—Had it been for the recognition by a trainee man, an old acquaintance of him, no one would have suspected when there appeared in neat, legal writing on the register of one of leading hotels of this city last Thursday day the names "Henry L. Delevar wife," these people were the priests in a remarkable romance.
Several years ago there lived in an aristocratic portion of Philadelphia two families, those of Charles Delevar and Thorton R. Du Bois. Each but one child. The Delevars had son, Henry, the Du Bois family daughter, Charlotte. They became lovers and the wedding was set for Christmas Day, 1885. A few weeks before the day set for the wedding change appeared to come over bride to be. She grew morose, met choly, and at times pleaded illness remained in her room when hercepted suitor called to pay his debts. She was given to taking walks and drives, and would be frequently an entire afternoon. On afternoon, about a week before she set for the wedding, she disappeared.
Henry Delevar went to Australia where he might forget and try his tunes in that faraway country.
In time old people died, the father of girl being last to succumbe Young Delevar had formed a woman friendship for an old-time traveller man, whom he met in Cincinnati when there on several occasions on business errands for his father, who was some years engaged in business in Quaker City.
Delevar prospered fairly well in stralia. He became active in business matters in Sydney. Putting his business in safe hands, he resolved to train and hunt for his lost love. He went Europe and drifted to Paris. At he gave up and determined to visit America again and then return to Australia. While walking the deck of steamer bound for New York he strolled over the feet of a lady sitting herself. Hastily apologizing she loved up. It was Miss Charlotte Du Bois she was dressed in widow's weeds. She had married a young Frenchman good family. They had met clinally in Philadelphia. He was devoid and she young and susceptible. Ten months before he husband died, leaving her in Paris, yearning for home sent her to America on same ship with Delevar.
She begged forgiveness, and he left most men, heartily forgive, and they were lovers again. They were mended on Thursday of last week, and Friday for Chicago, whence they got Australia.
THE CADIZ FLEET.
WASHINGTON, June 24.—That Spanish Cadiz fleet is proceeding steadily eastward is no longer doubt Trusted agents of the Government at shores of the Mediterranean watching every movement of the ships and availing themselves of every reliable source of information. So when word came from one of these agents day that the squadron was sighted Pantellaria day before yesterday; their officials were bound to accept the statement as beyond question. The first part put that effect which came through
more catarrh in this section
try than all other diseases
er, and until the last few
supposed to be incurable
reat many years doctors
it a local disease, and
local remedies, and by coning to cure with local treatment. Hall's Catarrh
fractured by F. J. Cheney &
Ohio, is the only constitution on the market. It is taken
in doses from ten drops to a.
It acts directly on the
nucleous surface of the system,
one hundred dollars for any
cure. Send for circulars
monials. Address, F. J.
Co., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by
175c.
Money to Loan.
1000 to $10,000 in sums to suit
state or approved security.
Richard Melrose. dec-23f
Census are Trying It.
to prove the great merit of
Balm, the most effective cure
and Cold in Head, we have preregistered trial size for 10 cents.
our druggist or send 10 cents to
BLS, 56 Warren St., N.Y. City.
from catarrh of the worst kind
a boy, and I never hoped for
Lily's Cream Balm seems to do
Many acquaintances have used
cold results.—Oscar Ostrum,
Ave., Chicago, Ill.
Balm is the acknowledged
carmil and contains no cocaine,
or any injurious drug. Price,
at druggists or by mail.
I will at last have a chance to send
this letter to mail. One of the party is going down to Bennett tomorrow in his new boat. We have ours almost done; will commence caulking tomorrow, and will leave here to move on next week on our way to Stewart river; will take about 15 dogs to go down.
We are all well; lots of mosquitoes here. The ice is most all gone. There is scarcely any darkness here at all, nowadays. We work all night sometimes, and do not know it.
We killed a moose a couple of days ago. It was the first fresh meat we have had.
I hope this letter will reach you all right, and find you well. I wish I will obviate the use of about 32 million stamps each year, that being the approximate number of money order offices having been prepared by the post-office department directing them to follow this ruling. The blank applications, etc., now in use need not be changed, and not until the stock is exhausted will any change appear in money order blanks.
A Private's Complaint.
SAN FRANCISCO, June 21, 1898.
EDITOR GAZETTE.-I will write you a few lines in regard to the Red Cross society, which seems to be very badly managed at the present time. The money which has been subscribed for the benefit of that society is enormous. There was a portion subscribed in Anaheim, in which it is supposed the Seventh regiment was to share: but we have two men from Anaheim in Co. L in the hospital, and no care is taken of them. It is ridiculous the way things are carried on. People who have subscribed money to the Red Cross ought to look into this matter, for we cannot, as we are only privates. One of the same parties I am speaking about was in the field hospital, and he sent to his camp for some underclothes, which were taken to him. In the package were two letters from his wife, which he had not received, nor the underclothes, either. That is the way they do things up here. The boys will lay for hours at a time without any attention.
I only wish I could compose what I comprehend, I would give the people of the Red Cross a few pointers.
A PRIVATE.
Census of the Earth.
The enormous difficulty of the taking of a census of the World's inhabitants, which it is proposed to publish at Borneo in 1901, becomes apparent when one considers that at least two-thirds and perhaps three-quarters of the inhabitants of our planet dwell in lands none of which have been fully civilized and many of which still remain in a condition of savagery. Yet this purpose is, according to the London Mail, as far as possible, to include in the enumeration every human being on whom the sun rises on a particular day in the year 1900. Explorers and census takers are to be sent to every attainable point on the globe for the purpose. Such is the scheme. It looks impracticable. An attempt has recently been made to take a complete census of Russia and this will aid the new undertaking immensely. During his tour in Europe, Li Hung Chang became inter-
Friday for Chicago, whence they go Australia.
THE CADIZ FLEET.
WASHINGTON. June 24.-That the Spanish Cadiz fleet is proceeding steadily eastward is no longer doubtful. Trusted agents of the Government are watching every movement of the ships and availing themselves of every reliable source of information. So what word came from one of these agents on day that the squadron was sighted at Pantellaria day before yesterday. The officials were bound to accept the statement as beyond question. The first port to that effect, which came through an Italian newspaper, was taken with the same reservation, owing to the known effort of the Spanish government to mislead our naval authorities by just such means in friendly newspapers.
By the reckoning of the naval officers the squadron should be now nearly Canda, south of Greece. At the time they are progressing, the squadron should reach Port Said at the entrance to the Suez Canal, on Monday at Tuesday. Beyond this point it is not believed the squadron will go, for it confidently felt that the whole Spanish movement is nothing more than a special display gotten up to meet its irresistible demand of the Spanish populace, and particularly the Cleric party, that something should be done to save the Philippines to Spain. There is a question whether the canary authorities will allow the heavy Spanish armored ships to risk the passage of the canal, even if Admiral Camara willing to undertake it. Their desire of water is so great that they might easily ground in the canal, and thus construct it to navigation indefinitely.
But even if all these expectations are not well founded, the naval officers are confident of Dewey's ability to resist attack by the Spanish squadron. A cording to their calculation she splits did double-turreted monitor Montenegro is very near Manila, under convoy e.g., Brutus, and her arrival may be expected within two or three days. There is not an iron-clad in Camara's fortune that would care to stand before her. Then it must be remembered that later before Cadiz squadron could reach Manila bay, Gen Merritt's troops would be in connection with the insurgent in possession of all the forts surrounding the harbor, and the Spanish gun being manned by American artillery men, will be expected to give a better account of themselves than they once when trained against Dewey.
Gazette.
D, 1898.
NUMBER 36
in the proposed census of the land, it is asserted, promised his liberation and assistance in the work. It forms the greatest factor of unrest in estimating the population globe. Estimates of the number inhabitants in China vary sometimes from 200,000,000 or 200,000,000, and even population of the chief cities can be guessed at. So, too Africa presents an enormous field of mysterious difficulties. Estimates of its nation are constantly varying, but explorers frequently come upon and centers of population the real home of which is unknown. The most official statisticians admit that their results of the population of Africa may not much as 50,000,000 out of it. West Asia are the vast lands that Alexan-terran in his conquest—Afghanisersia and Turkey in Asia. How scores of millions may they not know? Many of the uplands of Persia actually unknown to the civilized but they can support a great population. No one knows how many peoplaia contains.
Body knows how many Eskimo are dwelling in the lands of eterion; that encircle the north pole; of the islands of the vast Pacific with inhabitants living on the county of nature, whose free and life has captivated the imagination of highly educated men like Robbins Stevenson, and when the cen-completed, if it proves practical, that will it probably show the population of the globe to be?
ARMER LOVERS UNITED.
Bumbled Over Somebody's Feet on the Deck of a Liner, and They Were Hers.
DEDO, O., June 12.—Had it not for the recognition by a traveler, an old acquaintance of the one would have suspected that there appeared in neat, legible order on the register of one of the hotels of this city last Thursday names "Henry L. Delevar and these people were the principal remarkable romance.
SNAP SHOTS AT THE NEWS
Two near relatives of President McKinley have enlisted in the volunteer army as private soldiers. They are his nephews, John D. Barber and James Fuller McKinley. Both have been his guests at the White House for some time. The President was urged by some of his friends to appoint them second lieutenants in the army, but he declined to exercise his prerogative in favor of his relatives, and said that, inasmuch as they were willing to enlist as privates, he would prefer they do so, and that course was followed by both. The young men enlisted in the Eighth Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry, now camped at Falls Church.
One of the bloodiest tragedies ever enacted in Washington occurred one night last week in a little room in the rear of 914 Twenty-second street. N.W. William H. Brooks, a veteran of the civil war, a pensioner and until recently a watchman in the Navy Department, was killed by his wife, Martha, with a hatchet, she in turn being fatally injured with the same weapon. The old couple—Brooks being 75 and his wife 65—lived alone and there were no witnesses to the tragedy. About 6.30 o'clock George Larsen, a friend of the Brooks, called, and getting no response to his knocks, entered the house. Brooks was just breathing his last, and Mrs. Brooks was unconscious. The walls of the small room were spattered with blood and the floor was running with it.
The Supervisors of San Joaquin county passed a resolution authorizing a member of the board to attend a meeting of the Supervisors of the State held at Los Angeles in 1895, and provided that the member attending should be reimbursed in his expenses. D.C. Shepard attended and presented a bill of $44.25 to the board for approval. The demand was allowed but the Auditor refused to draw his warrant. On petition for mandate the Superior Court ruled against the petitioner. The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment, holding that the Supervisors exceeded their jurisdiction in passing their authorization, and that a supervisor cannot receive from the county more than the sums allowed by the County Government Bill.
committee also favorably reported the house bill giving to the adjutant general of the army a post now held by General Corbin, the rank, pay and allowance of a major-general.
Horticultural Commissioner McGarvey of Salinas has been investigating the beet pest which Professor Stirling recently called to the attention of Professor Hilgard. He says that while the maggot is found to the same extent in nearly every beet field, it has as yet done but little harm. He is of the opinion, however, that unless something be done to check or eradicate the pest it will eventually do much damage to the beet crop in this country, as it does in Europe. He found two other and greater pests than the maggot. They are the beet aphis and the beet worm. The aphis works in the leaves and the crown of the beet much the same as on fruit trees, while the worm bores down into the beets, frequently as deep as the tap roots, eighteen or twenty inches below the ground. An experiment with insecticide will be tried to kill them.
The retreat from Copper River has commenced and the vanguard of the home-coming army have reached Seattle. They are even more dejected and weather beaten than the men who returned from Skaguay last fall after tolling several months through mud. Fifty men, who have spent hundreds of dollars and months of time crossing the terrible Valdes glaciers and traveling on the treacherous rivers beyond, made up the delegation that reached Seattle. They are on their way back to eastern homes and farms, many of which were mortgaged to pay for the expenses of the futile trip. A.H. Hostetter of La Grange, ill., was with 200 men that crossed Tasnuna Lake and reached Konsina River. Only one party had been further in than that point, and they returned half starved, having lost their outfit in the rapids. They found no gold. A Massachusetts man named Baird lost his life in a big snowstorm the last week in April, according to those who returned. He was out on a glacier away from his party when the storm came up. He was never seen afterwards.
Lady Yarde Buller, eldest daughter of late Gen.R.W.Kirkham.U.S.A., was last week committed to a
The state department at Washington have discovered a suspicious craft lying at Fort de France, Martinique. She is a collier and presumably trying to convey coal either to Cervene at Santiago or to Blanco at Havana, via the Isle of Pines and Batabano.
Capt. Sigbe of the St. Paul and some of the other commanders of the American squouting vessels have been notified and are expected to defeat this purpose. Capt. Sigbe last week warned a British ship from seeking to enter the port of San Juan de Porto Rico, on the ground that it was blockaded. No formal notice has yet been given of the blockade of the port, but the captain's
Several hundred women armed with clubs, rocks and small paper sacks of pepper, gathered near the Morgan sahsh door and blind factory at Oshkosh, Wis., as a result of the wood-county passed a resolution authorizing a member of the board to attend a meeting of the Supervisors of the State held at Los Angeles in 1895, and provided that the member attending should be reimbursed in his expenses. D.C. Shepard attended and presented a bill of $44.25 to the board for approval. The demand was allowed but the Auditor refused to draw his warrant. On petition for mandate the Superior Court ruled against the petitioner. The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment, holding that the Supervisors exceeded their jurisdiction in passing their authorization, and that a supervisor cannot receive from the county more than the sums allowed by the County Government Bill.
An event that is significant at the present crisis at Manila occurred when Prince Henry called on Dewey to say goodbye when the American fleet left Chinese waters for Manila. Consul Wildman and Capt. Gridley were on the quarterdeck of the Olympic in conversation with Dewey, and the Prince said laughingly to the three, but looking Dewey in the eyes: "I will send my ships to Manila to see that you behave."
Dewey's jaws closed, but with perfect grace, he replied: I shall be delighted, but permit me to caution your highness to keep your ships from between my guns and the enemy."
The prince saw the point. If the Germans ever get in Dewey's way, we shall have another war on our hands.
In accordance with a writ of attachment, the Sheriff of Sutter County levied on a quantity of farming utensils, including harvesters, threshing machines and plows, belonging to Thomas Spence. It was claimed that they were exempt, and at the trial brought by Spence to recover the property, it was shown that Spence was farming 2700 acres. There was no dispute as to the farming utensils being no more than sufficient to farm the tract of land, but the Superior Court decided against him, presumably upon the ground that there should be a limit to the amount of land a man should farm. The Supreme court reversed the judgment, saying: "The State has fixed no limit to the amount of land which a judgment debtor may cultivate by farming, and, if the farming utensils which he had are necessary for the proper cultivation of his land, they are exempt from execution, irrespective of whether he would need them for cultivating a smaller tract."
James Burk, an old Colorado miner, who has returned to Victoria from the Copper River country, tells pretty hard tales of the suffering and disappointments of the men who went to that section. He says if there is any gold in the country, it is further inland than anyone has been able to go, up to the present time. The big glacier back from the river is an impassable barrier. He says that several men, at least 8 or 10, have lost their lives there by snowslides or exposure, and that almost every man is a physical wreck. There are about 1000 men back in the country, most of them being still on the big glacier, which is like a great mountain. rises up in five shelves or loe plateaus and is over fifteen miles long. It rises away above the timber line, and wood for fire sells at enormous prices, a log 12 feet long and 6 inches thick bringing $25. A small pony he took from Seattle, and which cost him $10, he sold for $400. All the men, he says, have been disappointed, and they claim the transportation companies have got them into the fix they are in, by misrepresentation.
Several hundred women armed with clubs, rocks and small paper sacks of pepper, gathered near the Morgan sahsh door and blind factory at Oshkosh, Wis., as a result of the wood-county passed a resolution authorizing a member of the board to attend a meeting of the Supervisors of the State held at Los Angeles in 1895, and provided that the member attending should be reimbursed in his expenses. D.C. Shepard attended and presented a bill of $44.25 to the board for approval. The demand was allowed but the Auditor refused to draw his warrant. On petition for mandate the Superior Court ruled against the petitioner. The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment, holding that the Supervisors exceeded their jurisdiction in passing their authorization, and that a supervisor cannot receive from the county more than the sums allowed by the County Government Bill.
An event that is significant at the present crisis at Manila occurred when Prince Henry called on Dewey to say goodbye when the American fleet left Chinese waters for Manila. Consul Wildman and Capt. Gridley were on the quarterdeck of the Olympic in conversation with Dewey, and the Prince said laughingly to the three, but looking Dewey in the eyes: "I will send my ships to Manila to see that you behave."
Dewey's jaws closed, but with perfect grace, he replied: I shall be delighted, but permit me to caution your highness to keep your ships from between my guns and the enemy."
The prince saw the point. If the Germans ever get in Dewey's way, we shall have another war on our hands.
In accordance with a writ of attachment, the Sheriff of Sutter County levied on a quantity of farming utensils, including harvesters, threshing machines and plows, belonging to Thomas Spence. It was claimed that they were exempt, and at the trial brought by Spence to recover the property, it was shown that Spence was farming 2700 acres. There was no dispute as to the farming utensils being no more than sufficient to farm the tract of land, but the Superior Court decided against him, presumably upon the ground that there should be a limit to the amount of land a man should farm. The Supreme court reversed the judgment, saying: "The State has fixed no limit to the amount of land which a judgment debtor may cultivate by farming, and, if the farming utensils which he had are necessary for the proper cultivation of his land, they are exempt from execution, irrespective of whether he would need them for cultivating a smaller tract."
James Burk, an old Colorado miner, who has returned to Victoria from the Copper River country, tells pretty hard tales of the suffering and disappointments of the men who went to that section. He says if there is any gold in the country, it is further inland than anyone has been able to go, up to the present time. The big glacier back from the river is an impassable barrier. He says that several men, at least 8 or 10, have lost their lives there by snowslides or exposure, and that almost every man is a physical wreck. There are about 1000 men back in the country, most of them being still on the big glacier, which is like a great mountain. rises up in five shelves or loe plateaus and is over fifteen miles long. It rises away above the timber line, and wood for fire sells at enormous prices, a log 12 feet long and 6 inches thick bringing $25. A small pony he took from Seattle, and which cost him $10, he sold for $400. All the men, he says, have been disappointed, and they claim the transportation companies have got them into the fix they are in, by misrepresentation.
Several hundred women armed with clubs, rocks and small paper sacks of pepper, gathered near the Morgan sahsh door and blind factory at Oshkosh, Wis., as a result of the wood-county passed a resolution authorizing a member of the board to attend a meeting of the Supervisors of the State held at Los Angeles in 1895, and provided that the member attending should be reimbursed in his expenses. D.C. Shepard attended and presented a bill of $44.25 to the board for approval. The demand was allowed butthe Auditor refused to draw his warrant. On petition for mandate the Superior Court ruled against the petitioner. The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment, holding that the Supervisors exceeded their jurisdiction in passing their authorization, and that a supervisor cannot receive from the county more than the sums allowed by the County Government Bill.
An event that is significant at the present crisis at Manila occurred when Prince Henry called on Dewey to say goodbye when the American fleet left Chinese waters for Manila. Consul Wildman and Capt. Gridley were on the quarterdeck ofthe Olympic in conversation with Dewey,andthePrince said laughinglytothethree,butlookingDeweyintheeye: "IwillsendmyshipstoManilashotoesthatyoubehave."
Dewey's jaws closed, but with perfect grace, he replied: I shall be delighted, but permit me to caution your highness to keep your ships from between my guns andthe enemy."
The prince saw the point. Ifthe Germans ever get in Dewey's way,theshallhaveanotherwaronourhands.
In accordance with a writ of attachment,the SheriffofSutterCountleviedonaquantityoffarmingutensilsincludingharvesters,threshingmachinesandplows,belongingtotheThomasSpence。它wasclaimedthattheywereexempt,andatthetrialbroughtbySpencetorecovertheproperty,它wasshownthatSpencewasfarming2700acres。Therewasnodisputeastofthefarmingutensilsbeingnomorethantissufficienttofarmthetractoflandbut,theSupriorCourtdecidedagainsthim,presumablyuponthegroundthatthereshouldbealimittoamountoflandamanshouldfarm.TheSupriorCourtreversedthejudgment,saying:"TheStatehasfixednolimittoamountoflandwhichajudgmentdebtormaycultivatebyfarming,andifthefarmingutensilswhichhehadarenecessaryforthepropercultivationofhisland,theyareexemptfromexecution,irrespectiveofwhetherhewouldneedthemforcultivatingasmallteract."
James Burk,anoldColoradominer,whohasreturnedtoVictoriafromtheCopperRivercountry,tellsprettyhardtalesofthesufferinganddisappointmentsofthemenwhowenttothatsection。他 says if thereisanygoldinthecountry,它isfurtherinlandthananyonehasbeenabletogo.uptothepresenttime.Thebigglacierbackfromtheriverisanimpassablebarrier。他 says thatseveralmen,atleast8or10,havelostleryivesthereby雪slides或exposure,andthatalmosteverymanisaphyrealwreck。Thereareabout1000menbackinthecountry,mostofthemenbeingstillonthebigglacier,risksupoundinfiveshelvesorloeplateausandisoverfifteenmileslong。它risesawayabovethetimberline,andwoodfordfiresellestenormousprices,alog12feetlongand6inchesthickbringing$25.Asmallponyhe tookfromSeattle,andwhichcosthim$10,thesoldfor$400.Allthemen,theyshares,havesbeendisappointed,andtheyclaimthetransportationcompanieshavethegotthemintofixtheyarein,bymisrepresentation.
Several hundred women armed withclubs,rocks和smallpaper sacksofpepper,gatheredneartheMorgansashshdoorandblindfactoryatOshkosh.Wis.,asresultofthewood-countypassedaresolutionauthorizingamemberoftheboardtoattendameetingoftheSupervisorsoftheStateheldatLosAngelesin1895,andprovidedthatthememberattendingshouldbereimbursedinthesuccessofmortgage.lostbydairie trip.A.H.HostetterofLaGrange,Ill.,waswith200menthatcrossTasnunaLakeandreachKonsinaRiver.Onethursday,intheafternoonanentireafternoon.Omeantheoldpeopledied,thefaithwentengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermethedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Whilewalkingthe deckofaherboundforNewYorkhestummerthefeetofa lady sittingby.Hastilyapologizimg,thelookitwasMissCharlotteDuBois.Isdressedwidelyinwildsheeeds.ShemarriedayoungFrenchmanoffamily.TheyhadmetclandiesonPhiladelphia.HerdevotedyoungyoungandthenreturntoAusiaiandthenreturntoAustria.
Whilewalkingthe deckofaherboundforNewYorkhestummerthefeetofa lady sittingby.Hastilyapologizimg,thelookitwasMissCharlotteDuBois.Isdressedwidelyinwildsheeeds.ShemarriedayoungFrenchmanoffamily.TheyhadmetclandiesonPhiladelphia.HerdevotedyoungyoungandthenreturntoAustria.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermethedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermethedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermethedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermethedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermethedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermethedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravelinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravellinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravellinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravellinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravellinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravellinghemmethermedowinglonganddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravellinghemmethermedowingsmallityanddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravellinghemmethermedowingsmallityanddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravellinghemmethermedowingsmallityanddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravellinghemmethermedowingsmallityanddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravellinghemmethermedowingsmallityanddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravellinghemmethermedowingsmallityanddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
Delevar had formeda warmshipforanold-timetravellinghemmethermedowingsmallityanddrives,andwouldbeengagedinbusinessintherearcity.
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THE CADIZ FLEET.
HINGTON. June 24.—That the Cadiz fleet is proceeding steadily toward no longer doubted, and agents of the Government on stores of the Mediterranean are urging every movement of the ships, calling themselves of every reliance of information. So when some from one of these agents to the squadron was sighted off Marina day before yesterday, the were bound to accept the state beyond question. The first result that effect, which came through an newspaper, was taken with one reservation, owing to the effort of the Spanish governemisle our naval authorities such means in friendly news-
The reckoning of the naval officers cadron should be now nearing south of Greece. At the rate of progressing, the squadron reach Port Said at the entrance Suez Canal, about Monday or. Beyond this point it is not that the squadron will go, for it is likely felt that the whole Spanish extent is nothing more than a spec-display gotten up to meet the stable demand of the Spanish populand particularly the Clerical that something should be done by the Philippines to Spain.
As a question whether the canalades will allow the heavy Spanish ships to risk the passage of real, even if Admiral Camara is to undertake it. Their draft is so great that they might ground in the canal, and thus obey to navigation indefinitely.
Even if all these expectations are founded, the naval officers are out of Dewey's ability to resist any the Spanish squadron. Accto to their calculation the splenble-turreted monitor Monterey near Manila, under convoy ofATUS, and her arrival may be exwithin two or three days. There an iron-clad in Camara's force would care to stand before her must be remembered that long the Cadiz squadron could reach Bay, Gen. Merritt's troops will connection with the insurgents, mission of all the forts surround-harbor, and the Spanish guns banned by American artillery-all be expected to give a better of themselves than they did gained against Dewey.
Several hundred women armed with clubs, rocks and small paper sacks of pepper, gathered near the Morgan sash, door and blind factory at Oshkosh, Wis., as a result of the wood-workers' strike. The police were powerless to disperse the women, and not a man was allowed to enter the factory, even the proprietors being driven back with threats of violence. Non-union laborers were singled out and chased for blocks, a number of them being struck with stones and eggs. The plant was ordered closed and the manufacturers are now holding a conference with the city officials. A similar riot on a small scale occurred the night before, during which one man had his nose smashed by a stone. Serious trouble is anticipated, and the strikers are feeling ugly. Several incendiary fires are laid to the strikers, and it is feared a resort to force may result in further attempts at incendiarism.
The house committee on military affairs has favorably reported a joint resolution reviving the grade of lieutenant general of the army. It authorizes the president, whenever he deems it expedient to appoint a lieutenant general, to be selected from officers in the military service distinguished for courage, skill and ability. The committee disclaim any idea of having any single military commander in view and assert the object is to permit the selection by the president to command the armies of the United States of one who should have a higher rank than any other officer as essential to efficiency of management. While Major General Miles has frequently been urged for a lieutenant-generalship, the members of the committee claim that his name is no more than a suggestion and that the resolution leaves it open to the president, whom he shall appoint, the appointee, however, being subject to confirmation by the senate. Nospecial commander is barred or favored and if there should be a battle at Santiago, for instance, in which General Shafter should figure and he should perform some heroic work, he would stand a fair show for the coveted rank. The
The state department at Washington have discovered a suspicious craft lying at Fort de France, Martinique. She is a collier and presumably trying to convey coal either to Cervera at Santiago or to Blanco at Havana, via the Isle of Pines and Batabano.
Capt. Sigsbe of the St. Paul and some of the other commanders of the American scouting vessels have been notified and are expected to defeat this purpose. Capt. Sigsbe last week warned a British ship from seeking to enter the port of San Juan de Porto Rico, on the ground that it was blockaded. No formal notice has yet been given of the blockade of the port, but the captain's action is in line with the construction of international law, namely, that a blockade may be initiated without formal notice, by simply warning from a naval commander.
The notice from Spain that the government of that country has succeeded in purchasing three powerful cruisers gains not the slightest credence at Washington. Although Admiral Camara's squadron is at Port Said, there is still doubt that the vessels are bound for the Philippines. Rumors reach there that only ironclads in the squadron, the Pelayo and Carlos V.have left the squadron and have returned to Spain, so that Camara no longer possesses a force that would threaten Dewey. If this be so, either the Spanish have realized the folly of leaving their home ports unprotected or they have received intimation from the British government that the navigation of the Suez canal cannot be jeopardized by allowing such deep draft, unwieldy ironclads to attempt the passage.
Some attention has been attracted by a special from Madrid to a British paper, sayling that Camara's purpose is not to attack Dewey but to seize and hold with ships and troops another island in the Philippine group. It is suspected, if this be so, that the object is purely diplomatic, the Spanish government being anxious to truthfully assert in the event that peace negotiations are forced upon it, that the United States is not in such complete occupancy of the Philippines as would justify a demand for their retention as one of the terms of peace.
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