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—— THE EVENING STAR. EVENING S' PUBLISHED DAILY E AT THE STAR BUILDINGS, 1161 Pea Avr Lits 3 Ligh by The Evening Star Newspaper Company, S. H. KAUFFMANN, Pres’t. Few ¥ Ming. ork Office, 49 Pott : = Tre Even sutseribers 19. th eity by cari unt, at 10 conte per week, 0 Copies at the counter Z cents each. By mail-anywhere fn the United States or Canada—pestage prepaid—50 cents per month. Saturday Qrintunte Sheet Star, $1 per year, with NEW YORK POLITICS -—— The Campaign of Oratory to Begin in Earnest “ext Week, ROOSEVELT NOT T0 BE BOTTLED UP Both Candidates Will Speak at All Important Points. oss SCHEME TO ‘Tk MURPHY tomorrow night Y trict, w in Lyric from Iress work of Van Wyek Will Fs ¥ x R I Afte Judge Aug « t t i or KO “ r ght. It will r ene nt, covering r © into a dis- ss tter will r lot will t ch ta Edward Mur- P t nL Most deputies on the superin- one Warner, an independ- hat he would run for Congr nst Lemuel E. Quigg in the fourteenth district. Part 2. Che Foening Siar. Pages 11-114, DEMANDS BURROWS! Pingree Charges Michigan Senator With De- feat of Fox Bil The Senator Has Lat.cn the Stump and is Adve Re-Election ting of the ovecnor. vecial Correspor c Star. RAND RAPILS, Mich., October 10, 1898. wr Pingree opened his campaign 2 ivered in this was not canned” t wa nd and characte ‘ sjointed, but it was long enough to expe the he inter to plas jie demands y not now taxe nd though what 1 Dil f tani n his Ke in the Hy mention this r the »by tion of railrc pest he does pot specific his ideal measure. What is of more political circles, however, is s the defeat of S or Ju- sUrroy i gives every indi- meant epenin s Burrow >and the to accom: on bill at the ture, and for placed on tk at this s th with t h he declared that i McMillan used their tronage at their ut of the th state nd fo! ur of them held ther s <eial session. the Stump. stump, making pre furrows on r Burrows is on the nd three t Dp u day, and until ele ches gait this is doing b d to ical conduc ting from s best to return good to olden rule break h nd the jumbermen in includes nd has no pror but D that ion C: Whiti ele Chairm in his opi will b hat while the other cand ket may pull through, it ed majorities. Governor ty he will ree: v 1d be vote v will be lers, Worked up axation and pin- e, will turn out wocrats, many of two urned with the re ection of the r will take to thi to ve ub- the RO'S PART, t. Ross Won Isfand Pig sndent of the lis papers, who w Ind urs in Bear St. Paul and in the fight S at Bear Lake, St pri of the son of Commis- or of Lieutenz sioner Ross of t strict Harry L. Knappen of the Minneapolis Times, in his story of the fight, writ. St 1 to mention the conduct WASHINGTON, D. ©, DEFEAT) MARYLAND POLITICS of Lieutenant Ross on the battlefidd and the whole time that the Indian > fort. He took charge of and left of the line when Major was warmly praised by his personal bravery. ad ever where during and it is a woader ded. He ne acted like a veteran. ive official commenda- his conduct at 1 n Lake, then d be the lieutenant H. Brill of the St. Paul Pioneer says of the part Lieutenant Ro: fight: ft of the very proc ver whicl eTS sought upright keep rifle ly in the t a hidden an Indian taking a nd firea. Butler dropp. men beg- » slowly. He 1 good c with @ bullet through his brain and at al- mest same instant Lieutenant Ross’ bullet found its home and the Indian throw his arms in th i vr, gave a loud yell and fell back either dead or mortally injured.” ——+-e+— Torrey's Troopers to Be Mustered Out Directions have been given for the mus- ; out of the 2d United States Volunteer Cavalry, commanded by Colonel Jay L. ‘Torrey, and now at Jacksonville, Fla. This regiment is composed of “rough riders” frem the Rocky mountains. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12%, 1898—FOURTEEN PAGES. Situation as It Now Appears in the Congressional Districts. DEMOCRATS ARE MORE HOPEFUL Result Depends More on the Men Than on the Platforms. ees REVIEW BY DISTRICTS cial Correspondence of The Evening Star. BALTIMORE, October 11, 1898. w that all the congressional nomina- tions have been made in this state, an op- portunity is afferded of comparing the merits of the oppesing candidates on the of their personal vote-attracting val- ues. It is generally believed that the per- sonality of the nominee is going to prove a very important factor in this campaign, and that it will, to a certain extent, throw the question of platforms in thie a This is particularly the case among the demoe: who propose, as far as they may be able, to dodge any reference to na- tional issues, and cenfine themselves to a consideration of state affairs, with abun- dant a!lusions, of course, to the conduct of the late war, In fact, in the fourth district they are relying entirely on the personality of M James W. Denny, the nominee, and have given him no platform whatsoever. While the first district 13 the only one in which the democrats fee! absolutely a sured of victory, they have strong hope of carrying the second and third. ‘The con- ions in the former, especially, they find , who has been d by the repub! ney 4 one absolutely nothing du ing his two term! the House, and do not areuse ar nthus mong many of the members of his party. In Baltimore especially, the apathy fact that the ets were elected in Carroll, Cecil and Har- ford cov es year ago, and that lc sentiment therein does not appear to hav wndergone any change, does not augur well for the success of the republican ticket next month. nocrats Make a Wise Move. 4 mocrats in that district have made a wise move by nominating Mr. Ric’ B. of Baltimere city, in the pt of o was named a The nolas W. Stecle, w ago, and later withdrew. a young man, of e€ day candidate i; racter end reputation, a consistent party man, and yet one whose political affiliations not been over intimate with or factic and has plenty of money. universally admitted that by n nating Col. John Walter Smith in the first the democrats there have more the occasion. Col. Smith leader of his party on the poll the full party per- but it is not b he will poll 100 votes. and h lieved that value. therefore, as an anti-Smith fy amounts to very little. In fact. tie ration on the shore i ny to be supplied with re and the transportation one of the leaders from T: ntion” in F tractors to ndidate, of the district the ncket book of Col. Wilbur heir nominee. It was be wealth that he was nominated as their candidate for the state senate from Do: chester county a year ago, and the agree- y with which he scattered at contest inspires the hope that repeat it this y ‘The < remember, however, that he w ed a year ago, and the a rep n of ve recent con not cnhance his value as a nominee. Not an Eastern Shoreman. Furthermore, Col. Jackson 1s not an east- ern shoreman in the full meaning of the term as understood by the residents of that ion of the state, and has only in com- paratively recent times acquired a voting ence there. Col. Smith, on the other and, was not only born on “the shore,” t has been {dentified with its interests and its people throughout his life, and this in a voting population so strongly imbued with local pride and sentiment ts a strong- ible factor. the third district, which comprises Baltimore, and includes among its a large foreign element, the oppo: andidates are Mr. Frank C. Wachte and Dr. John B. Schwatka, Here again, on the question of . the odds are in favor of the t, Dr. Schwatka being in every par- rior of Mr. Wachter, whose by no means satisfactory to the conservative republicans of the district. Just what the outcome here will be it {s difficult to s In the popular judgment the republicans will carry the city districts, though it is also generally belleved that Dr. Schwatka, st. will make a good run. r. Wachter'’s strength lies solely in the “organization” of his party, and it remains to be seen whether or not it can carry him through. While the democrats have an admirable candidate ‘n the fourth district In the per- son of Major James W. Denny, the per- sonal popularity of Representative W. W. McIntire, who has been renominated by the republicans, is so great that there little prospect of their success. Mr. Mc- Intire’s great majority of two years ago was largely due to the heavy democratic vote he received, and while democrats will not feel compelled to desert their party be- cause of the silver issue this year, many of those who voted for the representative two years ago will do so this year. In Mr. Madd’s District. Despite the heavy handicaps in favor of the election of Representative Sydney E. Mudd jin the fifth district, the democrats ter the campaign full of encouragement, and will make a game fight. Their candi- date, Mr. John S. Cummings, has the repu- tation of being a quiet, unobtrusive sort of considerable energy and large 1 that Mr. Mudd is alarmed is rom the energy with which he is paign. In the sixth district the democrats have at last succeeded in securing a candidate to lead their forlorn hope, and while the nominee is said to be a young man of ex- cellent reputation, he is entirely unknown outside his own county. That he will be able to defeat Col. Pearre, the republican candidate, his most enthusiastic support- ers do not for one moment claim at the present time. Senator Wellington has been in town all week, literally working with his coat off to get things in shape for the campaign. He is very much encouraged by the regis- tration up to the present time, and he told ‘The Star correspondent today that while he anticipate no such majorities as his party has received in the past three elec- tions, he had reasonable confidence of suc- cess in all but the first district, and that he was not without hope there, ly favo: In East pel demo ticular the sup evident already pushing his CAMP ALGER CONDITIONS General Graham Before the War Investigat- ing Commission, Not Enough Water for the Troops— Typhoid Was Brought to Camp. The war investigating commission was occupied from 3 until 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon in listening to the testimony of Major General Wm. M. Graham, command- ing the 24 Army Corps. Gen. Graham was stationed at Camp Alger soon after the organization of the volunteer army and his testimony yesterday afternoon related chief- ly to conditions there. Gen. Graham was a brigadier general in the regular army when the war broke out and was then appointed to be a major gen- cral In the volunteer srevice. He entered the army originally in 1855. ‘The witness said he réceived orders to go to Camp Alger May 17, when he was at Atlanta, Ga., where he was in command of the department of the gulf. He reached Camp Alger on the 19th, and found the camp established there, though there was no organization, ‘There were five or six regiments on the ground, Water at Camp Alger. In reply to questions by ex-Goy. Beaver, the witness told the commission of the fa- cilities for transportation he found at Camp Alger. He regarded the conditions for drainage there as excellent, the camp being cn elevated and rolling ground, sloping to- ward strezms. He said when’ he reached Camp Alger the water supply was suffi- t for cooking and drinking purposes und to allow the men to wash their sand hands. This water, b from springs and wells in the vicinity, ater in the streams undoubtedly being unfit for use. The maximum number of troops at Camp Alger at any one time, he said, v about of tro s the number 1 amp the ed after my arrival at the for more water bec cult to obtain the nec ently there Virginia. of War, and was told to send ar the country to get a plant. I secured three er four of these plants, and wells were driven as rapldl. possible, working night and day. This was continued until I had some forty-odd wells. ‘That gave a sufli- clent supply for each regiment.” a The witness said the capacity of cach of these wells ranged from 5,00) gallons up to from 8,000 to 10,000 gallor day, He explained that, with one exception, the wells were driven through rock, frem which er was obtained. This supply, he was not sufficient to give the men bathing facilities, but after the troops had been there a while outside people put up Turkis , Where the men could be ac- com Whi if there was any lack of water at Camp Alger Gen. Graham replied that at one time, when the troops were coming in there very rapidly, there was. 9 shortage of water. ‘There wes no distre resulting from this shortage, the trout being that men had to gb a great distance for water. This water famine continued. he said, until June x-Gov, Beaver— “Then you s a water famine?” The witness—“Yes, T think It was so re- garded. In the engineer's report that e: pression 13 used Typhoid Brought to Camp. The witness said that so far as he knew this lack of water did not seriously affect the health of the men. He said the water had regarded it nothing to do with any sickness at that camp. There were streams outside of the camp from which the men would drink ind which were known to be used for wash- ing clothing. The men knew this, but, eve when warned that they ran a risk of hay ing typhoid fever, they continuc ‘anteens with such wate: i in the camp, the witness fe sometimes goi phoid. inate in the camp. known there was brought in by vania regiment, the Typhoid fever, he said, did not ori: The first ¢: Fort My the d: e. Ex-Gov. Reaver—“‘Then the first case dis- covered was isolated and sent out of the camp?’ ras soon as it was known he had The witness—‘Immediately. 1 think the man was sent off within ay hour.”* ne witness said the second case of ty- phoid fever was also believed by the sui geons to have been brought in the camp. It came in a New York regiment. When asked concerning the amount sickness in Camp Alger he said that 1 than 4 per cent of the men were on the sick report. The deaths in his con.mand were: At Camp Alger, five officers and_G6 enlisted men; at Thoroughfare Gap, four officers and 40 enlisted men; at Camp Meade, one officer and 63 enlisted men. Thag included all deaths from May 20 to the present date. Those deatns were out of a comand, numbering of as high as 27,000 at one time, and now num- bering 23.803 men. Gen. Graham said that at first there was very little attention paid to policing Camp Alger, but he pnt into effect a number of orders regarding such matters and person- ally made inspections to see that they were carried out. He read a large number of these orders to the commission. Location of Kitchens. A feature of his camp arrangement,he said, was to have Kitchens in front of the tents of the officers, where they coul@ be watched readily, and to have the company sinks so placed that the tents were between them and the kitchens. This was done to prevent flies going from the sinks to the kitchens. Speaking of the engineering work done at Camp Alger, Gen. Graham paid a high compliment to Lieut. Col. James L. Lusk, now in Providence Hospital, where he has been quite ill of disease contracted while on duty. Gen. Graham saidithat Lieut. Col. Lusk showed himself to be most able and efficient, and had worked unceasingly to promote the work under him. Lieut. Col. Lusk was formerly assistant engineer com- missioner of the District of ‘Columbia, The commission adjourned ai 4 o'clock, Gen. Graham's testimony to be resumed this morning. ——_—_—_+-0+ Austrian Emperor's Appreciation. Baron Hengelmuller, the Austrian min- ister, has returned the appreciation of his emperor for the expressidns of condolence from the American people upon the re- cent assassination of the empress in the: words: “On the occasion of the cruel and cow- ardly assassination of the Empress Bliza- beth, manifestations ef sympathy and con- Golence were sent from all parts of the United Stetes,;-from ‘official persons, as well as from private citizens, either directly to the Emperortof Austtid, King of Hungary, or to the imperial and royal government in Vienna, or tts representative here in Wash- ington. In the hour of his direst sorrow the emperor has derived some consolation and relief from these proofs of sympathy, and he wishes that his thanks should be expressed to gJJ those.who have sent them.” 0 Agricultural Department Vacancy. The civil servige mission will hold an examination October 25 £6 fill the position of assistant editing, abstracting, proof reading and indexing clerk in the Depart- ment of Agriculture. The salary is $1,200 per annum, and all persons who were ex- aminéd and failed in the examination on April 25 last will be allowed to take this examination. SPEAKS TO IOWANS | President McKinley Delivers Several Addresses on His Omaha Trip. OVATIONS ALL ALONG THE ROUTE He Discusses National Questions From Platform of His Car. WITH A CANE PRESENTED On his journey from Chicago to Omaha yesterday President McKiniey made several speeches to large crowds of citizens who had collected at points on the way. These short addresses were in response to most flattering ovations to the President and urgent demands for him to say something on the issues of the day. At Clinton, Iowa, the President addressed the people as follows: My fellow citizens: I have not fitting words to express my appreciation of this splendid welcome. We have gone from in- dustrial depression to industrial activity. We have gone from labor seeking employ- ment to employment seeking plause.) We have abundant and tionable curreney the world over and we have an unsurpassed national credit—better than it has ever been before in our history. “We have, too, a and we have at applause.) ul for in th months. United States have 1 nation coura go the the but the adm won not ¢ on of the world. iev nts © a a parallel in ig all the e Unit Mu ithout Dur oft I © who thin’ must act been doi ie lo act of our war olemn and perma the in fruits e embodied nt settlements. Harmens “We want no S at home until we have settled our differences abroad. When all that is done we little differences amo! glad to be in t ourse of Iowa. to and d by your repr ntatives in Congress and by your hon- ed gover ud T need not tell you bh red I y old friend, your stinguis At De Witt, | ident was g Loud chee 1 fowa town t your people have made at home Indeed, there is no #lorious country where ¢ very at home, and 1 regret to leave vou at U mo: At this point not before three Ss of had been thrown ai tent u ing, he stooped and » the ba quets and carried io the car. g stop at Mout » sea Cornell Universit arene President had only m very glad 1 i nuitnous h that the their chiet ent his Aili hat meet y cheer i crow: 5 . McKinley marked to Senator Pre € Mounts 2 Platform, The President left 1 fur the first time at Cedar Rapids. nivorm, ¢ rately dec 1, stood r the track vered from 10,01 and gentle! citi- It gives me v 1 1 meet the people of Ces eee Journey to the great wester whither I go to celeb u of the s pe triumphs of nd their indu: sa fortun while engaged dustries of peac tion that th never ne; And while the war w going on and we were engaged in arms ag nst a foreign foe, the industries of the people went on, and their progress and prosperity were in no wise checked. “1 go thither also that I may celebrate with my fellow-countrymen of the west the progress of the war thus far made: the protocol already signed, and the suspen- sion of hostilities, with the hope that you entertain that in the final settlements may be one founded on right and in the of humanity. This war that was so spee ly closed through the valor and intrepidit of our soldiers will bring us, I trust, ble: ings that are now beyond caiculation. “It will bring also burdens, but American people ne i ty and nev forward civ humanit the onsibili- Unload a burden that carries ization. We accepted war for We can accept no terms of peace which shall not be in the interest of humanity. That hostilities have c ad upon terms so satisfactory to the people of the United States is cause for congratula- tion, and calls forth sentiments of pious gratitude to divine Providence for those favors which He has manifested unto us, and of appreciation of the army and navy for their brilliant victories. uch a celebration cannot but be help- ful. It will encourage love of country and will emphasize the noble achievements of our soldiers and sailors on land and sea. War has no glories,except it achieves them. and no achievements are worth having which do not ad ilization and bene- fit mankind. While our victories in battle have added new honors to American valor the real honor is the substantial gain to humanit Out of the bitterness and wi re the privations and sufferings and anxieties of the past five months will flow benefits to the nation which may be more important than we can now realize. Unification of the Nation. “No development of the war has been more gratifying and exalting than the com- plete unification of the nation. Sectional lines have been obliterated; narty differ- ences have been hushed in the great chorus of patriotism which has been heard from one end of the country to the other. To the executive's call for volunteers no prompter response was received than came from the patriotic people of the south and the west, and none were more patriotic than the people of Iowa. And when the orders were given to advance into a foreign territory every soldier was disanpointed whose regiment was not included in the orders to march. All were anxious to be with that portion of the army which was first to mcet the enemy. Our gratitude is boundless to these bra men, and the na- tion will hold them in perpetual memory. “In paying tribute to the patriotism and valor of the men engaged in the war, we must not fail to give deserved praise to the nobility of the women. As in the war for independence and for the Union, they never hesitated or murmured, freely offering their best beloved on the altar of their country. Husbands and sons went from every walk of life, even at personal self-sacrifice in the struggle for support, and were not held back, but encouraged ‘to respond to the sacred call of duty. Alert, generous and practical in providing relief work, minister- ing where disease 9nd death were most frequent ‘n the camps and at the front, ten- largest majority of Washi appreciation of this knowl your patronage we have ¢ we are enjoying now. The increase in our } secured only in a suit made to 1 our business has been phenome fact that we make to person This Is a sult sppropr cept full dre su criterion of what others ey Seageag Z z i Our store is so ¢ out one penny’s extra you're able—a little e notes to si Our Ca quality, varie Y¥, pric elsewhere, and in ac carpets without extra cost. rly resigned and stblime in their sub: mi n and faith when death claimed tt a of their household, the women « the United States in all the nation’s trials through which we have passed have placed the government a the under debt of gratitude that the ver pay. They have added n to rare and exquisite qualiti of Americ womanhood. afternoon. Short stop Tama, Marshallte each point the Pr to the people. Tama is in the home coun of Agriculture Wils President +o his At Logan. Iow ort speech, two pretty little I thank you and bid you good y of § > another chool girls ascended the platform, and in behaif of the Boone High School presented the Presi- dent with a gold-healed cane tied with rel, white and blue ribbon: —— ++ JESSE JAMES, JR., ARRESTED. He is Suspected of Complicity in Re- cent Train Robberies. A dispatch from Kan: City, Mo., last night says: Jesse James, jr., son of the no- torious bandit, Jesse James, Missouri’s pio- neer train robber, was taken from his cigar stand in the county court house by the po- lice this evening and is being secreted by the police authorities. Two other men, whose names are not known and about whom the police absolutely refuse to talk, were arrested soon after the police took young James into custody. Jesse James, jr., has been under survell- lance of the police since the t of the many train robberies in the outskirts of Kansas City. John K dy, who has been t with the nore recent train robberies in Jacksor county, is a native of Cracker Neck. Kennedy and Lowe and youn, James are friends, and though Jam alwa borne a good reputation, h lately been under surveillance with the och- ers. The police maintain that train rob- bing will not be suppressed in Jackson county until there has been a purification of the Cracker Neck district, and all their work since the last robbery seems to have been in this direction. Late tonight it became known that the police also had in custcdy Bill Ryan, one of the most notorious of the old James gang. Ryan, like the others, was reared in the Cracker Neck district. the locomotive engineer, Modifying Port Charges in Cub: Secretary Alger has issued an order modifying the charges imposed as a war measure on vessels entering Cuban ports in possession of the United States. The dis- tinction in tonnage dues between the en- tries of vessels in Cuba from Cuban ports in possession of the United States and those still under Spanish control is abro- gated. The tax of 20 cents a ton on entry from a port not in Cuba will be levied not more than ten times during & year, and the coasting trade tax of 2 eents a ton is not to be levied more than twenty times a year. ice arrested in connection | mn’s vi We bring many years of knoy siness aware that “the dainty touch, the indesc pers than you will pay for ready-made o Block cis in striped worsted trou te for any fully worth § charge, jen eS Competition is Lost. teat and « 13 ferent from that of all others that their offers and meth- 3 ods cannot influence us in the least. We select the best \g lines of housefurnishings that can be found, mark each 2 article at a price as low as can he found in a cash store, and then tell you to help yourseli—on credit—with- arge We're willing to help, and only r the accommodation. ask that you pay as ch week or month. There no ign and no interest cha: vet Department off and promptness that can be found lition we figures is not charged to you. : 9 M Grogan’s c:: i 817-819-821-823 7th St. N.W. 3 § Between H and I Streets. = ocl! “d + = Seeteedntntntetnt poe | | | | | | 1 | 1 1 } Advertising is not an expense, It is a business investment. If you want to invest your money profitably you will therefore put your advertisements m such a paper as The Evening Star, that is read regularly and thoroughly by everybody worth reaching. The Star is the recognized household and family journal of the National Caprtal, and has no rival as an advertising med- ium. Se > eho edoedoate nde Ao slontodtoato ies say Merts wil today. approval of the and your ge share of ger share since ame n be increase in due to the no greater toPedtetetetesteste te tetera ede lets Cale Cody ets r credit system so dif- s every inducement of make, line and lay all e int Even the wa ors Soldiers W Troops & ce the see An an w 1 partment shes iin died since Francisco, es follows: Fourth F Can 3d Artillery, P: Charles Winfield, J Mc son, Albert D. Fairtax Thomas Roche; 6th 4 € y Horton, Harry A. § William P. Grif fin; Astor Batte Mereu Holmes, t. Denr Priv Charl Utah - Huds hillip Hicks r; Ith fy vates E Willia Arthur Jubbiing, Charics F Berry, William A. ma Philip Fisk, Mz Jacob H. Lazelle: ve R. Roedy uer, Aug Company Ker ughn; mard ¢ Privates Wm. B. ‘Thomas Fie rederick Infantry, Capt. Reimbold Rich Privat niel J. Nichols, G eH. Perkins, John Dunmore, Maurice Justh, Peter Fisher, Joseph Tomer, ward F H. M. Bowe: Ist Colorado In Se ell iivan, Private Wise, Charles Phenix, John A. Serog Herbe : Idaho Infz rivate Adams h Minn ntry, ndmaster ©. . Lieut. Frank A. Morley, Musi- Duckland s Leslie B. Pac Charles Bw n, Sid: Wood, Her Watson, C “hwartz, Albert Dennis, William Sullivan, Pavseon alwell, Harry L. Currier, F. S. Wan- > He Cow ph O. Daily, y, Wills Marlinson; Ist braska Infantry m J. Vans, Privates C. H. Niske, William P. Lewts, Roy C. Maher, Walter M. Horace G. Falkner, John Black, The ATZOn; Ist Montana Infantry, Privates John C Adams. William C. O'Leary, Cary Taylor: Ist North Dakota Infantry, Private John Buckley; 2d Oregon Infantry, Pri Eliss P. Huckinson, Edgar W. Johnson, Rufus R. Holbrook, Edwin C. Young. Ric: ard Perry, Charles Miner, Frank Ro- fino, George ‘Stormer, Samuel J. Harry M. Wheeler; 10th Pennsylvania In- fantry, Corp. Walter E. Brown, Privates B. E. Snyder, John Brady, jr., Jesse Noss, William Stillwagon, Jacob Hull, jr, Wm. E. Bunton, William H. Crable, Robert L. Fox, William Braden; Ist South Dakota Infantry, Privates Newell Jenks. eDia Whitmore, Martin Martinson: Ist Wyom- ing Infantry, Privates Ernest 8S. Bowker, Leroy S. Mimick. It matters little what it is that you want~ yhether a situation or a servant—a “want™ ad. in The Star will reach the person whe can fill your need. Reid,