The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 2, 1898, Page 2

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& THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1898. his wife, his babe and himself had thelr lives snuffed out. When the water started to rush over the decks he was with us. His wife and babe were be- low. We had been referring to the lat- ter as our mascot and as a big wave swept over the deck and we saw that if we were to escape at all it must be at once, one of the boys cried: *‘Save the child.’ “For a minute we forgot all else and from a dozen—yes, two dozen—throats came cries of ‘Yes, save the babe; we can't lose the mascot.’ The mission- ary made a wild dash into the cabin. On the way he met one of the boys and cried out, ‘The ship is doomed; we will all die together! With that, this man, changed in a second from a hu- man being of good mental faculties to & maniac, rushed into his stateroom, shut the door, locked it, refused even aupon pleading to open it, and when the Jane Gray went down to her doom the Alask nary, his wife and his child—‘our mascot’—breathed thelr )t There is absolutely no hope for the men left on the schocner when our launch drifted away. There was an- other launch belonging to an Italian arty on the Jane Gray. Some of the entered the launch, but a great wave came along, dashed the little boat with its eargo of humanity up against the mair t dive she by mast, and as the schooner took was accompanied to the splintered launch. who perished were y voung men, who would ve fight for life had it not been for the fact that they were ill their bun , one of the best and newspaper men in ty, this State, was one He joined Major In- edition a mining ex- spondent he ¢ his experi- the sixty-three T Jane Gray ven before we the forward me her bow lons of water 1 a great deal ito the forward holes. The pt on her course on d. for the storm After eating morning we did meal after getting one o'clock on Sunday te, who was out “All hands on ed that the vi On. re n men W - 1 through a com- | > t stream. I tried| that wa ing on top | but in lowering the fore- | 1 the sailors covered the dory with o and others ng with the fastenings of the launch Kennormax. Our boat ated off with eral men in | > back to the schooner it and the men be- | s it floated away from jor Ingraha 1 back to th 1l on a w he he to the It and crushed him He ell into ea. and was hanging on the launch came back. major aved with number of launch With rock of the boat the main boom > over us. Once it caught head and nearly knocked beh: the one scttling fast and > the b as we drifted to work for any were twenty-five in the time. An hour and a e schoone ank we picked hnstone-of La Island, N. Y., ma 1 to-keep -afloat by to one of the -overturned up Job ho had nging boats. “I can any one: el wreck. The edly went dc in it were visions and would do not @ v no hope that saved . from . the aunch undoubt- it did not the men water and ave little ¢ the Jane given to un stanch clipp g through no orm- at -all. her ms opened and almost without warning. server or There was not a life raft aboard.” S JANE GRAY UNLUCKY FROM THE BEGINNING. pre- Given Up for Lost, Capsized in Ber-‘ ing Sea and Seized for illicit Sealing. The Jane Gray was a failure almost from the time of her launching. She was built in Bath, Me., In 1887, and came around the Horn to San Fran- cisco. passage that she was almost given up for lost. When st: did reach port barnacles a yard long were found stick- ing to her bottom. Soon after she arrived here she. was fitted out for a whaling cruise. ‘In the Bering Sea she wrs caught in a storm and capsized. Captain Kelly and his crew escaped and later the sloop-of- war Marion (now the naval training ship) picked her up and towed her into 8itka. There she was righted and fixed up and sailed back to San Francisco. For seven years the Jane Gray went whaling and then in the latter part of 1893 she was sold to C. Nonnemann. In fitted out as a for two yéars inade money for her ownc s, €aptain E.. W. Funcke was in command and. during ‘that time over:3000° skins weére ‘takew, mostly on the coast of Japan. In 1896 the schooner was fitted out for. a cruise in: Bering Sea. and on_ that voyage she.was seized by the United States'. gunboat “Yorktown = for. filicit sealing. For a long time the vessel was tied up, but she was finally released an bonds. - Last. March: she ivas sold to. some parties in Puget Sound and went to Seattle,where she:was fitted out for a voyage. with ‘gold hunters-to Kotze- bue Sound. “The Jane Gray was a most uxlortu- nate - vessel,” §aid -Captain I W. Funcke: yesterday. ‘“‘She evidently aid not capsize like she did.in Bering Sea, but must have sprung a 1-ak and went down. : She was thirteen days out from Seattle:and only ninety miles from Cape Flattery, so she must have sprung.a leak soon after leaving the Sound and ‘was putting back when the fatality oc- curred. The chances are that some of the men got away In the boats and the others were caught in their bunks and ‘went down: with the vessel.” , B Four San Francisco boys sailed -on the Jane Gray. They were Ed M. Tay- lor and -red S. Taylor of the S. P. Taylor's Sons Paper Company, Burrey ‘Bpencer, brother ° of - ‘George Spencer, with the Union Paper Company, and Charles W. Wilkinson, foreman of Val- leau & Peterson’s press rooms 21 | inter E were I | It took her so long to make the | FRENCH PRESS VERY NERVOUS Declare Britons Are Now Beguiling Americans. ALL FALL ‘UPON ALBION APPARENTLY FRIGHTENED BY THE PROPOSED ALLIANCE, On the Other Hand the Newspapers of London Speak Plainly of the Relations of France and Spain. Copyrighted, 183, by James Gordon Bennett. PARIS, June 1.—The French papers are as nervous as they can be over | American-English approachment. They | are virtually crying, “What's the matter with us?” Of course none of them believes'the report that an alli- ance is being considered. That s, they | say none of them do, but they devote | such an amount of space to proving | that there cannot be anything in it, | that it is plain to be seen they fear | there is. They protest too much; they | also quote with glee the Times’ denial of the report. They are all careful to | declare that they not only published | the Daily Telegraph’s dispatch “with | all reserve,” but they published the de- nial of the Times without any reserve. The funniest side of the affair is that England gets all the blows. It is a case of “Oh, you dear friends, Americans,” have been beguiled by the wicked Eng- lish, and with one accord the press and publiec fall upon Albion. No one dares utter a word against Americans now, but they make up for | it on England. They also try to show that England has nothing to gain from an alllance with America. Who can make us believe, Gaulois, “that President Mck tried to dazzle Lord Salisbury with the perspective’of an alllance in which England would take all the risks in | exchange for problematical support in | the East and Far East, where British | ts are not threatened.” This change of base is delightful | Only a few weeks ago these same pa- | pers were telling England thathertime | had come, the first indication of it be: ing chec he had already received in the C question. LONDON, June 1.—The London Daily Chronicle thinks the general war situa- tion is grave and s the rumors of a cret arrangen between France and Spain continue with singular per- sistence and the reports of French de- | signs upon the Cana Islands and | Ceuta are gaining strength. Continu- ing, the Chronicle says: | “In c mercial circles it is perfectly | well understood that Great Britain will regard France taking the Canaries or Ce! friendly act, that if France helps Spain publi¢ opin- i here wili demand that we assist America.” The Pall Mall Gazette devotes much space to the Anglo-American- re! and while disavowing its beli | any treaty of alliance exists, sa There will be something better—the recognition of our unities and the rap- ¢ consolidating sense of common in- and brother lines. Henceforth B ca will proach thes right spirit. Anglo-Ameri will become | something more and more to be reck- | oned with GREAT VICTORY FOR ~ AMERICAN BATTLESHIPS | | | | ; i \ | | ap Continued: from" First Pag ! | extraordinary precautions” and - have | | placed in the narrow pass at the en- | | trance of the harbor special contriv- | ances which permit the closing and| opéning of the port at wilk. ! | The condition. of ‘the. population of: Santiago, since the- beginning of the | | blockade, has grown rapidly worse, and | it is mow said to be nearly desperate. | Food is very scarce, and the’ poor peo- ple are finding it almost impossible to obtain any because of the anormous prices. . The expectation is gensral that | Santiago must soon fall into the hands of the Americans. e I | SPANISH VERSIONS | OF THE ENGAGEMENT | HE | | Dons, of Course, Assert the American Squadron Suffered a Check i at Santiago. HAVANA, June 1.—The following Spanish account of the reported en- gagement off Santiago de Cuba has been issued here: The American fleet, consisting of the Towa, Massachusetts, | Brooklyn, Texas, New Orleans, Mar- | blehead, = Minnesota .and - anotheér | eruiser, in addition te: six small vessels, took up a position on May 31 on the ['western side of the mouth:of Santiago | de Cuba chanmel, opening fire from the first. five vessels. The Spanish eruiser Cristobal :Colon was anchored toward Punta Gorda and Jcou]d be seen from the open sea.. The | fire of the American fléet was answered | by Morro, .Socapa and Punta - Gorda batteries and by the cruiser- Cristobal Colon. . The -Amierican fleet fired sev- enty shots, “‘with projectiles of 32, without causing the-léast damage. The bombardment:lasted ninety min- utes and- the. Amerfcan - fleet .retired with a transatlantic' steamer, an aux- illary crulser, . damaged. . Two.shelis | ‘were seen 1o : explode on thé Towa's stern, and there was:fire on- board an- other battleship. Several - projectilés Tell inside thé harbor; near the Spanish ‘warships. P S ‘. Admiral: Cervera, it is reported: here, ‘was not at Santiago de Cuba yesterday during the bombardment by the Ameri: can squadron.© Had the been.there thz ‘Spanish warships would have enterad the -combat ' against - the Americars, confident of a victorious outcome. : ~The Spanish troops have. ¢rders fo make an energetic, a slight, or no ra- sistance, according to circumstances, with. a view of facilitating the landirg of American forces, so:that the latter may go into the interior of the country, where the Spanish are ‘convinced thcy will be able to defeat them. The Span- ish army and navy -are anxious. to| measure arms with the Americans, and | are desirous that a propitious occasion | 'MENOCAL GUILTY OF NEGLECT. THOMAS W. KEENE DEAD. After an Operation for Appendicitis the Noted T dian Soon Passes Away. a1 I 97 { D ] I THE LATE THOMAS W. KEENE. NEW YORK. June 1.—Thomas W. Keene, the tragedian, who, on Satur- day, underwent an operation for appendicitis, died at the hospital early to- night. Mrs. Keene and the actor’s brother and sister, Willlam Eagléson and Margaret Eagleson, were at the bedside. Mr. Keene, whose right name was Thomas R, Eagl ide: Staten Island, where he owned a pretty home years old and leaves a widow, a son and daughter, the latter being the wife of Edward Arden, an actor at present-in Paris. Thomas Keene was born- in. New York City October: 26, - 1840. When quite young he appeared in the “Gunmaker of Moscow” at the Old Bowery, then under the menagement of John Brougham. His nrst engagement of importance was with the late J. H. Hackett, playing Henry IV to the lat- ter's Falstaff. Afterward Keene traveled with Kate Fisher in Canada and in the season of 1 leading man at her theater in Newark, N. J. He subsequently play sat the Broadway Theater, New York, and the ional and Comigue Theaters in: Cincinnati. During the season of 1867-68 he traveled with the late Annie Sefton and made his first appear- ance as Richard IIL J In 1869, after an arduous season at George Wood's Museum In New York, he: went to and for his health, and appeared with success in sev- sain returned to Wood's Museum in 1874, when John McCullough, who engaged him for a sea- Mr. Keene -became a great favorite while here, and son in remained un s, and after upported Edwin Booth in a Southern Ford in Baltimor: tour. After engag ncisco and Boston, where his Coupeau in “Drink” produced a great impression, he entered on his eer as a star. Mr. Keene has appeared with-much success in all parts of the country. While attendi a Kansas City lodge of with paralysis, his right r some days could only El speak in whispe ANECITO G, MENOCAL. WASHINGTON, June 1.—Lieutenant Lauchimer, judge advocate of the Menocal court-martial, to-day brought.the proceedings of: the court to. Wash- ington and laid them before Secretary Long.. Thé court found A. G. Menocal, civil engineer, guilty of neglect and carelessness and sentenced him to sus- - pension: from -duty on furlough - pay. for three years, but united in a strong recommendation for clemency. The Teport ‘has:not yet been acted: upon. The charges grew out of deféctive iconstruction of ‘the New York drydock: may Soon present itself, trusting for the | by Commodora® Schley, composed = of ljage- ARE REDUCING ALL BATTERIES Good - Practice Aboard Auxiliary Gunboats. BLOCKHOUSES ‘LAID IN RUINS CREWS = ENJOY TRE - SPORT ALONG CUBAN COASTS. Sand Batteries Blown' to Dust by the Uncas and Leyden, and Earth- works . Are . Easily Scattered. Special Disbatch to: The’ Call. KEY WEST, June .1.—The United States' auxiliary gunboat. Uncas ar- rived here this morning fromthe. Cu- ban coast. . She reports that on Mon- day last, when a mile and a half west of Matanzas lighthouse, she sighted a Spanish. blockhouse ‘on shore. - Taking up a position about 600 yards off ‘shore, the Uncas fired two shots at the house, and the two shells went clear through the building, which was wrecked. During the firing ‘the auxiliary gun- | boat Leyden came up and also: fired a couple ‘of shots. ‘It is. not known whether any Spaniards were killed, but they probably fled at the first shot. The. blockhouse made no reply. The action on the part of the Uncas and Leyden is in accordance with -the policy of the patrol boats shelling any blockhouses they may come acre The crews en- Joy this target practice v All was quiet ‘on the Havana block- ade when the Uncas left last night. The coast between Cardenas and N tanzas, for twenty miles east of where the Florida expedition landed, has been shelled and cleared of Spaniards by the auxiliary gunboats Uncas-and Leyden. | The Spaniards érected numerous sa batteries and. earthwor in that sec- tion, and Spanish cavalry and infantry have ‘often been seen' moving np- and down the two poln Perhaps this part of the coast has been selected for the landing of another expeditfon, or it may be a good point where troops could be landed preparatory to a move upon Havana. The Unecas and Leyden have made it safe for a landing party to approach the shore.” They blew all the sand batteries to dust, throwing earthworks into: heaps of debris and scattering the Spaniards. Several blockhouses were also demolished. In- surgents are numerous in- the vicinity of Matanzas and. may soon capture the place. BRYAN CETS A RECIMENT He Will Lead Nebraska Troops to Manila. SECRETARY ALGER CONSENTS . | CHANCE FOR THE WOULD-BE | BRIGADIER TO FIGHT. Volunteer . Forces ‘at - Chickamauga Being Sent to Tampa Prepara- tory to the Invasion of Cuba. Bpecial Dispatch ‘to The Call, NEW YORK, June 1—A ‘Washington special ‘to thé Herald ‘says: - Secretary | Alger. to-day: instructed ‘Adjutant-Gen- eral - Corbin: to: inform. Governor: Hol- | Railroad. | son. |‘died and were buried at sea. with renewed vigor. Then, when Gov- ernor Stephens of Missouri offered Mr. Bryan a colonelcy, and his. decision was withheld pending the fate of the Nebraska troops, the administration thought it best to accept the Nebras- kans. . ‘The War Department refused to give any information as to the assign- ment . Mr. ‘Bryan's command would receive, but stated -that it has been discussed. It is believed, however, that the Bryan regiment will be ordered to San Francisco for duty in the Philippines. CHATTANOOGA, June 1.—The first of the volunteer infantry left Chicka- mauga for Tampa to-day. The regi-| ments which went away were the One Hundred and Fifty-seventh Indiana, First .Ohio,. First District of Columbia and Second New York. To-morrow the | Third - . Pennsylvania, - First Illinois, Fifth Maryland and Sixty-ninth New York will leave. The Second New York, under Colonel E. C. Hardin, left camp at 5 o’clock and marched five miles to Rossville Station. This regiment has been in camp ‘at Chickamauga since May 20. The next regiment to leave camp was the First Ohio, which started on a nine- mile ‘march to : Ringgold. Ga., at -6 o'clock. . The regiment has been at| Chickamauga since May 15. Colonel D. B. Hunt is in command. The One Hundred and Fifty-seventh Indiana: left camp at 9 o'clock and marched to. Ringgold. = This regiment has been in camp in Chickamauga since May 16.. Colonel George M. Stude- baker, who commands, is one of the; st colonels in the army, being The First District of Columbia left | camp at 9 o'clock and marched to Ross- | ville. - This regiment is composed of | 1050 men under Colonel George H. Har- | ris. ‘It has been encamped in the park | since May 25. | The First Ilinois Cavalry arrived this | morning on three trains.. The command numbers 1018 officers and men under Colonel ‘Young. There are still 43,000 | soldiers here. The order to recruit all! the troops to the standard of 1307 men | will largely -increase the number and | with the constant arrivals will keep the army near the 50,000 mark. { General Breckinridge continues his | inspection and is doing much toward getting the various regiments into ser- viceable conditio TAMPA, June 1.—General Nelson A. Miles, ‘accompanied by his entire staff and a force of clerks, arrived in Tampa at 6:30 this morning from Washington, over the Florida Central and Peninsula General Miles Wwas accom- panied also by his wife, daughter and Brigadier General W. H. Lawton has arrived in Tampa and reported to Gen- eral Shaft: DISASTERTO GOLD SEEKERS Fever and Scurvy Over- take Sorenson’s Party. APIA, Samoa, May 14.—The schooner Sophie. Sutherland, which left San Francisco in 1897 with a party of pros- pectors on board to search for gold in the South Seas, reached here on May 11 with the crew in a horrible condi- tion. The Sutherland. under the guidance of a man named Sorenson, took a party of fifteen men, four of whom were sail- ors, who ‘prospected among the Solo- mon Islands for gold.: After cruising around for several months without suc- cess, all of the part vere attacked by fever, and the captain decided to leave for San Francisco.. - On March 19 last the vessel left Florida Island with all but “three men on board unable to move. . Three days later there was but one man' able to assist in navigat- ing the craft. The ecaptain then headed for Apla, the ‘nearest. point,: to ‘obtain medical treatment, but to .add to the trouble scurvy broke out, and when within | sight of Samoa there were only two men, the: captain and another, able to work. . The ship. for three weeks was | within seventy. miles of Apia, but did | not reach port until May 11 on account. of head winds, During those three weeks four of ‘those on board—Kohn, Nicholson,. Goldsmidt and De Witt— | v‘For - ‘the ‘last. few: days the ‘whole working -of the vessel devolved wupon | the - captain, who was up for from | comb ‘of “Nebraska - of the acceptance of 'W. 'J. Bryan's regiment for service| under ‘the second:¢all for:traops.. : The apportionment ‘for Nebraska under this call was ‘only 600 ‘men, not sufficient to | permit..of the “appointment of a col- | onel, but the: War Departnient -has ac- cepted the entire reginient raised, and Mr. Bryan will be its colonel.. Since -his “first“appeararice :upon the stage of war, Mr. Bryan = has - given something to think -about, ‘while poli- ticlans of -all'quarters have speculated as to the outcome. President McKin- ley was impertuned to appoint his lats | opponent & brigadier-general, and there were many reasons: both - for and | against, and he finally refused on the | ground that Mr. Bryan did not possess military qualifications entitling him to lead a brigade. - Subsequently the mil- itary misfortunes of the champion of 16 to 1 aroused sentiment in his behalf, and many who at first considered his enlistment as a campaign ~document were led to believe that his disappoint- ment resulted from & political intrigus, and that his foes feared the record-he might make as a soldier: His friends were not slow. to appre- ciate the effectiveness of this situation, and the cause of Pryan was. espoused | I | before the Suther'and sailed. | letter eighteen to twenty-two hours each day. | All those who reached Apia alive pre- | sented ‘a . terrible —appearance. ' The names of .those whao reached Apia are: McLean, Higgins, Lampe, Berge, Head- burg and Olsen. - There was an abund- ance: of food on board the Sutherland, but no cone was able to cook it. - The. vessel will:remain here until the crew has recovered, when she will be taken to San Francisco. * Four men of the party—Greenwood, < Gingg, - ‘Smadeke and Cunath-—remained at Florida Isl- ADVERTISEMENTS. Annual Salas over 6,000,000 Boxes EECHARQ FOR BILIOUS AND NERVOUS DISORDERS, such as Wind and Pafnin the Stomach, Giddiness, Fulne: ache, Dizziness, Drow of Hoat, Loss of Appe s Blotehes on the Skin, Cold Chills, Dis= turbed Sleep, Frightful Dreams and all Nervous and Treiniling Sensations: THE FIRST DOSE WILL GIVE RELIEF IN TWENTY MINUTES. Every sufferer will acknowledge theni to be A WONDERFUL MEDICINE. BEECHAM'S F1LLS 1 as directs ed, will quickly restor ales to com- plete health..” They promptly. :remove. obstructions orirregularities of the sy tem and cure sick Headache. Fora Weak Stomach Impaired Digestion Disordered Liver IN MEN, WOMEN OR CHILDREN Beecham’s Pills are Without a Rival And _Have'tho LARCEST SALE of any Patent Medicine in the World, 25¢. at all Drug Stores, DR. MEYERS & CO., 731 Market Street. Strictly Reliable—Established 16 Years. THE ONLY SPECIALISTS On the Pacific Ccast Treating Diseases of ~y MEN ONLY Piles and R aith until we ce 1 A clalty. To sk £ We will not ask for a dollar It you cann for the .GRE LISHED FOR which will b DR. MEYER ENGLISH AND GERMAN EX 731° MARK s A Waring to Bicyelists. e The . reprehensible \\ ' practice of some- bi- 7 cycle agents who re- move Christy saddles from bicyclesas equip- ped by manufacturers and substitute -imita- tions or cheap leather saddles must be ex- posed. It is unfair to-the bicycle maker, who desires his wheels to go to the rider with the best'equipment, and is a fraud on the purchaser. The object of this advertisement is to call your attention ‘to this “stripping” scheme. . Insist on having the Christy with . your - machine. The maker of the bicycle wants it. - You want it Avoid cheap imitations or substitutes. Once a Christy rider always a Christy advocate. A. G SPALDING & BROS,, NEW YORK AND CHICAGO. PAINLESS DENTISTRY - voPellsatof teth, cxtracing froe $5.00 op & you se Gold Crovas 2k » SIXTH AND MARKET Q. W.KLEISER, D. D.§. and to prospect. Sorenson, - who it seems was well: known- in the South Seas, was forced ‘to leave the island MONEY REQUIRED FOR EXPEDITIONARY FORCES. WASHINGTON, June lL-—Secretary Alger sent up to the House to-day ad- ditional estimates. of $3,107,000 required immediately - for ' the . expeditionary force to Cuba and for work and equip- ments ‘necessary for -‘the campaign against Porto Rico and: the Philippine Islands.. - Secretary: Alger ‘transmits a outlining - - immediate action against: Cuba and saying it is proposed to. dispatch from 15,000 to 20,000 troops at once, these to be followed as rapidly as ‘possible by 50,000 more. | result to. the ‘courage. of the Spanish soldlers and sailors; to their bettar pr- garization and to the greater =kill of theii commanding officérs. = MADRID, -June 1—The: Minister of | Madrine, Cdptain Aunon, has receiv dispateh saying the American: squad- ron has stiffered a. check before :San- tiago de Cuba.. The fire’from the Span- ish forts and the fleet of -Admiral Ce retréated and. to ‘have been damage The: Spanish fleet, it is claimed, dig not suffer, .o - g 24 2 The Minister of Marine, Capfain. Au- nan; on- leaving: the palace this afte noon after: a visit to: the .Queen sai “The ' American squadron .has bom- barded and tried to force the Santiago forts, which:Teplied: vigorously. -~ The Cristobal Colon advanced to thé mouth’| of the harbor, exchanging shots- wiih the -enemy, who fired seventy. shots against the forts. The damagz done is not reported. The C hit an auxil- iary: American ship, damaging it. The Colon: was not hur it Sk The following undated dispatch from Havana has been recelved here: . “The American squadron-commanded | Aunén, replied © affirmatively, | Tor.” 'in_Cuban waters: wvera ‘15 alleged- to:liave repulsed the|. ‘Amerlcan ships, which are safd to hava; 1 { repulse’ at-Santi large: ironclads :and. cruisers, ‘attacked the - fortifications at’ the entrance of Sarntiago de Citha. - Our ironelad Cristo- | bal €olon, closing the' mouth of the port and: supported by the fire of the forts, repulsed the'attack, causing some dam- dge to the ‘énemy.. : MANTEROLA." - Admiral Manterola: is-the officer “in command of the regular Spanish fleet Are: felt most frequéritly. is one’ of the. most: certain: of nature it any: time ra equently. In the. Senate to-day Count Valencia | asked if the news ‘of .the “American] " ago de Cuba was offi- of Marine,’ C A ne: thing gives men Stro ‘,fig,_am ;;‘Iit‘al ENErg What grand: ©them cial. The - Minist adding: The news is a good gugury for further victories. ‘Which: the courage and higl merit of ‘our sailors give reason to ho ways: ‘Hudyan' cures al - The-Senate then quickly “noted satisfaction the brilliant Victory Spanish fleet.” 7 : {The-Minister' of Marine says he. %, not receiveéd. any’ confirmation -6f i E report fhat Admiral, Cervera's squad- { ron, especially. the Vizcaya, is. in. by . condition. - Naturally, he. said, Viz-] .- caya would be fouler. than the:others, | O ‘a8 she has been longer at sea: b Read “How to Succeed in' Politics;? | - by Senator. Foraker of Ohic, in next: Sunday’s Call. .~ .- see " ‘shows that the system. is beh . Thoseé-who: have not: ahused. a some -sort, depleted their systems. “Palpitation & n; 1y T 3 Premature 11, the great speeific of the: hg. which. rebiilds. th ng heart: action: make: Circulars ; work it does :are a: Become 4 man:full.of life Meiical Tnsttute, Stoekton, Market and. Elis Sis, §. F. T IS . 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