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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1898. WHY HOBSON IS NOT YET R ELEASED Spanish Afraid of Strength- ening the “Jingo” Party in America. As a Further Reason It Is Said the Brave Merrimac Men Have Military Secrets. Copyrighted, 189, by James Gordon Bennett. MADRID, Jun -The reason why the Go nment, after much discussion, has finally decided not to release Hob- son and his mrades of the Merrimac was that sult of their return to the United States would be the cause of a popular demonstration resulting in strengthening the “jingo” party, and | that from military stand- . they had seen the fortifications | antiago, and It was therefore im- | possible to let tnem. out. > noted member of the that another question | > Maine might arise if the wught yellow fever and died. An artic Mane Flaqu lona, in favor of imme liate peace has attracted widespread attention, first on account of the position of the au- | thor, but above all as »senting the domination of public opinion in Cata- | lona, the most laborious region in| Spain, and where the manifestation in | favor of peace is growing general. The 1ken a highly sen- g trusted agents| Government has sible course in sendir throughout the country to feel the pop- ular pulse and find out whether the people are in favor of peace or not. PROMPT PROMOTION OF BRAVE HOBSON WASHINGTON, June 20.—Lieutenant Hobson, the hero of the Merrimac, will be transferred from the contsruction corps to the line of the navy and to the grade of lieutenant com: probably. this week. ander, This action S Ministry | definitely decided on by the adminis- | tration to-day. It has been proposed to await Hobson’s personal expr on as to his choice between the transfer to the line or proomtion within the corps where future advancement is limited. The final decision to-day to give sub- stantial recognition without further de lay follows the formal refusal of e change by the Spanish The matter was tak n up by both the President and Secretary Long and it was announced privately that the ad- ministration is anxious for immediate exchange to empower the President to act. ARMY CORPS A Composed of Troops| Sent to Philippines. | IS MERRITT'S SUGGESTION. OTIS WILL HAVE THE ACTIVE MILITARY COMMAND. | | This Will Cause the Promotion of a | Number of Regular Army Officers in the Volnteer Service. clal Dispatch to The Call. WASHI fonal army corps, to be known as the eighth, is to be created. It will be com- posed of the troops med to the Philippine Islands and will be in com- mand of General Merritt. The creation of the new corps is by direction of the President and authority is conferred upon General Merritt to transfer the command of the corps to the next officer in rank at such time as he may deem it expedient to do s as a matter of military administration, in order that he may be left free to de- vote his attention to important matters of the government connected with the Philippine Islands. There {s reason to believe that the creation of the new corps is the follow- ing out of an idea suggested by General Merritt himself. Upon his arrival at the Philippine Islands General Merritt will transfer the active command of the corps to Major General Otis, now his second in command. As military .governor of the Philip- pines General Merritt will have so many duties of an administrative char- acter to perform that it would be im- practicable for him to retain the active command of the troops on the island. He would be, of course, the supreme military authority in the Philippines, but direct command of the force there ‘will devolve upon General Otis. Promotions of the following regular army officers will shortly be announced, the officers in each case being given commissions in the volunteer service and assigned to the staff of General Merritt: Major James H. Barry to be lieuten- ant colonel and assistant adjutant gen- eral. Major F. H. Crowder to be lieutenant colonel and judge advocate. First Lieutenant Charles T. Potter, corps of engineers, to be lieutenant colonel and chief engineer. Captain C. W. Whipple, Ordnance Department, to be lieutenant colonel and inspector general. ALLEGED ATTEMPT TO ASSASSINATF BLANCO Story Circulated at Washington ‘Which Seems to Have a Poor Foundation. NEW YORK, June 20.—The Herald’s ‘Washington correspondent says: A story is in circulation here to-night of the attempted assassination of Cap- tain General Blanco by Mariano Salva, a young Cuban member of the volun- teer army, and of a condition of af- fairs in Havana bordering on revolu- tion as a consequence. The party circulating the story says the news comes from a Havana paper, but he was unable to produce the paper to-night or give its name. At the Cu- ban legation it is stated that few if any Havana papers reach the United States nowadays and it is doubted if any paper would be permitted to pub- lish the report of an attempted assas- sination of General Blanco, even if it happened. SR A WOREK AT MARE ISLAND. Repairs to the Cruiser Philadelphia Almost Completed. MARE ISLAND NAVY YARD, June 20.—The work on the cruiser Philadel- { K] | spondent of the Daily Mail says: phia is nearly completed. The ship’s | main battery of 6-inch rifles has been swung aboard by the traveling crane and set in‘position. The ship has been painted in war colors. It will be taken out of the dock the first of next week. The new deck of the Adams has been | about completed and that v soon will be ready for commission. The old iron cruiser Ranger will be hauled in | to the quay wall shortly and converted | as rapidly as possible into a modern | gunboat. Work on the Yorktown is being expedited, and as fast as the men get through with the Philadelphia they will be transferred to the Yorktown. 4 | FRANCE'S NEW CABINET 1 IS PARTLY FORMED. M. Ferdinand Sarrien Is Premier and M. de Freycinet Foreign | Minister. June 20.—The Parls corre-| A cab-| inet has been partly formed as follows: | M. Ferdinand Sarrien, Premier. | M. de Freycinet, Minister of For- | eign Affairs. M. Theophile del Casso, Minister | of Marine. | M. Godfrey Cavaignac, Minister | of War. i M. Paul de Lemobre, Minister of | Finance. The foreign policy will be unchanged. SPAIN PLANNING A THIRD SQUADRON | Captain Aunon Says It Will Be Ready to Start in a Month’s Time. MADRID, June 20.—In an interview at Carthagena, Captain Aunon, Minister, of Marine, stated that a third spuadron including the Lepanto, Princeza de As- turias and Cardenal Cisncros will be ready to start In a month’s time. He said Admiral Camara’s squadron con- sisted of fourteen ships, including tor- pedo boat destroyers and transatlan- tics, with a large force for landing. He spoke in the highest terms of the fight- ing qualities of the Pelayo. s iy Seattle Red Cross Work. SEATTLE, June 20.—Several hundred of the most prominent women of Seattle to-day organized a branch of the Red Cross Society. It was decided to begin the noble work in behalf of the men who are upholding the nation's honor upon the lines adopted by the San Francisco society. Practical means were adopted for raising money for the afd of the men in battle and in camp. It is expected several thousand dollars will be avail- able within a few weeks. —_— Death of the Boston’s Bugler. Copyrighted, 183, by James Gordon Bennett. HONGKONG, June 20— Captain Hodgson of the McCulloch leaves for America via Japan. The bugler on board the Boston died on June 17 and yas buried ashore at Cavite. e e Natalie to Become a Nurse. LONDON, June 20.—A special dis- patch from Belgrade, Servia, says: Ex- Queen Natalie is organizing an expedi- tion to go to the seat of the war be- tween Spain and the United States, in order to nurse both Americans and Spaniards. LONDON, FRC I WEDDED AT MARE ISLAND. Assistant Engineer Read of the Mon- adnock a Benedict. VALLEJO, June 20.—There was a hurried and romantic wedding here to- day, brought about by the expected early departure of the groom for the scene of war operations in the Philip- pines. The principals were Assistant Engineer Frank D. Read of the Monad- nock and Grace Lee MacMasters of San Gabriel, Los Angeles County. Rev. N. R. Freeman, pastor of the Baptist Church, officiated, the ceremony being performed at the Bernard House this evening. A e, Nominated for Federal Offices. WASHINGTON, June 20.—The President has made the following nominations: J. E. Hopley of Ohio, to Consul at South- ampton, England. Postmasters—Henry J. Jones, at Elko, » at Dayton, Wash.; shal for the District of Nevada. LATE SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. TRANS-ATLANTIC STEAMERS. Government. | MADRID MUST Blanco and Cervera ON than a mile from Morro Castle. complished her task. ernment. ting information to Madrid. COOOCOCODCO000C00 Cable Communication. BOARD HERALD-CALL DISPATCH BOAT SOMERS N. SMITH, OFF SANTIAGO, June 19, via KINGSTON, Jamaica, June 20.—The auxiliary cruiser St. Louis, after many attempts to cut the Kingston cable, finally succeeded Saturday night. The men detailed from her crew found and severed the cable less Her first attempt, which was made earlier Saturday, as I cabled you, was a failure. search, however, despite continued firing from shore, and at last ac- By the severing of the cable from Santiago to Kingston the Span- iards in Cuba are shut off from all communication with their home Gov- The only line on the south side now is that from Cienfuegos to Santiago, but that will be of no use to Admiral Cervera. it, communicate with General Blanco, but the latter has no way of get- CO0C000000000000000000000000000000 NOW DO ITS OWN FAKING Cut Off From All She continued her (4] o o o © (] ] [ [ o (] (] He can, by & o (4] (3 < DON CARLOS YET TALKING Pretender Poses as Hav- ing Lofty Motives. i |WHY HIS PLANS CHANGED WOULD NOT INTERFERE WHILE | WAR WAS BREWING. ~| Tells Bow Admiral Cervera Has a Chance of Preserving to Spain the “Aureola of Honor.” | Speclal Dispatch to The Call. MADRID (via Biarritz, France), El Imparcial publishes an in- terview its correspondent has had with Don Carlos. As it is understood that | the Pretender revised the interview be- | fore it was published,- his statements may be regarded as in the nature of a manifesto. Don Carlos said: “I won’t conceal from you that when I left Venice, last April, I was resolved to protest by means of force and arms —that is, by ordering my partisans to rise against the people who were pros- tituting our country by a series of un- imaginable humiliations—but when I turned that way war against the United States was imminent and might be declared any moment, and I changed my resolutions and firmly decided to observe the most absolute impassivity. Unswerved from this decision, I do not now desire to create the least difficulty for my country, since it is most import- ant that all her children should sac fice themselves for her. My enforced | inaction puts me to despair, but I carry it to the e even of expr me of depriving myself ng my opinion as to | current events. “The governing statesmen, who have committed the crime of not preparing the nation for a war every one saw to be unavoidable for the last two years, will never be able to accuse me of hav- ing withdrawn a single Spanish will from the national forces in the fight with the United States. They brought on the war by yielding continually to American demands and they will have to take the responsibilities of their mis- takes. This attitude of mine will last as long as the present condition of af- fairs endures, but when the hour for the great settlement arrives I shall make up for my present silence. I will then take my vengeance, not by means of words alone, but by means of acts, and I will do that as soon as my con- science as a Spaniard permits me to do it. I am firmly resolved to fulfill my duty to the end and to omit no sacrifice in order to redeem and avenge Spain.” Don Carlos, questioned as to the policy he would adopt in case he should mount the throne, said he could not en- | ter upon that subject now beyond ad- | mitting the nec ty of a large in- crease in the navy, but he declared he | had thought out and completed plans regarding the military problem and the question of Spain’s foreign policy. “They are my favorite subjects of meditation,” he observed, “and I have certain mature ideas of my own re- garding them. I have even carried | some preliminaries respecting alliances | which I hope will some day yield ex- | cellent fruits. This, in my judgment, is the capijtal point because the proud isolation of Great Britain has been and is deadly to Spain. I must pass the same judgment on the policy of going about begging for protection and inter- vention. “The result of such a policy can only be to reduce to the condition of Greece or Servia the Spanish nation, which ‘was once the mistress of the world.” Don Carlos spoke- eloquently of the necessity for prosecuting the war ‘to the utmost. “Our peoplé’s wonderful nerve, spirit of resolution and exalted sentiment of honor are,” he said, “the only thing that Spain can bring to a nation with which she may strike an alliance in the day of the coming European conflagra- tion. She must, therefore, preserve Jealously that force and spirit. The only disasters possible for us now are moral disasters, for we have no further ma- terial ones to suffer, having suffered all. "sherefore, if, for example, Admiral Cervera, surrounded by forces ten times superior to his own and having been granted a chance to capitulate on con- ditions comparatively honorable, should prefer to make a sally and dose all his vessels, sinking at the same time as many American warships as he could, he would do not only an heroic deed, but also a useful work by preserving to Spain the aureola of which no enemy has yet been able to deprive her.” NEVADA'’S VOLUNTEERS. Sagebrush State to Send an Infantry Battalion to the Front. CARSON, June 20.—Instructions have been received from Washington by Governor Sadler to call upon the State of Nevada for one battalion of infan- try, consisting of four companies com- posed of about 100 men each. C. A. Bennett of San Diego, Cal., has been directed to make arrangements for the comfort, shelter and subsistence of the organization and the order in which they shall be mobilized for muster. Colonel Lord of the State militia con- ferred with the Governor and the latter agreed to call upon the State militia. The order will be issued to-morrow. PHILADELPHIA—Arrived June 2 — Stmr P AMPTON - AmiIved June #)—Stmr Ber- —Arsived June Iin, from New York. i Under each call Nevada furnished twice the quota, having in the first instance ent two troops of cavalry instead of one. 2 l STANDING BY THE MONOPOLY Sausalito Trustees and the Gamblers. ISSUE NO MORE LICENSES FINAL DECISION AS TO THE HUMPHREY SYNDICATE, Dr. Crumpton Leaves the Hall in Rage, and the Defeated Trio Will Test the Or- dinance. Special Dispatch to The Call. SAUSALITO, June 20.—“This is all of the farce I want. Iam going home.” Savagely snapping out these words of disappointment. Dr. H. J. Crumpton, room triumvirate—Glynn, Broyer and Humphrey—arose from his seat at the meeting of the board of Town Trustees this evening and stalked from the rooni to a mingled accompaniment of cheers and hisses. Sausalito is still a wide- open town, but only to Harrison and Harvey. Their rivals received a blow straight from the shoulder to-night, four Trustees voting to reject the ‘peti- tion of the San Mateo men against Dr. Crumpton’s single vote in their favor. ‘When the board met the Town Hall was crowded and bets were made that Glynn, Broyer and Humphrey would get their license. Attorney Hep- burn Wilkins wag on hand to look out for his clients’ inferests, and first took a hand by arguing that their petition should take precedence inconsideration, a point finally yielded by Trustee Sylva. He then made a forcible plea in their behalf, asserting that they had waited patiently the action of the board, though proceedings had been often de- layed, and that they were all good business men and would be found in line for the financial benefit of the com- munity. He failed to see any reason why they should not receive the same consideration as others. Sylva wished to know if the petition- ers would locate their poolrooms where the board desired, and was answered in the affirmative, with an additional statement that they preferred to re- main where they were,asthey had gone to great expense in putting up their buildings. Sylva then moved that a li- cense be granted, with the proviso that the establishment be located in the northern part of the town. After a con- sultation with Glynn, Attorney Wil- kins objected, saying that this amount- ed to a prohibition, as no business could be done there. Sylva then withdrew his motion, and amid intense excitement General Dick- inson called for a vote on the original question. Ambjornsen, Dickinson, Thomas and Sylva voted In the nega- tive, Crumpton alone in the afirmative. The result ev ked a storm of hooting and cheering mingled, and Crumpton’s request to be excused from further par- ticipation was denied. Zeke Abrams’ application then suffer- ed a like fate. At this Crumpton's an- ger gained complete control, and he made his melodramatic exit. The crowd soon followed. Attorney Wilkins said he understood there was to be a reconsideration of the vote, and Sylva evidently in pure mer- riment gave notice of a reconsideration at the next meeting. It is understood the would-be rival trio will reopen to- morrow and test the law in court. At- torney Wilking was non-committal as to the mode of procedure to be follow- ed. Another interesting feature of the present agitation {s that Trustee Amb- Jornsen will probably resign from the board. When questioned in regard to his proposed action all he would say was: “Well, T have had about all I care to stand.” DEFICIENCY BILL PASSED. House Appmved—fi; Measure Car- rying $224,000,000. WASHINGTON, June 20.-The House to-day passed the general deficlency bill carry] ngb $224,000,000. The bill occasione littlé debate and it passed practically as reported to the House from the Commit- tee on Appropriations. The remainder of the day was given to District of Colum- bia business. " At 5:37 o'clock the House adjourned. critloalaics Sampson Has a Cable. WASHINGTON, June 20.—The War Department to-day received informa- tion that its officials had been able to secure an end of one of the cables run- ning out of Cuba and which, when properly connected, will give Admiral Sampson direct tommunication with the department at Washington. Secretary Alger expressed the hope that word over it from the admiral would be re- ceived in Washington to-night. — - Delivered War Munitions. LONDON, June 20.—A special dispatch from Paris says an Austrian agent has returned from Madrid, where he deliv- ered to the Spgnish authorities, via the 'Tenees, 3,000,000 empty cartridges and 1 tons of ‘explosives derived from French, Austrian and Belgian sources. ety i Camara Returns to Cadiz. WASHINGTON, June 20.—The War Department has received a dispatch stating that the C A'z fleet has return- ed to a Spanish port. Santa Rosa’s New Charter. SANTA ROSA, June 20.—The new char- ter was si, by the freeholders to-night, after which i to - Gl which will Tacr eat ae uu%:n?" = ’ |SAVED FROM BEING City Father and champion of the pool- | SPANIARDS WILL TH Intend to P BURN E. SHIPS revent Their Being Captured by Sam pson. Hull of the Merrimac Does Not Block the Channel at Santiago. ON BOARD THE ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCH BOAT DA LESS, OFF SANTIAGO DE CUBA, June 19 (via Kingston. Jamaica, June 20).—Rear Admiral Sampson author- izes the publication of the following in formation obtained from reconnof sances and from the Cubans: Matters are quiet at Guantanamo Bay. The Spanish are transporting ar- tillery to the town of Guantanamo. Yesterday a shell from the battle-ship Oregon destroyed a railway car and set a warehouse on fire. A spy asserts that the Spanish gun- boats have been filled with straw and will be destroyed if there is any dan- ger of their being captured. The Spanish forces at Guantanamo are vainly attempting to reach Santi- ago, where nothing is known as to the situation at Guantanamo, as the Cu- bans hold the intervenine territory. General Garcia's forces are within three days’ march of Santiago. They number 5000. The same number of Cu- bans are near Holguin. General Rabi is eighteen miles west of Santiago with 930 men, all well armed. The battery at Castillo de la Socapa, opposite Estrella, Santiago, has two | Hontoria guns, four Maxim-Norden- feldt 3i-millimeter guns, one Maxim- Nordenfeldt 57-millimeter gun and one | Gatling 25-millimeter gun, all taken | from the Reina Mercedes. The battery at Castillo del Morro has two Maxim- Nordenfeldt 75-millimeter guns taken brought by Admiral The Punta Gorda battery has two Ordonez | bronze guns and one Hontoria. All the batteries have muzzle loaders also. Cervera. | Latimenclar system—two lines of seven | each. One line was fired at the Merri- mac, but without effect. The Merrimac | cleared the line when she exploded. One torpedo in the first line was fired at the Merrimac without striking her. The | mines contain 225 kilograms of guncot- ten and there are several Bustamente torpedoes, The best information is that the hull | of the Merrimac does not block the | channel, but lies to the right. Vessels can pass without touching it. During the bombardment on June 3 Captain Hermon, second in command on the cruiser Reina Mercedes, and five men were killed by a shell. wounded. Lieutenant Hobson and his men are | now believed to have been taken up to Santiago. SHOT BY SPANIARDS. Correspondent Halstead Owes His Life to the British Consul at San Juan. NEW YORK, June 20.—The Herald" Washington correspondent telegraphs The alleged wounding of Freeman Hal- stead, a correspondent of the Herald, during the bombardment of San Juan port gave it. From a source not to be doubted I learned to-day that the Span- iards let the canard go out as to the wounding of Halstead in order to check the ardor of the American fleet and the story comes from one who was witness to the bombardment. ‘When the Spaniards lost all hope of saving the town in desperation the political prisoners were ordered out to be shot, Halstead among them. At a moment when their chances seemed well nigh hopeless the British Consul, hearing of Halstead’s peril, intervened. But before this, when the men were being taken from the prison, Halstead stoutly resisted and during the struggle his arm was slirltlv injured. Immediatelv the Spaniards set upon the ruse which thus far has been ac- cepted, but which is now for the first time exposed. Halstead was in fact sentenced only to imprisonment by the court martial before which he appear- ed, but when the bombardment by the American fleet be~an to be destructive, a spirit of hifter eagerness for unrea- sonable retallation swept away the court martial records, and Halstead found himself about to be the victim | of quick resentment that ignored his sentence for imprisonment in desire for | revenge. face with a danger against which, with the knowledge of his sentence, he re- belled. And it seems that this resis- tance resulted in an injury which tend- ed toward his deliverance. MAY YET BE SENT TO CUBA OR MANILA General Merriam Holds Out Hopes to California and Washington Volunteers. SEATTLE' June 20.—Major General H. C. Merriam, commanding the de- partments of California and the Colum- bia, was in this city to-day. He was | here more particularly on business re- lating to the Government's recent re- lief expedition to Alaska, and spent most of his time with Captain W. W. Robinson of the quartermaster’s de- partment. In an interview General Merriam denied emphatically, on the authority of the officers of the regi- ment, that there was any dissatisfac- tion among the Washington Volunteers by reason of their not having been or- dered to a foreign shore. The order to hold our men here, he said, came from ‘Washington City without any sugges- tion from the coast. he had asked for a regiment of Eastern soldiers to guard the Pacific Coast. If It was thus that he came to| | the request was granted the ‘Washing- | ton and California volunteers would be sent to Cuba or Manila. |OFFICERS NAMED FOR | THE VOLUNTEER SERVICE Nominated to Be Brigadier Generals. WASHINGTON, June 20.—The President ate: | Massachusetts and John W, | Ferey. © be addional paymasters—Fred N. Ri Arkansas, Clark M. Carr of Missouri, Ril;frf Hartzell of Cols S, v Hous orado, S. Heath Taylor of Vir- Volunteer Engineers, Second Regim | , S d Regimeént—To be | first lieutenant, H. Gildersleeve of Permuy v nia. | _Third Regiment—To b | 3. Spencer of Missouri; | fenant Edgar Jadwin, e lieutenant-colonel, B. to be major, First Lieu- Corps of Engineers; | oTo be engineer officers, with rank of major— | Captain Graham D. Fitch, Corps of ngiasers, | {:’}ms-dAl:alC&mel"l“ughh J. McGrath, Fourth | Unite es Cavalry; C - | Satie v: Charles Allison of Ten | , To be chief quartermaster, with rank of ma- | Jor—Captain James L. Wi Ji e ison, Sixth United To be chief commissary, First Lieutenant Hardy Infantry. To be assistant adjutant-generals, w of major—First Lieutenant William E‘.‘hflam';!f | Fifth United States Cavairy: First Licutenant Robert W. Noble, First United States Infantry. To be assistant adjutant-generals, with rank | of captain—First Lieutenant Edward Ander- son, Seventh United States Cavalry; Franois B, Harrison, Troop A, New York Cavalry. To be asgistant quartermasters, with rank of captain—First Lieutenant Wirt Robinson, | Fourth United States Artillery; Firsg Lieuten- ant Samuel A. Smoke of the Nineteenth In- fantry; Second Lleutenant Samuel V. Ham, | Fitth United States Infantry; Oscar Guessaz of with rank of major— E. Wilkins, | Texas, William L. Cowling ‘of Virginia, Ross Matthews of Ilinols, Edward B. Harrison of Virginia. To be commissaries, with rank of captain— Robert Sudley Winthrop of New York, Wil- llam H. Lyons of Kentucky, John M. Tobin of Massachusetts, Charles Deloney of Wyoming, Nathaniel T. Messer of California, Charles W, Neal of Towa. To be inspector-general, with rank of major— Captain John S. Mallory, Second United States Infantry. United States Volunteer Signal Corps—To be captain, First Lieutenant Edgar Russell, Sixth United States Artillery. | ,To be first lieutenants—Frank O. Bailey, first-class sergeant Volunteer Signal Corps: Newton Canno of Tennessee, Charles A. Clark of linois. Peter P. Reddy of Wyoming, Wil- liam Jarvie Jr, of New York, Charles A. Duffy of Kentucky. Sixth Reglment Volunteer Infantry—To be captain, Charles B. Evans of Tennessee. |, Seventh Regiment United States Volunteers— To be captains, Harry Bingham of Maryland, John H. Lewis, District of Columbia. Navy—Medical Inspector Joseph B. Parker, to be a medical director in the navy. S g Hobson’s Brother a Cadet. ‘WEST POINT, N. Y., June 20.—Fifty- two candidates for cadetships at West Point, who passed their examinations last March, reported to Adjutant Haz- ard here to-day, took the oath of alle- | Blance and were at once admitted as cadets to the Military Academy. Among | the number was James M. Hobson & He further said | Alabama, brother of the young naval | | officer who distinguished himself in the | © 1400 Rooms, 900 With Bath Attachad, sinking of the Merrimac. MAN! MAN! MAN! Are you content with your present condition? If you awe you ought not to be. You know you are but a weak and a puny being. You know you perform nature’s do not sleep well even. You have abused your power. work in a poor, weak way. You You have not used it with sense. Why not turn around and be a MAN again to-day? ‘‘Hudyan” will make up for your foolishness any your folly. It has done that for over 20,000 men. Is that good news? Get from the Institute circulars and testimonials showing what it does. No charge is made. Get It will not cost a nickel. continue to be weak? Feel the youth in your frame once more. Now, why not have it? all the advice you can ask for. Do you want to bright, sweet sense of healthful HUDSON MEDICAL INSTITUTE, Stockton, Market and El''= Ktreete. < SAN ERANCISCO. from the torpedo-boat destroyer Terror, | The mines at the entrance are on the | Six were | Albert Ames and John W. Plume | § | to-day sent th i il turns out to be not as the Spanish re- | ¥ these nominations to the Sen- | To be brigadietr-generals—Albert Ames of Plume of New | Second | 1 I [ | | | | | | | | l ! 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