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Qeondlcted by B. G. Lathrop. S5 g NDER the title, “‘Schley and San- go,” George Edward Graham s written an account of the cruise of the flying squadron, nd of the discovery and final of the Sp h fleet at San- During the cam- t Mr. Graham of the events of he writes. Mr. Graham was ative of the Associ- had galned permission Long and Commodore pany the uadron. Mr. every opportunity to went on from the be- cruise until after the bat- What he saw is de- scribed in a graphic way which invests ever ¥ known facts with fresh inter- book is {llustrated with a large photographs ch were taken uise and the battle. Ad- the book, as an ac- the movements of the of Schley's life up Spanish war opens to the whose location anxi to th srdon about ally w battle oy y to run_the ernoon of July e seen to ris: erican: enemy ips. To quote rt to the commo- the enemy’s ling time of to the acme o shirts dropping the they ran, that orders closed; th the decks wet a of 500 was in for battle completes T g €0 as t Brooklyn moved mnor entrance. whi slower 1 in ® o o died the ships thr out for deadl; parade o black hulls, the crest the proudly immense fiags bearing in the heaviest of the Spanish insignia, which in the morning sunligh ed ewnings over their decks, they besp: wury end chivairy and a proud Geflance ot 2's Dewer sea power. If death and de- ere to come they would be met gal- atly, grandly, the nation whose naval prow- ess has been sung in song and story never seeking conce; doffing a single fota silken gold bullion ittered brav to the brightly co by For Mothers The Baby E His Care and Trealment. Fully illustraled. A valvable 2id in the nursery —~complete and authorilalive —recommendcd by physicians Price $1.00, nct. A descrip- live circvlar sent on requesl. Elder and Shepard 238 POST STREET. L_~ -J [LLUSTR 71 8y 7/ }\ VB Comey ComPany /&l RS moving directly toward the Spanish ships com- ing out of the west. Every inclination, had a decision been made suddenly, was to turn in the same direction, to the west, to head them off. But had this inclination been followed the Brooklyn's starboard side would have been %o placed that any one of the Spanish fleet would have been able to ram and sink her, with the same fatal result. * * * Turning on her heel in a short circle moved the Brooklyn, her port side a perfect mass of flame and smoke, as the six eight-inch, six five-inch and eight six-pounders belched forth the deadly shot. Then as she swung toward the four Spanish ships her starboard battery opened and the din was terrific. * * * The Brooklyn had described a perfect circld, and, although under a deluge of shot and shell, practically uninjured, pointed west and began her famous $ s s Ae we got fully around w pointing to the west, almost side by side with the Maria Teresa, the Col her, the Viscaya just hehind the flagship and the Oquendo last of all, to burn and _evidently in -trouble. , Instead of what we ex- array, moke, and not an ._Schley ‘turned around Captain Cook: *‘Well with_this Gurtain of mighty foam-crested wave, of immense brilliancy, fol- r which spoke from a thirt s the Oregon, and as our aw it they yelled with delight freeboard broke the surging pushed aside in her mighty en and dashed up agamnst her great the mouths of the big thir- that were ling death and enemy. She was coming to oklyn in her terribily unequél strug- these four great Spanish cruisers, t that she was firing seemed to ng _effect. And then, as the smoke blew away a little aore, we saw, following up the Oregon, the 1 the poor old “heodoo of the navy,” but day to disprove her maligners, this xt to the Brooklyn and the Oregon, do of the other ships to destroy flect am pays a glowing tribute to y displayed by Schley and all other “Americans whom he noticed during the battle. Schley Mr. Graham onsiders the ideal naval commander, a n in whom are united quickness of perception, surety of judgment, a fixed self-reliance and an absolute fearles ness. During the long strain of watchin for the Sy ships Mr. Graham says that Schie ved the same splendid qualitie shown so conspicu- ously during the engagement with the Spanish fleet. Of Schiey’s appearance on that Mr. Graham sa da I feel that I ought to d ote a chapter to Schiey’s personality during battle. * * * He stood there on the little temporary footboard placed for just t on the outside of the conning tower, the same erect, energetic figure that years before on the lookout box on the mast of an American crulser gazed across ice fields and ordered the ship pushed through them to rescue ‘the starving Greely and his party from the death that would have come to them in forty-eight hours but for this man’s indomitable will. * * * I shall never forget him during those moments; he was all y and nerve. He noticed the most vial things. * % * He was the inspiration { every man forward. Some small 14-year-old apprentices, Who were acting as messen- had at first shown signs either of appre- fon_or of great excitement; but, as the odore told them calmly to take messages walked coolly around this wooden plat- form with the shells flying close to him and shrieking over his head and in the deafening nofse of his own ship'sguns, even the young- sters took heart from his example.” After de- scribing the battle and its termination the au- thor continues: It was then I noticed for the first time under what a strain this man had been. His lips were cracked and little flecks of blood showed where the saltpeter from the gun smoke had affected him. His eyelids were red from staring through his glasses so continuously, his eyes were blood- t and there were dark lines down his face. his hands eady, his voice was even, though somewhat hoarse from the loud speak. ing which he was compelled to do to be heard bove the roar of battle, and it scemed as though every instant he was thinking of all those who had helped him in that day's vie- ory. Mr. Graham devotes a chapter of his ook to instances of splendid heroism which he noticed among the American seamen while the battle was in progress. A description of the ships of the Spanish squadron and of their condition after the battle is given, together with brief notices of some of the principal naval officers among the Spanish. 'wo chapters are glven up to a quotation of Admiral fchley’s own account of the battle of ESantiago. Although the book has been written with the intention of giving to Admiral Schicy an appropriate meed of praise for the part he played in bringing about the destruction of the Spanish fleet, it is much more than a mere eulogy of his abilities. It is also an exceedingly well told story of one of the two great naval batties of the Spanish war, which have done so much to enhance the glory of the American people in the eyes of foreign ATIONS ROM To DEVELOP THELR, »| DEFENSES % % | corvmianT nations. (Published by the W. B. Conkey Company, Chicago.) “Out West.” Mr. Robert A. Thompson, well known by his many years' connection with the press of the State, has been appointed general manager of ““Out West” for San “Out West,” it will be re- membered, is the new name for ‘“The Land of Sunshine,” the magazine that Charles F. Lummis has made so popular. The February number is a notable one in the things that it has to offer. An a pecial interest is one on *Orange s Ago,” written by Mr. Lufnmis. In this the author shows that the navel orange instead of being a dis- covery or invention of the last few years is really quite an old affair after all. One of the new departments of this magazine which has grown to be a force in the West is the.one devoted to irri- gation, colonization and co-operation. Among the special features of this de- partment for February s 2’ timely stor) of ‘“the epoch-making work of the Cail fornia Water and Forest Assoclation,” profusely illustrated with portraits ? prominent men. The article contains thk first full account of the new commission, of which Chief Justice Beatty is the h2ad, for the preparation of new water laws. The same number contains the first pub- lic announcement of the plans of the California Constructive League, a mnew organizatiold which proposes ‘‘to bulld the State” by trylng to get the political par- ties to take up progressive measures of constructive character, among them pub- lic irmgation works, compulsory arbitra- tion, State purchase of large land hold- ings and State encouragement of co-Op- eration among producers. Other important articles in the same department are “The Premier of New Zealand,” with 4 fine portrait of Hon. Richard J. Seddon (one of the first pub- lished in this country), and “The Govern- ment as a Colonizing Agency,” with views of a great New Zealand estate “before and after” state purchase, This new department of “The Twentieth Cen- tury West,” conducted by William B. Smythe, has broadened the popular in- terest in the magazine immensely. . The San Francisco office of “Out West" is 310 Pine street. That Girl Montana. The heroine of “That Girl Montana,” a novel by Marah Ellis Ryan, is a young girl who has been compelled to live a rough life among mining camps in the West. She has been the companion of her father, a man whose career has con- tained a series of crimes. Montana es- capes from her father and falls under the protection of kind people. She be- comes wealthy through the discovery of a gold mine. Afterward she goes IZast to some relatives of her mother. These pecple try to persuade her to live the iife of fashion in which they find happi- ness. But such a life does not suit Mon- tana, and eventually she returns to the West, to find there happiness in the af- fection of a man who has long loved her. While the novel is by no means of great worth it will ples those who like a story with plenty of action in it. ( Published by Rand, McNally & Co., Chicago and New York.) - An Arithmetic. “Graded Work in Arithmetic,” Beventh Year (by S. W. Baird), is issued by the American Book Company, New York. It is the latest edition of the series, which will contain eight volumes for the first elght years in arithmetic. This volume begins® with a thorough review of the work of the preceding years, accompanied by applications to more difficult problems, exemplifying the principles already de- veloped. - The new subjects introduced in this book are duties or customs, commer- cial forms, bank discount, exchange and simple and compound proportion. (Price 25 cents.) THE MAGAZINES, The Atlantic Monthly. THREE MONTHS OF PRESIDENT BOOSEVELT. ..,..Henry L. Nelson ONLY AN EPISODE. Part I i z Bugenia B. Frothingham WHO FELL FROM ALOFT?..Geo. S. Wasson CopvRiGHT “You BuLLES WoN THE FienT> REMINISCENCES OF WALT WHITMAN John T. Trowbridge TWO TENDENCIES IN MODERN MUSIC Daniel G. Mason THE SECOND MAYORALTY ELECTION IN GREATER NEW YORK... . Edward M. Shepard FEBRUARY IN ENGLAND..Edward Thomas AUDREY. XX /. Johnston LINCOLN'S RIVAL. THE FAME OF VI THE LITTLE COYOTE UNIV 5 POEMS LET ME NO MORE A MENDICANT.... Arthur Colton® FORGETFULN Anna Hempstead Branch THE CHARM phine Preston Peabody WINTER DR Frank Dempster Sherman THE CRYPT artha Gilbert Dickinson .Mary Austin “Alfred C. Lane A FAREWELL. ... Virginia Woodward Cloud THE DICTIONARY OF X ONAL BIOG- RAPHY . .Ferris Greenslet BOOKS OR AND MAJOR VER: W. Boynton The Century. IN THE CENTURY'S “YEAR OF AMER- ICAN HUMOR™: "'A Government of the People”” . .J. W. Piercy FOUR NEGRO ‘The Possum and the Coon’: tice”; TIL “‘The ““The’ Catfish” . THE DON'T HURRY CLUB CHICAGO'S GREAT 1{1\'ER-H,\3:1§uR. 3 Elliott Flower THE SALON THE PRINCESS MA- THILDE . Victor du Bled POEMS OF THH WEST: By the Rivers of Gold ..Alfred A. ‘Wheeler The Old Santa Fe Trail ....Richard Burton Sigrran Luilaby Marjon_W. Wildman Suliset in the Redwoods..John Vance Cheney A Whiff of Smoke ..Herbert_Quick GILBERT STUART'S PORTRAITS OF MEN. 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