4 v'l -S i 1 nfr'fyY ill i Tllif J AMES G. DOYLIfJ, Publisher. The Vadesboro Messenger and Wadesboro Intelligencer Consolidated July, 1888. PRICE, 81 a Year. ' SERIES-VOL .-NO. 42. Wadesboro, N. C, Thursday. April 28, 1898. IV HOLE NUMBER 95 ea mi ffr ne i 0 el id ho Your friends may smile But that tired feeling , Means danger. It . Indicates impoverished - And impure blood. This condition may ' Lead to serious illness. : It should be promptly ; ,- Overcome by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, Which purifies and Enriches the blood, Strengthens the nerves, Tones the stomach, V Creates an appetite, And builds up, Energizes and vitalizes . - The whole system. Be sure f-et OnTf Hood's. t'AFT. WILLIAM T. SAMPSON. ft f?.' R. T. Bennett. Jno. T. Bennett Crawford Bennett. Bennett & Bennett Att o rneys-aii Law, Wadesboro, - - N. C. Last room on the right In the court house. Will practice in all the courts of the State. Special attention given to the examination and investigation of Titles to Real Estate, drawing Deeds and other instruments, Col lection of Claims, the Managing of Estates for Guardians, Administrators and Execu tors, and the Foreclosure of Mortgages. Will attend the courts of Stanly and Mont gomery Bounties. PromDt attention given to all business in trusted to them. o Covington & Red wine, Monroe, N. C. - "T. L. Caudle, Wadesboro, N. C ovington, Red wine & Caudle, ATTORNEYS - AT - LAW, WADESBORO, N. C. all the State, and United Practice in States Courts. Snecial attention will be eiven toexami nation and investigation of titles to Real Estate, the drafting of deeds, mortgages, and other leeal instruments; the collect ion of claims, and mangementof estates for Guardians, Administrators, ana executors. Commercial. Eailroad, Corporation and Insurance Law. Continuous and painstaking attention will be given to all legal business. Office in the Smith building. W.A.NGRAM,M.D. SURGEON, . Railroad calls by wire promptly attended " Office opposite M ational Hotel. W. F. GItVY, I). D. 8.. (Office in Smith & L dHlap Building. Wadesboro, Norh Carolina. ALL OPERATIONS W ARRANTEE. TEXAS, MEXICO, CAL IFORNIA, ALASKA, or any other point, with FREE MAPS, write to . FqED D. Busy, District Passenger Agent, Louisville & Nashville R.R 3ukWall St., ATLANTA, GA. prepared especially for you, which we mail free. It treats of the stomach disorders worms. nt, that every child is liable to and for which p .. rrcy s r? Vermifuge has been successfully used lor a nan century. Ob bottle by Mil for &t. pg. A S. FEE r, Baltimore, II A. S. HORISON, . DEALER IN 8 o ' o I V I v 1 , : : r lU Watches, Cloclis, EveQlasseB, Spec tacies ana jewelry or ail Kinas re paired on short notice. Inspected Watcnes for S. A. L. E. JL four years. r Fourteen years experience. Can be found in Caraway's store on Wade etreet. . ... PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM ClcanaM mad beaatifia th halt rrouioufl ft nixananl frovth, He Fails to Bestor G&, Htu to it Youthful Colo ; Cuts mp dinM a hair ituwE. ! ) 'e..nd tl.tjt Dni""iiu An Inlerrstlng Sketch of lorn- maatler-ln-CtaierorOnr Kayy. The following interesting article which recently appeared in the "New York Sun" about the new Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, Captain William T. Sampson, -will be read with interest and plsure: The man of all others in the naval service who stands out most prominently in all these preparations for war is Capt. William T. Sampson, Commander-in- Chief of the North Atlantic Naval Sta tion. Up to the time he was appointed President of the Court of Inquiry charg ed with investigating the cause of the Maine's destruction he was comparative ly unknown except in naval circles. His career, while interesting andbrilKant in one sense, had run in a quiet groove, and was not full of those stirring inci dents of life on the water about which people love to read and hear. But how ever little prominence he secured until recently outside of naval circles, the present naval administration knew him to be a man of mettle and ability, and has every confidence that he will give a good account of himself if occasion should arise. Since the Maine was de stroyed he has been highly honored twice, first in his selection as President of the Court of Inquiry, and again in his ap pointment as Commander-in-Chief of the North Atlantic Naval Station. Should war occur another and the great est honor in the authority of the Admin istration will be conferred' on this man of the occasion. He will be nominated to the Senate by the President as the Admiral in "command of all the naval forces operating against the enemy of the United States. Up in Wayne coun ty, N. Y., they call him "Billy" Samp son. When he goes back to that place', the home of his boyhood, on occasional visits he is not the calm,digniiied,studious looking officer who, to those not better acquainted with him, is considered cold and distant. He is still "Billy" Samp son, about whom there is no suggestion of gold lace and epaulets, and who is wholly lacking in that reserve which is so noticeable to strangers. Capt. Sampson was born in Palmyra, Wayne County, February o, 1840. He is four months younger to the day than Commodore Winfield Scott Schley, who has just been assigned to the other im portant naval command on the Atlantic coast, the flying squadron. Unlike Schley, the new Commander-in-Chief of the North Atlantic Station does not come of distinguished naval lineage, nor in fact, of a prominent family. He is the first of his line to attain distinction George Sampson, his father, was a day laborer up in Wayne County, and the early life of William, his son, -was not the pleasan test and easiest. Frequently he accompanied his father on the tramps from one farmhouse to another in Wayne county, helping to split and pile wood and do other hard work. In his spare moments he studied the few text books at his command and 'managed to attend the public schools in the county at in tervals. Old fquire William H. South- wick, of Palmyra, liked young Sampson for his energy and ambition. The squire was a friend of E. B. Morgan, who rep resented in Congress the district which includes Wayne eounty. Represents tive Morgan had the right to appoint a midshipman to the United States Naval Academy, and when Squire Southwick heard this he exerted himself in young Sampson's behalf. . This was in 1857, and Sampson went to Annopolis in September of that year and doiined the natty uniform of a mid dy. t our years later, less than a year before the beginning of the civil war, he was graduated at the head of his class. The opening of hostilities fonnd him on the frigate Potomac, with the rank of Master. Capt. Sampson was too young a man to get command during the war, but he conducted himself in a manner that won him promotion 10 a Lieutenan cy in July, 1862, and while holding that commission he served on the practice ship John Adams at the Naval Academy, on the iron clad Patapsco of the South Atlantic blockading squadron, and on the steam frigate Colorado, the flagship of the European squadron. - Capt. Sampson, then a. Lieutenant, was the executive officer on the ironclad Patapsco on Jan. 16, 186 j. His boat was a part of the blockading fleet be fore, Charleston. The rebels knew that sooner or later the boats or the Union fleet which were doing blockade duty would seek to enter the harbor and com pel the surrender of the city or reduce it, and for days they spent all their time, laying submarine mines and torpedoes preparatory to giving the Union boats a reception that they wouldn't forget. On the niorrimg of the 16th the Admiral of the fleet decided that the time was ripe to get into the. harbor. Of course he suspected that the place was full of mines and torpedoes, and he had to get rid of them in some way. He selected the Patapsco to do the work. She was ordered to enter the harbor searching, for the hidden enemies, and to pick them up or destroy them when she found them. As executive officer, Lieut Sampson had to stand in the most exposed position on the ship, the bridge, and he was there when the boat steamed in. She was hardly in the harbor when she was in range of the rifle bullets of the rebel sharpshooters, and they .opened fire on her. It was a withering fire, and the men on the Patapsco fell before it. Standine exposed, the target for a thousand rifles and with men dropping around you every moment, is a nerve test a good many men would not stand. Lieut. Sampson did. , The fire got hotter and hotter. Sampson ordered the sail- ormen and marines on deck to go below, where they could escape it, and he held his place a lone target for the -bullets that flew about him like bail- in an au tumn storm. Suddenly the firing ceased without any apparent reason. The sharp shooters could be seen on shore holding their rifles, but not firing. A moment or two elapsed. The little ironclad moved slowly through the water on her mission. The sudden stopping of the fire, perhaps, gave the men on the boats a warning that worse was in store for them, but it was too late to retreat if such a thought entered the mind of any man.- Foot by foot the boat moved on. There was an almost dead silence, then a mighty roar, and the boat shot up in the air surrounded by great spouts of water. She fell in pieces. Sheets of flame shot out from her hull, there was another and another explosion then with in her, and she sank slowly in the wa ter. Iyieut. Sampson had been blown a hundred feet in the air and fell in the water yards away from the disappearing hull of his boat. Twenty-five of her crew were with him safe, the others more than seventy in number, had met their death as the Maine men had met their death in Havana harbor. Penned inside the ship, there was np escape for them. .Lieut. Sampson was rescued with the others who were not killed by the explosion, and in a day he was" ready for another experience as dare-devil as the one that he had just gone through. In 1866, while on the "Colorado," Capt Sampson received his commission Lientenat-Commander. From 1868 to 187 1 he was at the Naval Academy, andl in 1872 and the following year was in Europe and elsewhere on the Continent. His first command was the "Alert," to which he was assigned just after he had attained the grade of Commander in 1874. From 1876 to 1878 he was again at the Naval Academy. Ten years later he became Superintendent of the ACad emy and served for four years. , Since the formation of the new navy Capt. Sampson" has commanded two modern ships, the cruiser "San Francis co" and tie battleship "Iowa," the most formidable vessel in the service. He was the "Iowa's" first skipper. It was in the fields of executive work and naval sci ence that Capt. Sampson made his mark. Ordnance matters have been his study for many years, and his thorough knowl edge of modern armor and armament and the use and comparative value of explosives has come from hard study and constant effort. Torpedo work was his especial study about the time of the inauguration of the Naval War College at Newport, where he delivered lectures on the subject. As Inspector of ord nance at the Washington Navy Yard for three years, he was ableto assist in the installment of the present magnificent gun factory and to continue his acquaint ance with big marine rifles. From 1893 to 1894 he was chief of the Bureau of Naval Ordnance. It was Capt. Sampson who, with Lieut. Joseph Strauss, devised and perfected the superposed or double deck turrets, which are to receive their first trial on the new battleships "Kear- sarge" and Kentucky," launched at Newport News recently. In handling big guns Capt. Sampson is in his element. Last September, while the . writer was on the "Iowa," off the Virginia capes, during target practice, he noticed that Capt. Sampson appeared to be the only person on board who thor-. oughly enjoyed the performance, which is not relished by most naval people.and to the peaceable laymen, with his cotton stuffed ears, ,is something that does not happen more than once in his experience if he can help it In civilian dress there is nothing about Capt. Sampson to suggest the naval of ficer. He is slight, a little round-shouldered, and has deep-set, serious-looking eyes that proclaim the student rather than the fighting man. He does not get ruffled easily, and seldom has more to say than is absolutely necessary. Despite the belief among those who have met him casually, he is very approachable and kindly in his speech. To his fellow officers he is known as a man of action, a deep thinker, but quick to get at the bottom of things, and, above all, an of ficer and a gentleman. That he will give a good account of himself in any hostile action that may engage the ships under his command, the President and the Secretary of the Navy are confident. A BATTLE SHIP. Statural Euoagli. 'How did this happen?" asked the sur geon, as he dressed the wound in the cheek and applied a soothing poultice to the damaged eye, - ' 1 "Got hit with a stone," replied the pa tient. Who threw it?" "My my wife," was the reluctant an swer. "Hum; it's the first time ever I knew a woman to hit anything she aimed at," muttered the surgeon. "She was throwing at the neighbor's hens,n replied the sufferer. "I was be hind her." Interesting to the Clergy. Somerville Journal. A minister who used to preach in Som erville had a little boy. A few days be fore his lather left the city to go to his new parish one of his neighbors said to the little boy: "do your lather is eome to work New Bedford, is he?" -. "Uh, no," he said, "only preach. in The Dangers From Spring Which arise from impurities in tbe blood and a depleted condition of this vital fluid may be entirely averted by Hood's Sarsa- paniia. lnis great medicine cures all spring humors, boils, eruptions and sores, ana by enriching ana vitalizing the blood. it overcomes that tired leeling and gives vitality and vigor. iiooa's fills enre nausea, sick headache. biliousness and all liver ills. Price 25 cents. Carcarets stimulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Never sickenr weaken or gripe, 25c. LfLl Cure sick headache, bad taste in tbe jnouth, coated tongue, gas In the stomach, distrust and Indigestion. Do not weaken, but have tonic effect. 25 cents. Tbe only fUU to take -with fiood't S&raaparill. Pills The Kind or Machinery Con tained In The V. S. Ship Mas sachusetts A Floating ma chine Shop aud a Terrible Eu gine of Destruction. Baltimore Sun. . . . . Fort Monroe, va., April 22. I? Admiral Nelson should come back tc earth and see the battle ship Massachusetts be would guess a. hundred times before he would venture to call her a ship. He would more likely take her for some kibd of ma chine shop or blast furnace, resting upon a foundation at the boitom of the water. That such a penderous structure of steel should be afloat would never occur to him. To the old line of battle ship with which Nelson was familiar she beare no lesemblance whatever, and it is difficult to realize that they are iutended for the same purpose, ine oja crait, we are told, walked the waters "like a thing of life." This new fangled battle ship is a thing of death, and looks it every inch. the is as ngly as it is possible to make anything, and the drab war paint .which is now upon her increases her ugliness to the extreme limit- THE NAVAL OFFICER. Lord Macauley said that a naval officer should be a gentlemen and a gentleman and seaman. In the British navy, in the time of Charles II, he added, there were gentlemen and there were seamen but the gentlemen were not seamen and the sea men were not gentlemen. The na val officer who works and fights the Mas sachusetts must be a great deal in ad dition to being a gentleman and a sea man. He must be a machinist, an elec trician, a steam engineer; he must under stand gunnery, the law of projectiles, bal listics and how-to work penumatic and bydiaulic machines. In all these matters, and a great many more, the American naval officer is educated at the Naval Academy, and when he goes abord the Massachusetts he finds the need of all he has learned. The Masachusetts, to the unprofes siononal mind, is more of a vast and complicated machine than it is a ship. She carries no less than eighty-six steam engines, four dynamos, hydraulic ma chine for charging the automobile torpe does and for ventilating the ship, an ice machines and a condenser and electric machine for hoisting and lighting. . We read in history of the terrible broad sides delivered from the hundred gun line of battle ships of the first half of thU century. Lord Nelson mighthave pound ed such a ship as the Massachusetts all day lon with his entire broadside with out injuring her much more than she could be injured by a hailstorm.while one well directed shot from the thirteen-inch turret would have demolished any ship then afloat. THE TURRETS. There are on the Massachusetts six turrets Two of these turrets, one to the fore and the other aft of the middle of the ship, contain the iS-inch guns. These guns, four in number, are almost the most ter rific engines ol destruction upon any ship afloat The turrets in which they are in closed are made of steel as. hard as steel can be made, eighteen inches in thick ness. Their shape makes it most likely that a shell striking one of them would glance off and inflict no damage. The turrets extend fardown into the interior of the ship. They are worked each by special steam engine and are coptrolled by the officer in the turret who can move the structure, guns and all, around by i working a leyer. Thus he can point., the guns to any direction except toward the middle of the ship. GUNS AND AMMUNITION. The guns themslves are thiry six feet long and project out of the turrets far over the decks. This great length is nec essary to get the full force of powder, which is slow burning. The shell used is 13 inches in diameter. It is conical at the extremity, and several feet long and made of hard steel. It weighs 1.25Q pounds, and the powder which propels it weighs half as much. The weight of a projectile used in a gun can be ascer tained approximately by taking the cube of the diameter of the bore and dividing it by two. The ammunition for the big guns is stored far down in the ship under the turret. There ia a hydraulic lift con taining three cylindas. In one of these the projectile is placed and the powder in the other two. The powder is of the browD, hexagonal kind, and one charge is divided and sewed into two serge bags. From the bottom of the turret the charge is shot up to the breach of the guns and rammed home into the guns by a hydraul ic rammer. - THE RANGE. In theory a gun can shoot one mile lor each inch or its calibre. Thus a 13-inch gun is supposed to shoot thirteen miles, a 10-inch gun ten miles, and so on. But in a snip mis cannot De done, because it is impossible to get the necessary elevation. One-half the theoretical distance is nearer the mark. The other turrets of the Massachusetts, four in number, contain 8-inch guns. They are elevated above the big turrers and between them and the smoke stacks. If it were possible to fire continuously and at the same time all the guns of the ship the effect would be tremendous. Each minute one shot would como from the 13-inch turrets, and the four 6-inch guns would be working in proportion, while a hailstorm of steel would come from the twenty 6-pounder rapid-fire guns. QUARTERS OV THB CREW. The protected deck of the ship is almost level with the water. Aboye this the ship is unarmorel. The comparatively light steel plate of which the sides are construct ed are perforated with port holes admit ting light and air into the various mess rooms, offices and staterooms of the senior officers. The steel floors of this and the apartments on the deck below are capet ed with lineoleum. The ceiling are steel and the walls are of the same metal, paint ed white, with here and there a portiere over a door. On the deck under the pro tected armor the junior officers have their staterooms and the crew their sleeping and living quarters. These are lighted by electricity and ventilated by blowers. There are no outside openings, but the quarters are fairly comfortable. There are washrooms and bathrooms, and in each stateroom there is a -writing desk and some other little furniture. On this deck also is a pirson, which is j a small, room, lighted and ventilated through a perforated door. Going through the interior of the ship is almost like go ing through a succession of burglar-proof safes. The doors, many of them, are like the safe doors, and upon the collision signal being sonnded, which is the ''siren," or fog horn, and certain rattles, all these doors must be closed, and when closed water cannot pas from one compartment to another. . - OFFICERS NOT JINGOES. The war spirit among naval officers seems to have been exaggerated. It is said that there is less war talk oa board the men-of war than elsewhere, and the officers, while standing by to do their dutv. and clam and unexcited. and . the silly jingo spirit is entirely absent The desire to fieht seems to manifest itself more among the bluejackets than among the officers, and they want to avenge the Maine. They do not appear to be paticu larly zealous about Cuba lib re. BOMB FOR THE PRESIDENT. PROCLAMATION BY PRESIDENT. THE I NASHVILLE FIRES SHOT FIRST An lufernal Machine Sent to the White Honse, But its Nature Was Discovered. Washington, April 22. An infernal machine was sent to the President today. Fortunately its character was suspected, and measures taken to prevent its explo sion and no harm was done. The inci dent was carefully concealed and all ef forts are being made to capture the sender. There was nothing to sug gest from whence it came and no clue was afforded as to the villian who sent it . The machine was inclosed in a harm less-looking cigar box. An mgenu ous contrivance had been arranged so that when the lid of the box was opened there would be a flash of powder which would explode a stick of giant powder, sufficient to blow a man to pieces. Lieut. Cross, in charge of the While House police, to whom the machine was handed,' discovered its nature and took precautions to render it harmless. He soaked it thoroughly in a tub of water until the contents were thor oughly saturated, and then opened it. As a result of this incident additional measures will be taken to guard the Ex ecutive Mansion. The police force was doubled, and tomorrow it is expected that a detail from the district militia will form an additional outside guard to the approach to the White House grounds. Deeming- Sufficient Occasion to Exist, He Issnesa Call For Vol unteers to the Aggregate Num ber or 125,000, to Serve Two Years, Unless Sooner Dis charged. Washington, Aprl 23. The Presi dent to-day issued the following procla mation calling for 125,000" troops to serve two years: By the President of the United States. A Proclamation: Whereas, a joint resolution of Con gress was approved on' the 20th day of April, 1893, entitled "Joint resolution for the recognition of the independence of the people of Cuba, demanding that the gov ernment of Spain relinquish its authority and government of the island of Cuba and to withdraw its land and naval for ces from Cuba and Cuban waters, and directing the President of the United Stales to use the land and naval forces of the United States to carry these resolu tion into effect," and Whereas, By an act of Congees?, en titled "An act to provide for temporarily increasing the military establishment of the United States in time of war and for other purposes," approved April 22, 1898, the President is authorized, in order to raise volunteer army.to issue his proclama tion calling for volunteers to serve in the army of the United States, Now, therefore, I, William McKinley, President of the United States, by "vir tue of the power vested in me by the constitution and the laws, and deeming sufficient occasion to exist, have thought fit to call forth, and hereby do call forth , volunteers to the aegresrate number of 125,000, in order to carry into effect the purpose ol the said resolutions, the same to be apportioned, as far as practicable, among the several States and Territories and the District of Columbia, according to population and to serve two years, un less sooner discharged. The details for thi3 object will be im mediately communicated to the proper authorities through the War Department In witness whereof. I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done at the City of Washington.this 23rd day of April, A. D., 1898, and of the Indepen. dence of the United States, the 122nd. (Seal) ,Wm. Mckinley. By the President, John Sherman, Sec retary of State. Captures the Spanish Steamer Buena Ventura With a Crew of Twenty men Prise Crew Plac ed on Board the Spanish Ship. Key West, April 22. The first Spanish prize is the steamer Buena Ventura from Pascagoula, Miss., for Rotterdam with luncber. The Nashville fired a blank shot, which the Spaniards ignored. This was followed by a shot from a six pounder. The Bue na Ventura then surrendered with her crew of twenty men. The Nashville towed her prize into this harbor at 11 o'clock this morning and put a prize crew on board. Both ships are lying well out in the stream The news of the capture of the Spaniard set the people of Key Wert frantic with enthubiasm. All works has been suspen ded and the docks are crowded with peo ple. The Nashvill is in charge of Comman der Washburn Manard, of Tennessee Rayal auk th lo4 pin, :.o'4j FQVDZn Absolutely Pure aoMi iwm ptn? co.. ww yowc FACTS ABOUT HAVANA. It Was Founded Before James town and Its Present Popula tion Is About 350,000 who is the only southern command I Excljange. in the navv. Sfininr TCn-sitm T P M xiavaua i Cruder, ol the Nashville, is from Vick mosjt unportr-Schy of $he, West In- burg, Miss. 1 he Spanish steamer Buena Ventua, captured by the United States gunboat Nashville, is a tramp steamer hailing from Bilboa, Spain. She belonged to the Sarrinaga line. On March 29 she arrived at Pascagoul, Miss., from Havana, and was on the way to Pensacoia, Fla, to load for Holland when captured. Havana is "the capital of Cuba. It is dies and one of te priari j commer- ciai mans 01 America, the said BLOCUADE PROCLAMATION. President McKlulev's Official Announcement oflhe Enforce ment of the Resolution by Con gress Washington, April 22. The follow ing proclamation, announcing a blockade of Cuban ports, was issued to-day: By the President of the United States. A proclma ation: Whereas, By a joint resolution passed by Congress and ap proved April 20, 1898, and communicated to the government of Spain it was demand ed that said government at once relinquish its authority and government in the island of Cuba, and withdraw its land and naval force from Cuba and Cuban waters; and the President of the Uunited States was directed and empowered to use the en tire land and naval forces of the United States, and to call into the actual service of the United States, the miliU of the several States to such extent as might be necessary to carry said resolution in to effect; and Whereas, In carrying into effect saip resolution the President of the United States deems it necessary to set on foot and maintain a blockade of the north coast of Cuba, including all ports on said coast between Cardenas and Bahia Hon da. and the port af Cienfugoes on the south side of Cuba, Now, therefore,!, William McKinley, President of the United States, in order to enforce the said resolution, do hereby declare and proclaim that the United man at the telephone exchange'myhuf - States of America have instituted and band, please." "Number, please," said the polite operator. "Only the fourth, you impudent thing!" snapped back the tair telepnoner; and wnen me operator i , . . , 1 : v . 1 .1 : v. 1 : 1 iauea vo cnecK a aiiKuuy auuiuic smuc, the bell rang viciously What the Drums Say. Hark! I hear 1 he tramp of thousands, And of armed men the hum; Lo! a nation's hosts have gathered Kound the quick alarming drum Saying, "Come, Freemen, come! Ere your heritage be wasted," said quick-alarming drum. "Let me ol my heart take counsel; War is not of life the sum ; Who shall stay and reap the harvest When the auhinin days shall come?" But the drum Echoed, "Come! - Death shall reap the braver harvest," the solemn-sounding drum. 'But when won the coming battle, What of profit springs therefrom? What if conquest, subjugation. Eveu greater illsjiecoine?" liut me tirnni Answered, "Come! You must do the sum and prove it," the Yankee-answering drum. What if, mid the cannon's thunder, Whistling shot and bursting bomb, When my brothers fall around me, Should my heart grow cold and numb?" But the drnm Answers, "Come! Better there in death united than in life a recreant come!" said Situated on the northern shore of the island, on an inlet of the Gulf of Mexico, ' its harbor is one of the finest in the world. The entrance is through a nar row, strongly fortified channeV' three eighths of a mitlong. The channel opens into a larTe'basin capable of ac commodating 1,000 vessels of any size. Havana was founded in 15 19. Its pop ulation is about 250,000. . Railroad lines run from Havana to Cardenas, Cienfuegoes, Matanzas and other important places in Cuba. Since 1751 yellow fever has broken out frequently in the city and its ravages are severe during the hot months. With the exception of tobacco fac tories, Havana s manufactures are un important More than a hundred fac tories there are engaged in the haudling of tobacco and many of them are of large size. An extensive trade in exporting tobacco is done. Most prominent among the public buildings are th& opera house, one of the largest in the world; the Cathedral, built in 1724, containing, it is believed, the remains of Christopher Columbus, trans ferred from St. Domingo in 1796, and the palace of the Governor-General of the island. Its public parks and prpmen ades are among the most remarkable in the world. The city has a university, an excellent botanital garden and a number of scien tific, educational and benevolent institu- tions. Amenities of Journalism in Kan sas. Kansas City Journal. The Galena Post failed to issue the other nieht, and its explanation of the cause in a subsequent issue is something verv funny. It charged tn at tne rival papers in the town conspired to get its printers drunk, and. having eot the entire offl ce force into a joint, plied them with whiskev until thev became unable to re port for duty. The other papers deny the charge and say that The Post gang gov . .. ... i -ii 1 ' lull ot tneir own iree win ana accoru 111 celebration of something they had not had for a long time before a pay day. Rhnmatism Cured. . Mv wife has used Chamberlain's Pain Balm for rheumatism with great relief, and I can recommend it . as a splendid liniment for rheumatism aud other house hold use for which we have found it val uable. W. J. Cuyler, Red Creek. N. Y. Mr. Cuyler is one of the leading mer chants of this village and one of the most prominent men in this vicinity. W. G. PhiDDin. Editor Red Creek Herald. JTor sale by J. A. Hardison. "I want," said the excited Chicago wo- Thus they answered hoping, fearing, Some in faith, ana doubting some, Till a trumpet-voice proclaiming. Said, "My chosen people, come!" Then the drum, Lo, was dumb, For the great heart of the nation, throbbing, answered, "Lord, we come!" Bret II arte. In 1898 mv wife went East and was at tacked with rheumatism- She received no relief until she tried Chamberlain s Pain Balm. Since that time we have never been without it We find it gives instant relief in cases of burns and scalds and is never failing for all rheumatic and neuraleic pains. D. C. Brant Santa Ynez, CaL For sale by J. A. Hardison. NT SCROFULA. One of America's most fa mous physicians says: "Scrof ula is external consumption." r t t -1 1 r t ocroiuious uiuarai arc onm fhfMfffl. hilt thv y 9m r . 2 lack: nerve iorcc, strong rones, stout musou ano power iu resist disease. For delicate children there is no remedy equal to will maintain a blockade of the ports on the north coast ol Cuba, including the ports on said coast between Cardenas and Bahia Honda and the port of Cieulugeos on the south coast of Cuba, aforesaid, in pursuance of the laws of nations appli cable to such cases. An effective force will be posted so as to prevent the en trance to said ports. No vessels will be allowed to enter said ports, and if the same vessels shall attempt to enter, a second time, any blockaded port, she wil be captured and sent to the nearest con venient port for such proceeding against her and her cargo a prize, as may be deemed advisable. Neutral vessels lying in any of said ports at the time of the establishment of said blockade will be allowed 30 days to issue therefrom. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal ot the United States to be affixed. Done at the City of Washington, this, 22d day of April, A.D., 1S98, and of the Independence of the United States the 122d. William McKinley By the President, John-Sherman, Sec. of State. ElTecl of The War. "It has been said, and is pretty gener ally believed,'' says the Charleston News and. Courier, "that a war with Spain would produce no goodforthe South, but there is an Eastern man who takes a dif ferent view. Mr. T. O. W hitworth is a manufacture interested in cotton mills of the South. He has recently been in the South and in his return to his home pas sed through Charleston, where he was interviewed by the News and Courier. Mr. Whitworth said: " 'Let me make one predicti jn in case of war. I am not a war man, but 1 am for sustaining the country's honor. If we do have war and a few hundred thou sand volunteers come down South and see what a country yon have here, it will be followed by the biggest tide of immi gration you ever saw. They will go home and sell their high-priced worn out farms and come down here and buy your cheap farms by the thousands. They have never heard of good farming lands worth only five to ten dollars an acre, and when they see them under friendly circumstances they will come back and settle. Futher more, capital will come here to develop your indus-tnes and you will be gainers bv it in the lone run. So if I was a South ern man with interests to develop I would sav. let the war go on. I ounsts are all verv well, but thev never come oacs: ana settle, you want people of the middle class who want homes and Know a good tn ing when they see it' m Practically Applied. Tid-Bits. A teacher asked a little boy to spell responsibility." which he did. "Now, Tommy," sayl the teacher, "can you tell . m M -r t "Yis. mum ' answered 10m my. -11 1 had onlv lour buttons on my trousers, and two came on, an me responsioiuiy would haug on the other two. M. L. Yocum, Cameron, Pa., says "I was a suHerer lor ten years, - trying uioai au kinds of pile remedies, but without success. DVitt's Witch Hazel Salve was recom mended to me. I used one box. It has ef fected a permanent cure. As a permanent cure for oiles DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve has no equal. J. A. liaraison. The Most Favorable Season To cure catarrh is in the spring. During the winter the patient is likely to take fresh cold and have a set back. But if treatment is be gun in the spring aud contiuued into the summer, nothing need be feared for the succeeding winter. Of course, ft all depeuds on the medicine. There are a great many catarrh medicines which relieve the most disagreeable symptoms tempo rarily. Pe-ru-na cures more slowly but also more permanently than this class of medicines. A course of Pe-ru-na during the spring, will cure catarrh more quickly than any other season. Mr. Walter II. Tucker, Concord, N. H., wriUs Dr. Hart man as follows: "When I began taking your medicines four years ago I was suffering with chronic ca tarrh. I had taken nearly two doz en bottles of so called catarrh cure without much relief. Pe-ru na cured the night' sweats and dizzi- have had say it Baved ness: it cured tne coun 1 I can from my cradle; my life' Dr. Hartman has published in book form a series of lectures on va rious phases of chronic catarrh, which he calls "Wlntr Catarrh." This book will be sent f ree to any address by The Pe-ru-na Drug Maufacturiug Company; Columbus, Ohio. To the loiut. Clarksville, Ky., Leaf-Chronicle. Aunt Cherry Mallory was recently put . . tl 1 A. 1 on the witness siana 10 ieu w se knew aobut the annihilation of a hog by a railway locomotive. After being sworn she was asked by the lawyer if she knew the traia killed this hog. "Yes," she , said, "I seed it." "Well," said the lawyer, "tell the court in as few words as possible all you know I about it" "I kin do dat in a mighty few words," said Aunt Cherry, clearing her throat acd, with one eye on the judge and one on the lawyer, she said: "It jus tooted and tuck "im." . The Usual Thing. Philadelphia Times. mtt'S hmi1lsinn S Little lan.es had been telling a visitor aMMsannannan 3 that his f father had got a new set of false 2 teeth. of Cod-liver Oil with Hvoo- WA "Indeed." said the visitor ."and what wi old set?" eplied little James, "they'll cut 'em down and make me wear A little boy asked for a bottle or "get np in tne morning as last as you can, - me drimgist recognized a household name for "DeWitt's Little Early Risers," and give I him a bottle of those famous little pills tor constipation, sick headache, liver and stomach troubles. ' J. A. Hardison. 'em. phosphites of Lime and Soda. will he do with the o S It fills out the skin by putting: w "Ob, I s'pose," r S c-ood flesh beneath it, It makes v A r- -t-- j t c: 9 A ucuucu nu oy infcum nut y jg blood. It creates an appetite $ tor xood and grves tne body g a power enough to digest it. Be f. sureToueetSCOTTSEmul- The farmer, the mechanic and the bicy cle rider are liable to unexpected cuts aud bruises. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve is the best ihinz to keeo on hand. It heals quick ly, and is a well known cure for piles. J. A. Hardison. - sion. 4 50c and $1.00 ; H dntgghta. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chamists, New York. $ l - A tomid liver robs yon of ambition and ruins your health. DeWitt's Little Early Risers cleanse the liver, cure constipation and all stomach and liver troubles, j. a. Hardison. ALWAYS KEEP 01 BAUD k aa . na THERE IS RO KiaO OP PAII OB ACHE. INTERNAL OR EXTERNAL, THAT PAIR-KILLER WILL ROT RE LIEVE. LOOK OUT FOR IMITATIONS AND SUB STITUTES. THE GENUINE BOTTLE BEARS THE NAME, PERRY DAVIS A. SON. A Sort of Dentist. . London Tid-Bits. Tramp I called to see, lady, if I could do sum work for ye. Kind Lady What can, you do? Tramp I'm a eori of dentist, mum; I want ter advertise; so 1 11 put a set ot teeth into a good pie fer no thin.' I was reading an advertisement of Chamberlain Colic. Cholera and Diar- ihoea Kemedy in the Worcester Enter- 1 prise recently, which leads me to write this. I can truthfully say I never used any remedy equal to it for colic and : diarrhoea. I have net er had to u&ejwora than one or two dosjs to cure the worst case witn myseit or cnuaren. w. a. Stroud, Popomoke City, Md. For sale by J. A. Hardison. When biloua or costive, eat a Cascaret candy cathartic, euro guaranty-!, tc, zoc.