11 f i ft ' A ?' a y A HAENETT AND JOHNSTON CUMBERLAND AND SAMPSON 'I'liUVfc. 4.LL, HU-Mitf; li...L r.--T I ti A I' WUIt-il la OUU1V' VOL. VII. NO. 9. DUNN, N. C, AUGUST 2f 1898. TY M VI f (ien. Merritt Has Issued a Proclamation Defining the New Government. PIS Bill H FAII Cubans t.c Lay Down Their Arms- Trouble Brooding in Santiago. The Philippine Qistlon Viewed Abroad. Spain's Hopes and a - uireaxs. Vesuvius A special dispatch to The New' York World from, Manila says: "Ge'ueral Illerritt has prepared a proclamation to ithe natives, which provides a scheme o government for Manila and sur rounding territory and other island places in our possession, tlia chief ?jpoints of which are: Rigid protection tfo all in person, religion, municipal laws, . tribunals and local institutions for punishment of crime to remain until further notice (except where in compatible with military rule), subject to supervision of American general; jprovosVniarshal and sub-provosts to be appointed with power to arrest civil as well us military offenders; open trade rfor neutral nations; public property to bo rigorously protected; no interfer- ence w ith the people, so long . as they preserve peace. " General Merritt oc cupies the Governors palace. , The War Department has made pub lic the order sent to General Merritt, zegardiug tho .occupation of the' city of Manila, by the American forces. The order follows: "Washington, August 17, 1808. Major General Merritt, Ma nila, Philippines. The President di rects that there must be no joint occu pation with the insurgents. The United ; j -rrJ5u. . .. v .11 lit nsW MANILA HARBOR AND THE DEFENSECAPTURED BY THE AMF.RICA.N3. States in possession of Manila City, Manila J'ay and harbor.'must preserve the peace and protect the persons and property within the territory occupied by their military and naval forces. The inaurf-reuts and all others must recog nize the military occupation and au thority of the United States and the cessation of hostilities proclaimed by the President. Use whatever means, in your judgment, are necessary to this end. All law-abiding people must be tieatad alike. By order Secretary of War. II. C. Corbin, Assistant Sec retarv. " THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. Indications Point to the Retention of the Islands by the United States. The Vienna correspondent of Tho X,ondon Times eays : "Tiie develop ment of the Philippines question will foe watched here with the keenest in terest. Circumstances appear to point to the retention of the islands by Amer ica. The fact that Senator Davis, who is a public advocate of complete annex ation, and Secretary of State Iay, a ; The Cable Once More Free. -The Western Union Telegraph Com pany's central cable office at New York announces that all censorship on cable messages Iils been abolished. The Commercial Cable Company makes the following announcement: "We are ad vised that censorship has been raised on ali commercial code and cipher messages to and from Cuba, Porto Rico and all the West Indian Islands. " The Texas Republican. Tho Republicans of Texas ) reoently held their State convention , in Fort Worth. The platform favors the im mediate construction of the Nicaraguan Canal, owned and controlled by the United States and favors an increase in our army and navy. It approves .the fianexation of the Hawaiian Islands. Counterfeiters Arrested. The officials at Decatur, Ala., have captured two counterfeiters, Frank Mason and Albert Larson, with their outfit of goods, dies, etc. That section of the country has been flooded with counterfet silver, principally quarters, for some time. Ships Ordered From Key West. With the exception of the gun-boat Princeton and the monitor Monitono mah, which were sent to Dry Tortugas ail the ships the fleet have been or dered to Norfolk without delay, and manv have alreadv departed. The na val base has been transferred from Key West to Norfolk. In a quarrel over a game of marbles between Jimmy Johnson, white, aid Cbas. vood, pol., 9 former was EXCHANGE FELIGlIflTlOKS. in xTupxiort.- y , supporter of the Hawaiian" policy, ore appointed commissioners is regarded as indicating that President McKinley favors their retention. "The papers generally expect that Russia's attitude will prove an impor tant factor in the situation. The Ger man press has raised the bogie of in tervention talk and of the United States sounding tho European powers on the question of annexation. America has already given indica tions that she would unhesitatingly re sent interference without waiting to count the cost. It is recognized that the American is a very different sort of man from the Turk, for example, and might, if an attempt were made to in timidate, suddenly transfer that con flict from the diplomatic sphere to one in which it would be extremely difficult to maintain eithar a concert of the powers or an East Asian driebund. "Moreover, any such interference would only hasten an anti-American alliance, which tho powers are anxious to prevent, besides giving tho United States Japanese sympathy, therefore, it is probable that the powers, dis tracted by mutual jealousies, will hesi tate to cause aa open breach with what the Fremdenblatt describes as 'a gi eantic world power, whose conscious- ness of innato strength hi immenselj increased by its present victory." Trouble Brooding. The conditions at Santiago are caus ing a great deal of uneasiness at the War Department and it is believel that more troops will bo ordered there very soon. Already orders have been is sued directing tho Fifth Regular In fantry, now at Tampa, to proceed at once to Santiago. Inquries have been made as to tho condition of the immune regiments which have not " yet sailed with a view of sending them there, also. The goveiniment intends to take vigorous measures to preserve the peace and keep order in Santiago and the territory under United States control Was Not Intended to Offend. Offical and leading papers, of Berlin, display anxiety to show that the re moval of Governor General Angustin from Manila was in no way intended to offend America, but was a mere act of courtesy, After the Spanish Residents. The natives of Porto Rico show a dis position to persecute the Spanish res idents and several minor riots have occurred there. At Yauco the natives threw stones and bricks into Spanish shops in retaliation for outrages com mitted within the Spanish lines. The military has been ordered to suppress these demonstrations and punish the offenders. Vesuvius in Eruption. A special from Naples says the Vesu vius is again in a state of active erup tion. Four streams of lava are flowing down the mountain side at the rate of 400 yards an hour. Tho chestnut trees on Mount Somma have been buried. Constant explosions a;e heard in the central crater, which is emitting smoke and flames. Aguinaldo's Administrative Capacity. The Madrid correspondent of the Lon don Times says: Letters from thePhilip pines bear remarkable testimony, as coming from hostile Spanish sources, to the administrative capacity and ad mirable organization of the Tagalo in surrection, under Aguinaldo Wants a Coaling Station. The London Daily Mail's Odessa correspondent says he hears on incon testible authority, that Russia has opened pourparle with Spain for the cession of a coaling station in the Phillipines. Summoned P.efore a Court of Inquiry. Commandant Comte Fernidad Wal sin Esterhazy. the alleged author of tbo borriean i'J liio Dreyfu- cr.se, wilt be bumiaoned before a court of inquiry, whose composition will bo determined by tke Paris military authorities, THE, TIE THVf BIND?. dent Faure lAcnange Direct Felicitations. President McKinley and President Faure of France, oxchauged direct fe licitations over the relations of the two countries and expressions of nintual esteem of the two yhief eXeCUtiv-63 oil the. tfth, Tilts occasion was the cptj' bfif cl & heW tjttift ristwgiTu Cape Cod, lHtt?, ilaVre, on the French VjVAst, and the wires were connected to effect a through circuit between the White House at Washington and the President's palace at Havre. The mes sage from M. Faure was as follows: To His Excellency, Mr. McKinley, President of the United States t It affords me special pleasure to inauRil rate tho nv submarine communication Which unites tttore directly than heretofore oir ttfo Countries by addr'e.-'fing to yoli dri eipreesiori of the feeling of SfDere pympnthy existing between the French republic and the repuouc or tne United States. I desire also to renew to you, Mr. President, the assurance of my high esteem and constant irtenashlp. (Kignwd) Felix Faube. A mlnuto later, at 10:33, President McJiinley sent the following response: To 1113 Excellency, M. fattSe, President of thi Republic of Frances I am happy to believe that e" very ividitlda to tho n.eans of eomMuaicatlott bot ween our two collntri-is crtn serve only to keep alive GENERAL WESLEY MEBSlf t (He has hoisted the American flag In Ma nila and assumed control of affairs.) and to strengthen that feelint? of cordial Rood will Which has so strikingly character ized the relations both in early and in recent times. Teimit me, Mr. President, most heartily to reciprocate your expressions of esteem and friendship. Signed William McKixlky. The ceremony is a result of an ar rangement made many weeks ago between President McKinley and Am bassador Cambon. It was the call for this purpose which first started con jecture as to France being the nation to initiate a peace movement between the Unjted States and Spain. Cubans to Lay Down Their Arms. There have been conferences be tween Estrada Palma and other rep resentatives of the Cubans with officials of the United States government, rel ative to the Cubans and what could be done with them. Mr. Palma advised that the United States would not con sider the questiou of compensation of tlin'Ciiban troorja. He was told that the best thing the Cubans could do was to advise the men in , arms to disband, retire to their homes and eDgage in peaceful pursuits. Emissaries have al ready been dispatched to Cuba with a view of carrying out the desires of the United States government. These emissaries will try to persuade the Cuban leaders that resistance to United States authority would result only in further disaster and distress to Cuba. Spain's Hopes and Threats. The Madrid correspondent of the London Standard says: Spain and her continental patrons still hope that the United States may be induced not to take advantage of the conquest of Ma nila, but will be satisfied with coaling stations, trading privileges, eto. Should her retention of Manila be in sisted on, the United States may meet more trouble even than Japan in secur ing the results of her victory over China and at the hands of the same powers. " Four Men KiUed by the Fall of a Cornice. Four men were killed and five others badly injured, at Philadelphia, by the collapse of a cornice on the new build ings in course of erection., at 475 and 477 North Fifth street. Alabama Democrats. The Democratic convention for the. Third Alabama district, which met in Union Springs, re-nominated Hon. H. D. Clavton. Declined to be Responsible. A belated despatoh from Manila, ex plains that Governor General Angustin diad not "quite abdicated," and says: "The Governor only declined to be re sponsible for the consequences when he found that Spain was not sending him help. He retained his position, but practically washed his hands of the lighting. A Madrid despatch construes this as an insubordination and the Ga zette, will now publish an order to supercede him. It is rumored that confidential instructions have been given to his successor to resist to the utmost, hoping to gain the world's ad miration and possibly, assisitance in securing a favorable termination." The American I Bar Association re cently met in Saratoga, New York. Includes the Archipelaja. The Hong Kong correspondent of the London Daily Mail, says: "The terms of capitulation of Manila as agreed up on between General Judemes andGeu eral Merrett. include the cession of the Phillipme Archepeligo to the Uuited states." . Private Aicnzo Andrews,- Company T, One H'dum-ei! and Sixtieth Indiana. Kegimeat, was fhot and killed by Sam Hall, & negro saloonkeeper, in Blood, field, near Newport Ntw, V&, ' " 1U Hundreds of Thousands of People Along the Riv er Banks and on Vessels of all Kinds SEVEN" I IffilffllS - 1 J . n I "BIB The Spanish Residents of Porto Rico Terror Stricken by Depredations of Natives. Foreign Policy Convention. Deeds of a Georgia - Negro. Pitiable Condition New York; N. I.j (Special). Hun dreds of thoiisands of people along the bauke of the Hudson; and thousands on all styles of river craft, blended their shouts m a royal welcome to the returned. north of the Atlantic squadron under commiind of Kear Admiral camp- sor., and as fine an August day as could bo desired wai nature's tribute to the return or tho 'victors. For almost three hours .steam whistles of all sizes, steam sirens and small guns along the shores, shrieked and boomed in the effort to display the heartfelt en thusiasm for the home coming of the naval heroes with their battle-scarred ships. Bv y o'clock the big, dull-looking fighting ships, looming high aboVo the pietureVque.coufusion of smaller eraft Which hud come dowu to get a glimpse nf them, were ready for .movement. Strung out ulong their decks, in long, regular lines, were the white uniformed jaekies, with here and there' a blue coated officer ; all strongly contrasted against the sombre, lead-colored armor of the shins. When the hour for the start came, it looked as if it would be impossible for the great ships to make their wav through the perfect jam of the river craft. Vessels of all descrip tions, from the smallest steam launch AmilKAL SAMtSOS. to the great ocean liner, w-" uanked; around the srtuadron. Suddenly there! was a movement on tho flagship New: York, and the big . vessel started for- ward with a slow, stately glide. She! was immediately followed by the Iowa,! Indiana, Ilrooklyn, Massachusetts,, Oregon and Texas in the order named, j It was some time before the vessels could tret into the review formation,! but by the time the New York's prow came in the line with Governor's Is-j land, the other ships had formed in aj regular line. j As the grim-looking battleships movi ed up" the river the crowds became! denser and tho enthusiasm more mark-; ed. At riverside Drive, with its steep,; grassy slope, tho scene was like a vast amphitheatre. Tens of thousands of persons covered the green slope and a the battleships approached, a mighyj eheer arose that reverberated bacfc and forth across the Hudson. At thq bottom of the slope an observation train crawled lazily along, keeping even with the ships; above this the vast sea f hiimunii-7 and crowning mis Lighter With 600 Men on Board Sunk. Tho steam lighter Laura struck a rock near the steel pier and sank in ten feet of water at Santiago recentl y. At th time of the accident she had on board 600 men of the Twenty-third Micbigaji Regiment, who were on their way to the transport-Harvard. No lives weie lost, but an exciting scramble for the shore took place in which many of the men fell in the shallow water. j -The Carrma! of Crime in Arkansas. The carnival of crime inaugurated in Arkansas several weeks ago, eantinueis without abatement. At raragould, Henry L. Bramlet was asleep in his bod, when an unknown assassiu crer't up to his window and shot hini, killing him instantly. A cutting af fray, in which two prominent farmer figure, is reported from Carroll county!. The men fought with knives and one was fatally stabbed. The decomposed bodv of a well-dressed man was found near Blackville, in Conway county. The head wns severed from the body. Advin Strong was found near Mount Pleasant, suffering from a fractured Bkuil, and died without raining con sciousness. At Ilarrisburg two na irroM fonfht over a woman and one is dead and the other injured. Blanco Will Not Hand Over Cuba. A cabinet minister who was inter viewed by a representative 'of the As sociated Press at Madrid, said it wa3 certain that Captain General Blancjo would not hand over Cuba to the Amer icans, since he had expressed a desiro not to do so. Congratulations to Dewey and Merritt President McKinley has cabled to Admiral Powey aad General Merrilt til and the nation! cosgrattiUtioBB t pea tat ir csrwt j JJfttUt, r of the Spanish Prisoners. miirk th$ beginning at the return ol ithe sdukdron. where a. national salute Ifaf 21 gUns was fired, the tbmbj stand ing high, white and solemn, iar auuv the waters of the river, looked to be built upon a foundation of faces. Just at tho point of return there was a momentary lull, as if expectant of the climax. Suddenly, from the sides and turrots of tha battleships there was a vivd flash; fol jowing this a tremendous f oar announc ing the first gun of the national salute. Tho heavy smoke curled and tumbled 1 down towards the water and up into the air" until the ships had been hidden, I but the roar coming asrain and again seemed to rock the waters themselves. It was an imposing spectacle as the big battleships boomed a salute tg the nation- as the Warships saluted tho final restins place of General Grant and the guns that soitnded the knell of Admiral Cerrera's ships at Santiago boomed a reverential obeisance to the dead hero. The salute ended, the return of the squadron along tho line of review was begun; it wis a repe'titon of the en thusiastic scenes an the, way up the river. The" parade of the ships from the time it passed the battery oil its way up the river to the time it re-passed on its way to anchorage off Tompkinsville, . I., occupied just two hours and thirty five minutes. Spaniards Terror-Stricken. A war of retaliation against the Span ish residents of the Island of Porto Eico Within, the American lines is threatened. The natives burned the town of Cota, seven mile3 from Ponce recentlv. The Spadish residents fled. Throughout the surrounding country the Spaniards ard terror-stricken and are appealing to the Americans for pro tection. The shops kept by Spaniards at Ponce which were opoued-. alter the signing of the peace protocol, huve been closed again through fear of the rioters. Editions of twd papers which hysterically domauded veugcauce and the expulsion of all Spanish-born resi dents were sunuressed by t'ae military authorities, who are doing all in their power to allay tho fears of tho Spanish inhabitants. The natives who are fo menting the trouble are of the lowest class ana mauy oi mem are cnmiuuio. Over 25 of the nugleaders in tne turbances have been arrested. dis- All in a Pitiful Condition. The condition of the Spanish prison ers at Santiago, Who were recently sent back to Spain on the hospital ship, Alicante, was so pitiful as to bring tears to the eyes of men not readily moved to tears, A Spanish officer refering to the camp just outside of Santiago, said: "It was not a camp out there, it was a eravovard. Between 2J0 and 300 went into the hospital dailv. Hospit al? It was not a hospital there were no medicines, there were no attend ants. Fortv are dvinz every dav and th trenches are full of the dead. We have saved you many a $2'J for passage money to Spain. That camp has been nearer heil than anything elsa in the war. The are U,00) out there yet, only a thousand came in to day, but they will not last long. Dysentery camp dypeutery we call it, and it is worse than the "plague is car ving them ctfl" 4 Freight Wrecked. The through freight going north oyer the Southern was wrecked in Gastonia, N. C. The engine, tender and two or three box cars passed over a point in the track where piping had been plant ed to allow the water to pass when this portion of the road gave way and a large number of the remaining cars were piled one upon the other and smashed into a mass of timber and debris. Three persons were injured. Deeds of a Georgia Negro. The most fiendish crime in the his tory of Sumter county, or tne wnoie State of Georgia, was committed at Friendship. 12 miles west of Macon, recentlv. Mrs. James McGarrah and ber son James Boone, were murdered by a negro m an with an ax, while they were in their beds. After this double murder the fiend outraged a negro woman, tied her to a tree in the woods and mutilated her fu a shocking man ner. She died also, but not until she had told the murderer's namo. The murdered people were discovered by John Boone, aeon of the murdered woinao, and a crowd at onca started after the fiend. lie was caught and promptly lynched. Thirty-One Deaths on a Conict Ship. The Berliner Post says that during a recent voyage of the Siberian convict ship Angara, from Tieum, Sibera, to Tomsk, capital of the government of the same name, on the Tom, western Sibera, ?A out of 500 prisoners died from suffocation and overcrowding. Celebrated Spanish Painter Dead. The death is Announced at Madrid of Doa Edsrico Madrazo, tho culebrat tdU$UhP lister, & Mi S4tli y tir, ! Oil I i t i Unlimited Contract for Coal Awarded the Pocahontas Coal Co. NEITHER PEACE NOR WAR. i Squabble id Prospzct Over the Settle ment 6? Philippine Question-Neiro Soldier Killed at a 5tM Fatwtain. The Pocahontas Coal Company, of Virginia, i said to have an unlimited Aontract from tbo British government for toaliog ber station! M over the world, and the work has jusitai commenced. The statlo-fis to which cargoes have thus far been Befit, Iontcvideo, in Uruguay; St. Michaels, in the Azores; Kingston, Jamica; Cape town, Africa; St. Vincent and Porto Praya, Cape do Verdes; Singapore, In dia; Buenos Ayres, Argentine Kepub lic; St. Paul de Loanda, Africa, and London. One veesel alone, the Lndra, carried y, 150 tons to Singapore. The discovery has caused a sensation. A Neg ro Soldier Killed at a Soda Fountain. Jim Neely, a negro private in the Twenty-fifth Infantry, was shot and killed at Hampton, CJa. H was refus ed permission to drink at a soda foun tain and became abusive. When re monstrated with for swearing in the presenco of ladies, he assaulted Mr. Will Henderson with his dagger bay onet. Henderson drew a pistol, but it was knocked from his hand and secur ed by the negro who began shooting, A number of citizens joined in the fusi lado and Neely received wounds from which he died. Wade and Butler Relieved. , . Major General Wade, of the Third Army Corps, at Cbickamauga, and Major General M. C. Butler, of the Second Army Corns at Falls Chuxcb, have been relieved of their present du ties, in order to enable them to enter upon their duties as members of the commission charged with evacuation of Cuba by the Spanish troops. A similar order has also been issued in the case of Brigadier General William W. Gordon, of the lourth Army Corps, who has been appointed a mem ber of a similar commission in tho case of Porto Rico.' Neither Peace Nor War. El Liberal, Madrid, publishes re marks made bv Senor Sagasta on the diplomatic and political situation, quot ing the Promoir as follows: "From a legal point of view, the present state of things, is neither peace nor war, but merely a suspension of hostilities. An armistice would haye allowed us to dis pol better tho obscurity of the situa tion; but the United States declined to agree to our making a step further in advance." .Another Ship Load Sent Home. The War Department has received the following cable dispatch, givintr in formation of the departure of Spanish prisoners: "Santiago de Cuba, Aug. 19. "II. C. Corbin, Adjutant-General, Washington. Cabadonza sailed this morning with 2,165 Spanish soldiers, 100 officers, 44 women, 45 children. Two others are loaded and probably will sail this afternoon. Shatter, Major-General." A Squabble in Prospect. The Madrid government has resolved to insist that the capitulation of Manila after the signing of the protocol shall have no effect in the peace negotiations unfavorable to Spain. In any event the government holds that the capitu lation, having been signed by the com mander of the town, does not entail the surrender of the whole of the Philip pines. No More Troops Will be Needed. General Shafter, has informed tho War Department that after consulting with General Lawton, commanding the Department of Santiago, that it will not be necessary to send any more troops to Santiago for the preservation of peace and good order. Spain's Commissioners. The cabinet council has appointed I . . t 1 T- 1 urenerai oonzaies rrarrauo second, la command in Cuba; Rear Admiral Luis Pastor Anclro, who succeeded Admiral avarro, the Spanish commander in Cuban waters, and Marquis do Monto ro, minister of finance in the insular cabinet, as the. commission of e vacua tion for Cuba. Tariff Rates for Porto Rico. Tho President has issued an execu tive order, which was promulgated by the War Department, carrying into ef fect the tariff organizations for Porto Kico. The rate is the Spanish mini mum rates, heretofore enforced in the island. The tobecco schedule is the same as that for Cuba. Instructions That Will Fail. It is rumored that the Madrid gov ernment will instruct tho Cuban com missioners to present a strong case for the recognition of the Spanish claim for compensation for the cession of public works: in Cuba, the compensa tion to take tbo form of saddling upon Cuba the bulk of the Cuban debt ' ex isting iu The Volunteers Mutined. The volunteer troops now garrisoned at Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, Tex., mutined recently at breakfast and marched out of the mess hall in regular order as a protest against the food furnished them. The matter is now under investigation. T Weekly Bank Statement he total bank plearings in the Uni ted States for the week ending Aujuit 11) wre 91.273.103.8:11: Per eant'-iD- creaie, 11.8; excluiiro of Ntw York, 1470,513,11 per ceo.fc UCTIMt, 7.Y. Tetter. Sftlt-Uheum ami Fcrwnt. TT" interne itt hing and smarting, inci-; lout to tlirsiliaseR. is instantly alWted. by applying Chamberlain's L.yc a r-kirt Ointment. Many very - hail cae hav bn permanently rnred by it. lu U rnn.-iUy fficientfor itching piles and a f.ivnritn r.vxlV tov POI f nippi". sort chapped band,, cfcnldain. ;ro and chronic wr yo. 2- c t,-. per bo. Ir. C.vlv'- Condition IN.- d. u in ;11P ta.f. nr.T bur. conT.!"M. Toni'. vei niifiiL''. Thr-y n.i;..ii. .! llii -' bi.xu p-M'.; f...Tl it t- hoit i:i iu iiV- cents p-r p:vl:ng. Firla by N. U. 11aV. Dunn ff. O. Profclonttl Cards. Attorney at Lav. DUNN, N. C. s Will DracticO la all tbo ouurts of thr State wbtre eorvices dired. Z. 11. Jl'LEAlf, Counsellor and Attorney at DUNN, N. C. Practice in all courU. Oolleotiont specialty. TF. E. MUlWniSOlfr , JQNKSUOliO, 11. C. Practices law in Harnett, Moore and? other counties, but not for fun. ij20Ty. ISAAC A. jriTIlCJlSSON Fayettevillk, N. C j Practices law in Cumberland Waff nctt and anywhere ef icen are wacfdL tW Willi WOMEN used VY to think "f malc diseases " cocld only bo , treated after "lo- cal examina tions" by physi cians. 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