THE FRONTIER. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY By The Ekontieh I’iuntinii co. O'NEILL, ~ NEBRASKA. The pence proclamation of the Em peror of China 1b a remarkable mixture Of wisdom and superstition. It declares that continuance of the war wa« ren dered impossible by the gross Incompe tence of the lenders and the terrible condition of the country, and clinches tho argument with the words: "Heaven had not withheld its angry. The sea overflowed the coast and the camps were submerged." An enlightened re form administration would Beem to be imperative In the Celestial realm. Young Mr. Astor Is a line example ol the power of money In literature. Hav ing written a book—which. Indeed, might have been worse—he gets up an elegant copy and sends it to King Oscar by special messenger. Mr. Howells or Mr. Clemens or Mr. Stoddard would have ben obliged to rely on a registered letter post, which would have been very uncertain. But Mr. Astor corners royalty with his messenger and insures a reception. It Is useless for contempo raneous authors to buck against Mr. Astor. Dr. DeSaussure believes that he has discovered that the negro race Is dying out In the United States. He tries to prove hts conclusions by local statis tics which show more deaths than births of colored persons In South Car olina cities. In his deduction he is not supported by the latest census. It may he contended that the development of the American negro has been tardier than his friends anticipated when citi zenship was given to him. Neverthe less, such development is actually tak ing place. The Chilian congress has recently enacted legislation guaranteeing the capitol of the Transandine Railway Company for 20 years at 4V4 per cent, which virtual subsidy will enable the completion of the road between the two oceans. The line will do a great deal for South America. Its completion will mean that the long journey around Cape Horn Is only for cargoes and that pas sengers Instead of prolonging a voyage about two weeks can reach the Pacific from the Atlantic or vice versa in 72 hours. The galta afforded by this route can be Imagined. Chili is brought some thousands of miles nearer the United States and England, and she will be nc longer a remote country. Charles R. Sllgh of Grand Rapids has Just returned from England, where he has been looking over the prospects of establishing a furniture trade in the English market. He is very confi dent from his observations that a sub stantial and. profitable trade can be es tablished if the American manufactur ers will comply with the English ideas of style and finish. It is useless, he thinks, to try to force goods upon the English market which are not built on the accepted lines, but by making nec essary changes goods can be manufac tured here and sold in England in com petition with the English manufactur ers at a substantial profit. It is his purpose to manufacture a line of goods especially for the foreign trade, follow ing Ideas which he gained abroad. An experiment of some importance is reported, made with a view to deter mine, if possible, the origin of natural gas, Irrespective of theories hitherto prevalent. For this purpose dried sea weed was steeped in water which had been freed from air, and on the third day gas appeared, continuing to be evolved in diminishing quantities until the tenth day, when 803 cubic centimet ers had been collected. The evolution had evidently ceased, though after standing two years and a half thirty cubic centimeters more of gas collect ed In the apparatus; the second gas dif fered from the first, consisting, it is re corded. almost entirely of methane— the chief constituent of natural gas— from which it is inferred that this slow secondary decomposition of vegetable matter has some relation to the origin of natural gas. Hall’s Journal of Healthy says: "Don't economize in bath water. Don't economize sleep. Don’t be stingy with fun. Laugh all you can. Laughing •hakes up the system, makes the blood circulate, starts the digestion, warms the feet, relaxes the nervous system— In a word, it rests you all over.” That settles it, If one had nothing to do but accept such advice. But how are you going to laugh when the rent day is «t hand and the money isn’t. Suppose you have a boll, or the blues, or the toothache. Everybody likes to laugh, but most people have got to be worked up into a funny mood. Got to have good digestion, a steady Job, something to eat and something to wear. If every day were a circus and every night a minstrel show, that advice would bring •s many testimonials as a patent med icine. If time were a clown and trouble only a jack-in-a-box, life would be one thrce-score-and-ten-year laugh. But it Isn’t. So far as the advice can be taken, if. It is good; very good. A little Atchison girl was given a picture card at Sunday school, on which was a picture of King David. The next Sunday the teacher asked whom the picture represented. “They say it is King David,” the child re plied, “but it looks like a jack.” A Kentucky poet is comforted by the belief that the blue grass will wave over him when he is dead. Kentucky poets must have more wealth than most poets If they can leave enough to pay for keeping their graves sprinkled dur ing the droughty season. OVER THE STATE, Tiik Crete assembly opened under favorable circumstances. Thk teachers’ institute at Beatrice had an enrollment of 225. (iov. Hoi.comb delivered an address at Auburn on the Fourth. It is said there is not a poor field of small grain in Hurt county. Foil the first time in seven years Pen der is without a woman on the school board. Kki> Ci.oun has decided to allow the presence of saloons, the license being til ,000. Thkiik were ten thousand present in the closing hours of the Heatrice Chau tauqua. Thk populists of Cage county will hold their county convention on the 31st of July. Citizkns of West Lincoln have of late been much agitated over the appear ance of a mad dog. North Loci’ is without a bank, and it is said the town is worthy of an in stitution of the kind. Ainsworth is tearing down her old school house and will erect a modern structure at a cost of #7,000. Watches and ot|ier valuables have turned up missing in some of the towns visited by Wallace's circus. Tiik residence of John C. Martine of Nebraska City was burglarized, and that gentleman's pantaloons relieved of #25. Hon. A. G. Scott of Kearney, who was a member of the national board of \\ orld'a fair commissioners, died last week. Nomk parties in Hurt county are prospecting' for coal, and indications are that success will attend their efforts. The school enumeration of Fremont shows 3,080 children of school age. This gives an estimated population of nearly 10,000. Tub work of a crawfish at Ashland stopped a flouring mill and left the town in darkness by interference with the electric light. A Union Pacific engine struck and killed a man near Silver Creek the other day. He had nothing about him that would lead to identification. IV. E. Jack way recently purchased sixty acres of alfalfa from Lawrence Kelly, a few miles west of Kearney, paying 940 per acre for the piece. Tiik. Smyth Syrup company of Hast* ings has nearly 1,000 acres of sugar j cane under cultivation and giveB em ployment to fifty men in caring for the crop. In the district court of Dodge county Judge Marshall sentenced Hud Coon, who pleaded guilty to uttering forged papers last week, to two years in the penitentiary. Tub state board of transportation has made its findings in the Prairie Home station case against the Chicago, Hock Island & Pacific railroad compa ny in favor of the company. This year's school census in Schuy ler, which has just been completed, by V. W. Sutherland, shows an increase over last year of twenty-seven, there being 1,030 children of school age. A coach load of insane patients, twenty-nine in number, transferred from the Lincoln asylum to the asylum for incurables at Hastings, went out on the Burlington from Lincoln last week. The creamery plant at Genoa was sold by the sheriff to satisfy the de mands of relentless creditors It was purchased by local parties who will set it going if enough milk is pledged to make it pay. Tony IIydock, a saloonkeeper at 330 North Twenty-seventh street, South Omaha, shot and instantly killed Charles Taylor, a colored man of Omaha, who was in the act of carrying away stolen gooda The son of Wesley Loos, of Elwood, about 10 years of age, accidentally shot his brother, 13 years old, with a 33-caliber revolver, the ball penetrated iuto the stomach. The wound is thought to be fatal. What promises to develop into one of the most sensational scandals which has ever agitated Lincoln society came, to the surface last week. It involves a prominent divine of the city and the wife of a leading druggist Miss Vesta Okay, daughter of Hon. E. F. Cray of Fremont, was admitted to the bar. Miss Uray enjoys the dis tinction of being the first lady ever ad mitted to the Dodge county bar. She is a graduate of the state university. The city marshal of Fairmont ar rested two boys aged 8 and 0 years with a stolen horse and carriage. The boys refused to talk or give their names, but it was learned they be longed at Geneva, whither they were taken. 11. A. WniTTKKF.it, the Baptist min ister who was arraigned in the district court of Dodge county on the charge of embezzling 805 from' Esty & Camp of Fremont, pleaded guity and was sent to the penitentiary for eighteen months. Uknkrai. A. A. Avbrh.1., United States army inspector, has recently in spected the Soldiers' and Sailors’ Home ut Grand Island, and reports that he is well satisfied with the present man agement and finds affairs in excellent condition. Phoiubitonists in state convention at Lincoln made the following nomina tions: For justice of the supreme court, A. J. Wolfenberger, of Lincoln; regents of the state university, J. J. liryan of Polk county, Mrs. Anna K. \\ oodbev of Omaha. The Winona Wagon company sued N. Wullenwebcr & Son of Seward for 8980. the price of a carload of wagons. The defendants claimed to have coun termanded their order in season to prevent shipment, and the jury re turned a verdict for 8120 against the plaintiff. M ahtin Roimiss of.Ashland sustained a very peculiar accident While riding' horseback the animal shied, throwing him to the ground. A large bottle which he had in his hip pocket was broken, and several pieces of glass driven into his thigh. Some of the pieces were five inches in length and indicted very serious injury. Fakmkks in the east part of Johnson county along the Missouri river report the sandbars along the river as grown up to a thick mat of Russian thistles. They are consideraby worried over the matter, as there is a probability that their farms will get seeded to the pest this year. Prohibition State Convention. The prohibition state convention closed its labors by nominating the following ticket: For justice of the supreme court, A. J. Wolfbergerof Lin coln; regents of the state university, •I. .1. Bryan of Polk county, Mrs. Anna it. VVoodby of Omaha. The convention had quite a time over the financial plank of the platform, Wolfberger seeking to secure the in sertion of a plank favorable to the free coinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1 without regard to any other nation on earth, and C. K. Bentley opposing it The amendment of Wolfuerger was lost by a tie vote of 61 to 61. The financial plank adopted is as follows: “The money of the country should be issued by the general government only, through government banks of loan and deposit, directly to the people upon ad equate security and at a uniform rate ot interest, it should be a full legal tender for the payment of all debts, public and private, without exception in favor of contract stipulation. We favor a money composed of legal tender treasury notes based upon the credit of the nation, coin being used for sub sidiary purposes only.” Beyond Their Depth. A very sad accident occurred south of Alda on the l’latte river. While a num ber of young men from that vicinity were seining near the nine bridges on Platte river they suddenly came to a deep hole, and two brothers, Tom and Will Pishburn, both being unable to swim, sank and were drowned. The boys were about 24 and 22 years of age, respectively, and unmarried. Their comrades worked hard to save them from a watery grave, but to no avail. Their father, YV. II. Pishburn, one of the best known and respected farmers in that vicinity, was an eye witness of the sad affair. The bodies were recov ered after floating some distance down the river. Another brother, Daniel Pishburn, is a teacher in the Grant] Island schools. Probable July Weather. Frofessor Sweezy reports that the warmest July in the state during the past nineteen years was that of 18tK> with a mean temperature of 78.8 de grees. The coldest July was that of 1801, with a mean temperature of 70.1 degrees. The average mean tempera ture for Nebraska is 74.0 degrees. The warmest day in July, was 1804. The mercury rose to 114 degreea The coldest day was in 1801 when the tem perature fell to 37. The prevailing winds for July are from the south at Omaha and the south east at North Platte. The highest ve locity recorded was 84 miles an hour at North Platte on July 30, 1800. The dryest July during the past nine teen years was that of 1804, when the average precipitation for the state was 1.43 inches. The largest precipitation was that of 1870 when 5.01 inches felL One Maniac Kill* Another. Governor Holcomb has received a let ter of explanation from Dr. Damarell, superintendent of the Hastings Asylum for incurable Insane, in relation to the death of Patient Wood, killed by Car roll. Dr. Damarell says that Carroll attacked Wood June 15, beating him over the head with a piece of stone. Wood was rescued from the clutches of the maniac and taken to his room. For the following two days Wood seemed to be on the road to recovery, but suffered a relapse and died on the morning of June 18. Dr. Damarell is emphatic in his statement that there was no attempt at concealment, but says the utmost publicity was given to the affair. However, it is true that the governor was not informed of the tragedy until after June 20, and then not uniil he had read an account of the affair in the papers. The dispatches from Hastings conveyed the intelli gence that the patient had been killed on the spot and at the time the attack was made. This statement is evident ly wrong. _ Robbed tbe Creamery. Bert Carter and Jess Wilson were ar rested by Sheriff Hunter of Custer coun ty, upon a warrant charging them with stealing about 800 pounds of butter from the Sargeant creamery. After the arrest the butter was traced to where it had first been placed, in W. .1. Wood's cellar, and from there taken in the night to the ice house, where it was found by the officers. It is claimed Wilson had no knowledge of the theft, but believed it was Carter's butter, and that he accompanied Carter for com pany. Carter claims the creamery owed him and would not pay him and that he he took the butter* to get his pay. — Stats Mortgage Indebteilnm. The following is the report of mort gage indebtedness record of Nebraska for the year ending May 31, 1894, from the bureau of labor and industrial sta tistics of Nebraska: No. filled 24,463. FARM MORTIS ACES. Amt I No. satisfied Amt $22,418,260 26 | 22, 3D.*16,8811,739 nil TOWN AND CITY MORTIS AO ES. l',U20..*9,916,606 60 I 7,613.1684,103 58 CHATTEL MORTIS ACES. j 113.187.*23,815,107 01 | 52.068 .. ,?13,:U7,82i 11 | Sheriff and other deeds In foreclosure Ksirm, 1.46i; city, 130. The following are the comparisons be tween 18.4 and 1895: No. filings Amt Ending May 31. 1894.140.279 $55,494,968 17 i Ending May Jl, 1895— 116.106 15,139,116 87 No. satisfied Amt Ending May 3\ 1891. 82,020 $38,611,671 :: Eluding May 31. 1895 . 64,054 33,132,224 Os I Filings more than releases: I No. Amt Ending Mav 31, 1894 . 64,250 *16,883 2114 os I Ending May 3), 1895 .... 52,032 12,006.850 89 | I.ess in 1895 than 1894 .12,198 $ 4,876,444 10 | Saloons Close In New York. [ New York, July 2.—New York was as "dry” as the Desert of Sahara Sun day. There was m huge premium on wet goods, and those who failed to lay in a supply Saturday night suf fered. Sharp at midnight every sa loon in town closed tight and left their bars exposed. Drug stores and res taurants, where drinkables have al ways been procurable, locked their sideboards tight as a drumhead. Quite a building boom is on at Craw ford. A number of costly structures are being erected. ROBBED OF THOUSANDS. TYPEWRITER INVENTOR YOST DE FRAUDED OF MUCH MONEY. IS WORKED BY "MEDIUMS.” Completely at the Mercy of • Gn( of Sharpen—Hts Family Deserted and HU Fortune Squandered—He la Mow Poor and a Physical Wreck—StIU Believes In the Medium Frauds. New \ork, July 8 — Because of his belief in spiritualism and through the impositions of a professional medium, G. \V. N. Yost, the inventor of the typewriter, is living apart from his family in a furnished flat in West Fif ty-fourth street, attended by a friend and provided with none of the luxuries of life which are necessary to a man 70 years old. He has expended time and thousands of dollars in pursuing the ignis fatuus which spiritualists have danced before his eyes. He acknowledges that he is poor and a physical wreck. Yet he still believes in the men who imposed upon him, and declares that he is as certain about the things he believes he has seen as he is that there is a heaven. He was a man of fine intellect, a. man who still has a family who is devoted to him, yet is almost deserted, is scarcely able to talk, much less continue his once brilligtit career. The man who was the prime mover in the conspiracy of mediums is summering at Onsett Bay, Mass. When visiting the world’s fair in Chicago some acquaintances told Mr. Yost that they knew of a young girl named Lizzie Bangs, who was able to secure the most remarkable state ments from dead worthies by means of an ancient and very decrepit typewrit ing machine. Mr. Yost visited the medium and found that pieces of paper were apparently taken from the cylin der of the machine signed with all the names of history from Moses to Gar field. Yost was immensely) interested be cause here was an actual exemplifica tion of his own idea of what spirits could do with a typewriter in case they felt so inclined. Miss Bangs lived on Elizabeth street, Chicago, and Mr. Yost visited her several times and presented her with a new typewriter which did infinitely better work than the old one. But Miss Bangs was an independent medium and it has never been intimated that she was responsi ble for Mr. Yost’s misfortunes. He was, however, convinced that type writing could be done in this way and he made up his mind that in order to have constant communication with the departed he must have a medium of his own. He accordingly sur rounded himself with a galaxy of young men who were represented as excellent mediums. From spirtualistic typewriting to spiritualistic portrait painting was an easy sransition. Mr. Yost became in terested in this branch of occult won ders much as Luther R. Marsh, the prominent New York attorney, be came interested in the spirit portraits produced by Ann O’Delia Dissdebar. He spent thousands of dollars upon the mediums and quarreled with friends who paotested, Mrs. Beech of this city, widow of the founder of the Scientific American, Melville C. Smith, pro jector of the Arcade railway of this city, and Robert Anderson, a wealthy mine owner of Minneapolis, are among the persons who have purchased pic tures from this syndicate of mediums. PROBABLY A FAKE. Reports of a Sensational Religions Blot Lacking all Conflrmatlon. Evansville, Ind., July 8.—Last night a sensational report was sent out from English that there had been a terrible religious riot at a German Catholic picnic at Siberia, an isolated village of Perry county, Thursday afternoon. The report declared that anti-Catholics, mad with liquor, had attacked the Germans, and that 1,000 persons had participated in the con flict which had resulted in three deaths and the injury of over fifty persons, several mortally. To-day telegrams of inquiry were sent to Troy, Cannellton, Tell City, Huntingburg and other points in that vicinity, and all answered that they knew nothing about the reported riot. It looks like a fake. Walt and Householder Scored. Topeka, Kan.', July 8.—The commit tee which investigated the charges against W. S. Wait and M. A. House holder, trustees of the state board of charitable institutions, reported to day, holding them guilty in each case. The reports were unanimous and said that the evidence showed a condition of affairs that was a disgrace and a shame to the state. They continued: “We do not feel it gratuitous to sav that should any member of our fami lies become so afflicted the Topeka in sane asylum under its management of the past two years would be the last place on earth in which we would place them.” Six Lost In a Steamboat Wreck. Memphis, Tenn., July 8.—The Mem phis and Ash port packet Lady Lee sank last night at the head of Island Forty, and Harry Robinson the baker, Peter Watson the barber, a negro roustabout named Ady and three ne gro deck passengers were lost. One of the “Six Hundred” Dead. Jacksox, Mich., July 8.—Thomas Phillips, one of the survivors of the historic charge of the 600 at Balaklava on October 5. 1854, died yesterday at his home in Woodville. Ink Maker Carter Drowned. Hakwick, Mass., July 8.—John W. Carter, the well known ink manufac turer of Boston, was drowned while bathing at the beach here. NO ONE REALLY TO BLAME. Report* of the Expert!* in Regard to the Steanmhlp Colima Dimuiter. Washington, July 8.-— (ieneral Du mont, supervising inspector general of steam vessels, has received from the inspector of the San Francisco district the following report of the loss of the Pacific mail steamer Colima: ‘‘We have investigated the matter of this most deplorable disaster, taking testimony of a number of its surviving passengers and erew, including that of Third Officer O. C. Hansen, who is the only officer saved; and also of others who were competent to speak of the vessel herself. “From the evidence there appears to have been no danger anticipated until five or ten minutes before the ship went down. _ It appears that there was good discipline maintained on board in the deck and the engine de partments, all orders having been obeyed, and we therefore can attach no blame to the third officer, Mr. Han sen. Captain Taylor was in charge on the bridge on the steamer all the morning of May 37 until she foundered and it may have been that he was at tempting to keep her off before the sea, or to wear her around on the other tack when she was caught in the trough of the sea- and thrown on her beam ends. _ But without his testimony or that of his first officer and the chief engineer of the steamer, it is impossible to decide the true cause of the disaster. “With regard to the steamer Colima there can be no doubt that she was a staunch and seaworthy vessel. She was inspected March 15, 1895, and her hull, boilers and equipments found to be in good order. She was examined in dry dock May 14, 1895, and her bot tom found in good condition, and new blades put on her propeller. She was classed.34 L. 11 in “Bureau Veritas,” which is the highest class which that society awards to steam vessels. The Colima was an iron vessel, built in 1873 at Chester, Pa., new boilers in 1887 at San Francisco, Cal,, of 2,905.65 tons gross, 2,143.s5 tons net, and was valued at $225,000. “The exact number of lives lost is not obtainable at present for the rea son that the number of way passen gers received is not yet reported by agents to the company’s office at San Francisco. The number so far known with any degree of certainty to be lost is eighty-five passengers and sixty eight crew. Mr*. Lean Loiei Her Case. Topeka, Kan., July 8.— The supreme court to-day decided the case of Mary Elizabeth Lease against George A. Clark, holding that when Mrs. Lease was appointed to be a trustee of the atate board of charitable institutions by Governor Lewelling in 1893, it was for an unexpired and not for a full term and that Governor Morrill's ap pointment of George A. Clark to be her successor was regular and in ac cordance with law. The opinion was written by Associate Justice Johnston, Chief Justice Martin and Associate Justice Allen concurring. Warned by White Cap*. ^ St. Joseph, Mo., July 8.—Jack Mer riam, a horse trader in Parnell, a suburb of St. Joseph, has received a whitecap notice to leave the country at once. It was written in blood which, it was announced, had recently been spilled from another victim Merriam says that he will not obey the order, and that an attempt to en force it will result in work for the coroner. NEWS IN BRIEF. A boiler explosion at Carthagena, Co lombia, caused the loss of ten lives. Count Herbert Bismarck says that his father s health is better than usual. The Leader, one of Chicago's big gest department stores, has assigned. Allen Martin was assassinated in Calhoun county, Arkansas, by a negro. £?nn*’I’e.rre> Mo ’ James Wilson, aged 1J, suffering from disappointment m love, blew out his brains. bailie Huneyeultof Tacoma, Va., has been arrested, charged with having poisoned her niece, Airs. Calvin Spark* A Potest against. firing Governor Hughes of Arizona has been made by tne 1 ress Association of the territory. Official reports of the sinking of the Colima attribute it to the storm, say ing the vessel was in every way sea worthy. . Mother St. Gabriel, founder of the convent of the Incarnate ward in Houston, Texas, died at Galveston, Texas. A. M. Green and son,/Kimball, were acquitted at (Steel ville, Mo., of the charge of murdering David Hilder brand. The Kansas Temperance union will put an organizer in the field to work up temperance sentiment throughout the state. C. C. Dalton, a member of the former Dalton outlaw gang, is under arrest in Tennessee for horsestealing in Vernon county, Mo. Every joint keeper in Washington, Kan., was arrested at midnight Tliurs day by the sheriff and all spent the night in jail. Airs. S. V. Leeper, a Topeka school teacher, has been appointed superin tendent of the industrial school for girls at Beloit, Kan. ,N?lmes, a pioneer settler of Winfield, Kan., died at an advanced ag-e. lie ha* theep—Natives. NEW YOKE. Wheat, No. 2, red winter. torn—No. .. Oats—No. .. .. Lurd.s't" LOUIS. Wheat—No 2 red, cash.. j* J :t! 50 f 30 4 13 50 djjl 6 3J Corn—Per bu. Oats—Per bu hogs—Mixed packing.. Cattle—Native steers. Mieen—Mixed natives.. Lambs.* . KANSAS CIIL Wheat—No. 2 hard. Corn—No. 2. Oats—No. 2. ■ Cattle—Stockers and feeders.- gia| hogs—Mixed packers. 1 s J j; 03*1 , 33) 8s5| 41 # !| 22Vi»,?l 2 75 * ;l NEWS IN BRIEF. Clay Pugh, who V ductor, was hanged at Bou. Cuban bonds are said to m rolJ. fected by the progress of tne tion. Another batch o^eroploy^^ dropped from the office. The report that Russia ®fir[nej are preparing for war is Berlin. erlin. . , for tbt A receiver was app01“ t,uiidiif Colorado mining exchang company. impany. j 1. Gerald Balfour, br0‘“£f secret«i? Balfour, has been made ch for Ireland. f,1rtli>'f<*' Bids are to be *nvltf‘ gun struction of a number o for the government. geveral The Poindexter Ho,u5r0VedV ^ other buildings were destroy at Fort Worth, Texas it Fort Worth, Texas. ,tttr The currency eomptroU ] _. that there are * ment shows that there bank notes outstanding- D00c[<» The state department^ ^ inl» that it is in no St“tes conso'5- „ marriages of Lnited ailiutf The_.— nf collecting iges ui — , .. - mull**/ system of collect >t, nformation through m ^ ^^Qiished. itary liormanuu . aboh’M . t foreign courtsmay ^ ^ ^ Tne Kansas Citj, * ureen«® [emphis has bought ^offBeiV nd Northern road. It L Louis parties orotest * Constructor llichborn w ■cretary Herbert ‘t^jrJingt0 e new battleship *s plans* „„il fV,n st rue tion bure» J ,,, bat* le new avil Construction bure General Gomez is report^, ’ j . '51# General Gomez is r1^0* ; . rprised the Spanish gar . to p,eC* .... »i... anil cu* irised tne 5 ,,ut 11 “■ ■ ^ en at Alta Gracia andL« Hav»* id to be now marching V ^1* There will be no separ.^ ir the Oregon bbort 1 ia con«* nion Pacific null rcra* m siapW is thought that th» M western traffic sl‘“»