1 t U N IP Hhntine fjenwcrxt ROBERT GOOD Editor and Prop VALENTINE NEBRASKA TO CROSS THE OCEAN AMERICAN FLEET WILL ATTACK SPANISH COAST Commodore Watson Will Lead the t Expedition Sailed Monday to Join Sampson Flotilla Will Be Quickly Made Up and Started Will Go to Spain The navy department posted the follow ing Monday morning Commodore Watson sails today on the Newark to join Sampson when he will take under his command an armored squadron with cruisers and proceed at once off the Spanish coast The navy department bulletin shows Watsons squadron designated as the east ern squadron is as follows Flagship Newark battleships Iowa and Oregon cruisers Tosemite Yankee and Dixie colliers Scania Abarenda and Alexander The advance will be made at once from Santiago The bulletin also shows the following changes in the destination of the divisions of our war vessels North Atlantic fleet Rear Admiral Sampson commanding First squadron Commodore Howell commanding Sec ond squadron Commodore Schley com manding Naval base Key West Commodore Remey commanding LOST TOYOPA MINE FOUND A Brooklynite Stumbles Onto Vast Wealth in Old Mexico News has been received from El Paso Tex stating that Amtnon Fowler of Brooklyn N Y after visiting the ancient mine in Mexico discovered by his son is convinced that it is the lost Toyopa and will claim the reward of 15000 offered by the Mexican government - For nearly 100 years the famous Toyopa mine was a sealed mystery almost a tra dition Adventurous men have sought it for years in vain and many of them have found death in the search The hiding place of the long lost mine was securo in its mountain fastnesses Even now it has been discovered only by accident After explorers had spent years searching for the lost gold mine it remained for Mr Fowler to stumble on the old shaft while pursuing a wounded deer Expedition after expedition was sent out to trace the mine but failed The men who knew its exact location died and the mine became known as the Lost mine The Mexican government offered 15000 to anyone who should discover it RECOGNITION FOR HEROES Two Special Messages Sent to Con gress by the President The president sent two special messages to congress Monday providing for the rec ognition of the services of Lieut Hobson the hero of the Merrimac Lieut Newcomb and the crew of the revenue cutter Hud sonwhich rescued the torpedo boat Wins low at Cardenas Capt Hodgson of the dispatch boat Hugh McCulloch which fig ured in the battle of Manila and Naval Cadet Joseph Wright Powell who held the steam launch under the bluffs at San tiago harbor searching for the crew of the Merrimac Authority is asked of the senate for the transfer of Hobson from the construction corps to the line of the navy and the pres ident announces that he will suitably ad vance Hobson in the line The Hudsons crew is to be given a vote of thanks and medals of commendation Capt Hodgson is to be suitably recognized The pres ident in mentioning Hobson cites the fact that the crew with him has already been promoted MANILA HOLDS OUT There Is No Change in the Situation on the Islands American transports had not arrived at Manila up to June 23 the day this dispatch was sentto Hong Kong There was n change in the situation then The i surgents have not made any further ad vance and the Spaniards have been con tinuing the construction of sandbank for tifications and planting sharpened bam boos around Manila for the purpose of stopping the insurgents advance The papers continue to appeal to the natives to some to the assistance of -Spain Tragedy at Camp Cuba Libre While in bathing at Camp Cuba Libre Jacksonville Fla Private Charles Burk art of Company A Second Illinois was shot 1 y a negro connected with the reg iment The boys had been having fun with the negro when he became incensed at Burkart drew his pistol and fired the ball entering the right side of the ab domen and passing downward Burkart was taken to the division hospital and while weak the injuries are not considered fatal Twenty Rounds to a Draw Mysterious Billy Smith of Boston and Andy Walsh of Brooklyn fought twenty rounds to a draw before the Greater New York Athletic club Monday night Victory for Yousouf Yousouf the Turk defeated R N Har rison formerly champion wrestler of Can ada at Toronto in two straight falls Vicksburg Takes a Prize Saturday night the Vicksburg over hauled the schooner Amapala of Hon duras trying to run the blockade out of Havana with a number of refugees She was brought to Key West Sunday morn ing King Alfonso Confirmed King Alfonso of Spain was confirmed Thursday with great cereraa pjr L in the presence of the royal family tile court dignitaries the cabinet ministers and the grandees I 1nmii i j m jnn mjra i n Hii MARCH INTO A TRAP American Bravery Averts Disnstei at Battle of La Quasina Juragua Cuba June 25 4 p m vis Kingston Jamaica June 26 10 a m The Initial fight of Col Woods rough riders and the troopers of the First and Tenth regular cavalry will be known in history as the battle of La Quasina That it did not end in a complete slaughter of the Americans was not due to any miscalcula tion in the plan of the Spaniards for as perfect an ambuscade as was ever formed in the brain of the Apache Indian was prepared and Lieut Col Roosevelt and his men walked squarely into it For an hour and a half they held their ground under a perfect storm of bullets from the front and sides Then Col Wood at the right and Col Roosevelt at the left led a charge which turned the tide of battle and sent jthe enemy flying over the hills toward Santiago It is now definitely known that sixteen men on the American side were killed while sixty were wounded or reported to be missing It is impossible to calculate the Spanish losses but it is known that they were far heavier than those of the Americans at least as regards actual loss of life Already thirty seven dead Spanish soldiers have been found and buried and many others are undoubtedly lying in the thick underbrush on the side of the gully or the slope of the hill where the main body of the enemy was located The wounded were all removed TROOPS IN A WRECK Five Soldiers Killed and a Dozen Injured in Mississippi A railway accident occurred at Tupelo Miss Sunday afternoon in which five soldiers lost their lives and others received fatal injuries Everything wa3 done to relieve the wounded by the local physi cians and citizens who were soon upon the scene Sunday afternoon Col Torreys regiment of rough riders from Cheyenne Wyo reached Tupelo via the Kansas City Memphis Birmingham Railroad The first section had stopped to takewater and had whistled to start on when the second section rounded the sharp curve in the track just before the town is reached and dashed into it In the rear of the first section was the sleeper Seville containing Col Torrey and his regimental staff This car was completely demolished yet strange to say every in mate escaped unscathed except the colo nel who is injured though not seriously The chief fatalities occurred in a coach which stood in the center of the first sec tion which carried Troop C from Lara mie Wyo This coach was completely telescoped and the soldiers within were jammed and bruised beneath the masses of flimbers broken car seats and other debris In the second section one baggage car was thrown into the ditch but in this train few were hurt and none danger ously TORNADO IN OHIO Small Twister Causes the Death of Three Picnickers A tornado struck Marietta Ohio SA urday doing slight damage to buildings and injuring a few persons The steamer William Duffy which had just left the wharf with a picnic party of about 200 careened and a number were swept into the river Three young men were downed They were John Jerkin of the orchestra L A Bevand a commercial traveler of Marietta Malcolm Nye of Boston SCAFFOLDING GIVES WAY Two Men Killed and Four Badly Hurt at Butte By the giving way of the scaffolding on the big Hennessy building in course of construction at Butte Mont Monday afternoon six iron workers were precipi tated to the cellar below The dead are John Cunningham Frank Albert The injured W J narrison J D Brown may die John McNutt U M Maurer recovery doubtful Bi Louisville Fire The buildings occupied by Sraead b Cos Arch iron works at Louisville Ky were totally destroyed by fire Saturday The loss will be between 250000 and 800000 insurance 140000 The firm is said to have had large government con tracts on hand Half an hour later the Phoenix Hotel one block east on Market street caught fire from the sparks from the foundry fire The guests all succeeded in escaping The loss was 10000 Miles to Go to Cuba Gen Miles will go to Cuba and direct military operations in the field This fact was made known definitely in Washing ton Saturday The time of going hits not been fixed In the meanwhile he will bo making arrangements for forwarding ad ditional troops Hobson and Crew Safe The state department has received the following From a flag of truce I learned that Lieut Hobson and his companions are all well They are confined in the city of Santiago four miles from El Morro Sampson Accessory Gets Off Easy Lizzie De Kalb the notorious Woman in black pleaded guilty at Norristown Pa to the charge of being accessory after the fact in connection with the murder of Mrs Emma P Kaiser and was sentenced o two years in jail by Judge Weand Attempt to Poison the Czar A Vienna special reports the arrest of Count and Countess Zuanoff said to be respectively chamberlain of the czar and lady in waiting on the czarina charged an attempt to poison their majesties 300000 Fire at Peoria The Great Western distillery at Peoria 111 was struck by lightning at 280 Sun day morning and everything burned ex cept the bonded warehouses The loss is probably 300000 Arrest Two Alleged American Spies Two strangers from Barcelona who ac cording to the Spanish authorities are supposed to be American spies have been arrested at Palma Island of Ma- MJteaC FERGE LAND FIGHT J A Spaniards Ambush and Kill Tbir teen Cavalrymen j FIFTY ARE WOUNDED Engagement Results in a Victory for thj Invading Troopers Fpanish Force of 2000 Men Is Put to Rout by 1000 of Uncle Sams Soldiers-Army Is Driven Back Into the City with Heavy Loss Fourteen Being Found Dead by the Victors Washington special Thirteen Americans were killed in an engagement Friday morning with a Span ish force which ambushed them Four troops of the First cavalry four troops of the Tenth cavalry and eight troops of Roosevelts rough riders less than a thou sand men in all dismounted and attacked 2000 Spanish soldiers in the thickets within five miles of Santiago de Cuba They heard the Spaniards felling trees a short distance in front and they were or dered to advance upon the enemy The country thereabouts is covered with high grass and chaparral and in this a strong force of the Spaniards were hiding As the Americans moved forward they were met by a withering fire Col Wood LIEUT COL ROOSEVELT and Lieut Col Roosevelt led the charge with great bravery Thoy scorned to hide themselves in the grass or underbrush as the enemy did and ultimately they drove the enemy back toward Santiago inflict ing heavy losses upon them but with a loss to themselves of thirteen men killed and at least fifty wounded A number of Cubans took part in the days fighting and rdfty uithem were killed The fight lasted an hour The Span iards opened fire from the thick brush and had every advantage of numbers and posi tion but the troops drove them back from the start stormed the blockhouse around which thoy made the final stand and sent them scattering over the mountains The cavalrymen were afterward re enforced by Seventh Twelfth and Seventeenth in fantry part of the Ninth cavalry the Sec ond Massachusetts and the Seventy first New York Thursday in a baptism of blood the American invading army at Santiago won its first victory To the dashing regi ment of rough riders under Cols Wood and Roosevelt fell the honor of striking the first blow and offering up the first lives of our land forces in behalf of a great cause While portions of the First and Tenth cavalry regiments of the regu lar army also stood shoulder to shoulder with them dividing the glory and the losses the roster of the dead and wound ed shows that the rough riders took the brunt of the charge and to them as com paratively raw recruits must be awarded the palm of chief honor They have shown the Spaniards and the world how American volunteers fight their maiden engagement Though many of the brave horsemen fell at the first volley the troops calmly stood their ground dismounted and returned the fire so vigorously that GEN DON FEDERICO A GASCO One of Spains Leading Officers at Santiago the enemy was glad to take to instunt flight leaving a dozen dead on the spot The subsequent running fight and final taking of the blockhouse in which the Spaniards took refuge will read well in the annals of American bravery The enemys loss is reported to have been at least forty Probably it is more than that or the retreat would not have been so orecipitate Shafter Tells the Story Dispatches received from Gen Shafter by the War Department tell the story of the operations of the invading force The first dispatch confirms the earlier press re ports of the remarkably successful man ner in which this comparatively large body of troops was landed at Baiquiri It was no light task to convey sixteen thousand men with animals trains sup plies ammunition and artillery from Key West to Baiquiri and land them in safety through a heavy surf with the loss of less than fifty animals and but two men It f liljW VICTORIOUS PINK COAT AFTER HIS GREAT RACE FOR NEARLY 10000 is also remarkable that the command not withstanding the heat and the crowded condition of the transports was as healthy as when it left Key West which speaks well for the sanitary precautions which have been taken That so large a force should have been safely landed was due first to the fact that the Spaniards did of the fleet and second to the co-operation of the fleet itself which enabled Gen Shafter to accomplish in two days what as I believe i should have lost so many boats in the surf To crown all this suc cess he reports that the weather was good from the start that there has been no rain on shore and all the prospects in dicate fair weather The story from the time of the landing to the encounter near Sevilla is briefly told The first landing was made on Wednesday and the second on Thursday No time was lost Troops were sent for ward on Thursday morning and occupied Juragua which had been evacuated by the Spaniards and the railroad and its BRIGADIER GENERAL DUFPIELD In command of re enforcements sunt to Major General Shufter from Newport News equipment which the enemy did not de stroy fell into our hands The movement forward under the immediate command of Gen Joe Wheeler began on Friday and was undertaken to dislodge the Span iards who had intrenched themselves upon a hill near Sevilla to block the road to Santiago The story of the skirmish as Gen Shafter calls it between the rough riders and the regular cavalry and the Spaniards is told concisely above It is called the battle of La Quasina According to the later reports it was the fault of the Amer icans that they lost as heavily as they did and the fault of the Spaniards that the loss was not much greater than it was The volunteers appear to have dash ed recklessly into a well planned ambus cade where they might have been wiped out had the Spaniards made full use of their superiority in numbers and position They gave way however before the head long rush of the volunteers and abandon ed ground which American troops would have held This painful experience will not affect the bravery of the rough riders but it will make them more cautious They j have learned a lesson which many Ameri j can soldiers have had to learn before them Gen Shafter briefly says the firing j lasted about an hour the enemy was n from his position and retreated toward I Santiago and our troops occupied the lo cality where they were to wait until sup plies and artillery could be landed Corpses Were Not Mutilated Surgeon General Van Reypen of the navy has received full reports from the surgeon with Admiral Sampsons fleet who cared for the dead and wounded par ticipants in the Guantanamo fight Their important feature is a definite statement that the corpses were not mutilated but that the severe wounds attributed to mu tilation were the result of Mauser rifle balls Left to Sampson Admiral Sampson has authority from the President to deal with Admiral Cer vora regarding Lieut Hobson and other prisoners The Spanish Government may refuse to exchange Hobson and his men but Admiral Cervera must be held respon sible for their safe keeping and Admiral Sampson will hold him responsible Warning Given a Steamer A steamer arriving at St Thomas Sat urday reported that it had been stopped by the United States cruiser St Paul Captain Sigsbee near the entrance of San Juan harbor Porto Rico and warned to put in at some neutral port Prize Panama Brings 41000 The Spanish prize steamship Panama was sold at auction at New York for 9 11000 She was bought by the Gov ernment and will be used as a transport Two hundred girls belonging to local No S4 of the United Garment Workers at Wappinger Falls N Y have contrib uted several truck loads of provisions to starving Cubans TROOPS FACE OSHKOSH MOB Striking Woodworkers Are Dispersed by Wisconsin Soldiers The woodworkers strike at Oshkosh Wis resulted in rioting The trouble is said to have been started by a watchman at the Mortrnn nlnnt nnintfncr a rpvnlvpr not care to expose themselves to the fire at some of the women doing picket duty The strikers set upon the watchman and would have killed him but for police in terference John Pable another work- otherwise he himself says could not have j man was pounded and cut until his neen done in ten and perhaps not at all l tion is critical C H Paxton manager of me luciuuian juunmer uompany was egged and narrowly escaped a dose of vitriol Thursday evening the mob 1000 strong started for McMillans mill Warn ing had been sent ahead and the gates to the yard were closed Five hydrants were opened and the hose turned on the crowd but it broke in the gates and took possession Police and deputies were of no avail All of the non unionists received severe beatings Ed Casey an engineer was struck in the face with a stone He retaliated by hitting the thrower James Morris over the head with a wrench in flicting fatal injuries Gov Scofield ordered the militia at Milwaukee to go to Oshkosh and restore order The arrival of the troops added to the tension but prevented another out break on the part of the striking wood workers The strikers marched to the factory of the Paine Lumber Company at 6 oclock Friday morning but when they reached the grounds soldiers stood ready to receive them and the crowd dispersed Thursdays fighting resulted in nine non union men beinc disabled PINK COAT WINS The Leonatus Colt Takes the Ameri can Derby at Chicago Pink Coat is a double Derby winner Saturday afternoon at Washington Park Chicago the Leonatus colt trained by Pat Dunne and ridden by Willie Martin flash ed under the wire in the American Derby a winner at odds of 4 to 1 with Warren ton W T Olivers candidate but a nose behind Isabey secured third money four lengths behind AVarrenton Mirthful the 0 to 5 favorite fourth with the rest of the field strung out The Derby was run over a slow track and a heavy wind was blow ing up the stretch The time 242 under these conditions was very good The race itself was a pretty contest from start to finish There were nine starters Bradley scratching Traverser and Foster adding Eva Rice Thirty thousand peo ple cheered Martin as he came under the wire a nose in front of Warrenton stall ing off the hitters furious drive down the stretch Martin called on his mount three furlongs from home and he drew away from the field apparently an easy winner Mirthful shut up like a clam when pinch ed but Caywood made one of his stretch rides and it was nip and tuck the last six teenth Martins riding lauding the horse a winner WIND WRECKS A SHOW TENT One Man Killed and Many Injured at Sioux City Iowa At Sioux City Iowa Forepaugh Sells Bros circus tent was blown down during the performance Friday night Adolph Halverson was killed and twenty or thir ty persons injured As the tent lifted and the poles began to fall the spectators rush ed for the entrance The fall of the can vas stopped the panic A stampede of horses threatened great damage but was finally checked The wild animals were in their cages ready for shipment and none escaped The loss to the circus peo ple was heavy Will Warn Fleets of Storms It has been decided to establish signal stations at several points in the Carib bean sea and on the South American coast to warn American fleets in Cuban waters of the approach of tornadoes dur ing the coming season The new service will be under the management of the weather bureau Would Sue for Peace Former Captain General Rivera has urged the Queen Regent of Spain to sue for peace and to ask the friendly offices of the South American Governments in se curing favorable terms The Queen is said to have authorized Rivera to sound the South American rulers as to their sen timents m Sailed for Cuba The converted cruiser Harvard sailed for Cuba from Norfolk Va Saturday having on board troops from Massachu setts and Michigan The repair ship Vul can accompanied Get Orders to Move Fifteen volunteer regiments at Camp Thomas including the Third and Fifth Illinois received orders Saturday to pre pare for immediate departure for some unnamed point Beconcentrados Dying by Hundreds Messages from Havana say that the condition of the pacificos about Havana is wretched Hundreds have died of late Merriman Nebr Right car cropped Hole In center of left ear Range Lake creek 8D HKtaHHML A i w nu v mii n 9B ffff I 7 St I Rosebud S D On left side Horses branded same on left hip or shoulder Range on Horse Creek 7 - r Aff - ffi IIMi STOCK BRANDS Metzger Bros 7 E I BH rullman Neb Cherry Co Brand on left side and thigh Earmark square crop right ear Southern branded cattle have but one braid on leftside Native ofjitle have throat wattle j wm ire on iioruou unu anatce ureeKS Horses have same brandjon left tulgb A Iletcartl ofSlOO will bo paid to any tut air cviis v y bUU I1IMW UIIU t Koy vunfiiiij iwi kmi jjutouiia steal lag cattle with above brand Joseph W Bownet P O address Se9Dk i a ml Bw3 BtfSjAiMifcfifiiWrnnjKBB William M Dunbar Lessee from Heine Kroeger Cody Neb DUn Either side Alsf gagi low Oil right Left ear oi cattle Split Range beau of Hay Greek Henry Pratt Rosebud S D Left side Horses same on left shoulder Deerliorn clip on some cattle William Shangren Cody Neb Dniap underside oi neck Jack LePoint Merriman Neb Cattle branded on left side Some on hip also Earmark round hole In center of left ear Also use BKo Sb nn riiTlit drla Bear creeks Itange Lake Cora ana Charles H Faulhaber ir Brownlee Nebr Either right or left side on cattle Horses same on left shoulder Left ear cut off of cattle Itange Loup river Marshall Wolfenden Kennedy Neb Some s on the left bin Horses s on left Shoulder Brand is small Earmark Quarter clip behind half cir cle forward on left ear Range Loue Tree Lake Louis F Richards Meiriman Neb Charles Benard Rosebud S D RanRe Big White and Bad Rivers MIM W R Kissel Brownlee Neb 1M Also some below lelt bin Also m right hip Ranire Kissels Ranch Wheeler Bros Cody Neb Range on the Snake River and Chamber lain flat Charles C Tackett Rosebud 5 D Range head of An telope near 3t Marys mission Horses branded on left thigh William F Schmidt m Tki sx - r T 1 V - l V k i m