THE OMAHA i DAILY BEE. ESTABLISHED JTJNE 19 , 1871. OMAIIA , TUESDAY MORNING , MAKGll 22 , 1898-TWELVE PAGES. COPY FIVE CENTS. FROM THE OUTSIDE Teirlfio Force Which Wrecked Undo Sam's Battleship , EXTERIOR AGENT DID THE BUSINESS nineteen BeaEons Given in Support of the Theory. EVIDENCE DISCOVERED BY THE DIVERS Besults of Oarefol Investigation of Maine's Ruins. SUPERB DISCIPLINE OF SHIP'S ' CREW Heroic IlvnrliiK of Cmitnln Sln l > ee JUnrliiK the MiiHt Trylnw Clr- cuniNtnnrvM of III * Untlrv Nuvnl Curecr. ( ( Copyright , IMS , by Presi Publla-hlnsi Compnny. ) HAVANA , March 21. ( Now York World Cablegram Special Telegram. ) From the time the explosion shook Havana until the Board of Investigation , full of facts and ex port testimony , left Havana and up to yes terday afternoon , the facts have been printed In thcno dispatches. They are not hearsay things , they cro not Imaginations , but cold facts In Iron and steel and flesh. When -with Havana's chief of police , Tagllcr ! , Oeorgo Broncon Rea end myself reached the wreck at 10 o'clock on the night of February 15 , wo found Captain Slgsbeo Just b'epplng from the etlll dry poop of the Maine into hid gig. Our first queetlcn was , "Did the magazines go up ? " Slgsbeo then , In tbo su preme moments of a captain's agony , gave * Ifio only pleco of Information ho has ever given. Ho said : "It Is Impossible that the magazines could explode. " If the big twenty-flvo ton forward powder room was intact everybody knew the other small for- y ward magazlnea alone could not have annihi lated that part of the ship. Something must tavo helped. Iho thing was to prove the condition ot that ono big deposit of ex plosive ? . Daybreak next morning showed a condition ot affalro which each succeeding day has only seemed to clinch. Wo noticed : First That everything movable and wrenched arart ha-1 been thrown from the loft of the ship to the right side. Had the big magazine gcno everything would have moved Just the other way. It was on the right sldo of the ship and although nobody can Uy down a law for the exact direction that an. explosion of steam or powder will take , everybody knows that nothing would approach twenty-five teas of powder In the ect of explosion. Second The rear portion of the wreck canted to port exactly at It would If struck end .fractured from that side. Third Three men had been sleeping in i the ship's cutter moored to the starboard I boom not thirty feet from the big magazine. It acemed that had thla exploded the very rush of gas would have killed these men. Yet they wcro but little hurt and two left lor Key West the next morning. ESCAPE UNHARMED. Fourth Another man had been sleeping over the six-Inch service magazine forward end lived. Although this powder holder was too far forward to produce the effects ob served , yet the Incident tended to prove that not even It bad exploded. Fifth -The rear vlslbld portion of the Maine had been slewed away from Its known position at the time qf the explosion by ome great force applied from the left. SUth Filled unexploded ten-Inch powder caeca were brought up from tbo vicinity of the big magazine. The highest experts here enld It was Impossible that several such packages ot 125 pounds each should explode without all In the magazine exploding , and that then the other rear magazines and all the forward magazines would go off , the Malno completely disappear and the Havana water front bo badly wrecked. Yet no de bris fell upon the nearest point. The ma- chlno and tew1 gas lamps put out and a few mirrors broken by the shock alone were the only shore signs ot the Malno disaster. In any direction but from port to starboard In this direction articles were thrown a quarter ot a mile Into Casa lllunca. An other Indtcatlton ot a etroke on the port Ide. Ide.Seventh Seventh Divers found the floor of the magazine practically Intact and also large portions of tbo walls. * Eighth The ten-Inch shells that had been stacked between tbo ten-inch powder room and tbo reserve magazine were found thrown unoxplodcd Into , the ponder room from left to right. Ninth There were many such shells In the loading room just ubovo the powder. Had they exploded the Havana water trout would 'havo been covered by fragments. Tenth 'Both ' ten-Inch and six-Inch powder cases were found empty , burned and 'dis colored. Experts say that they might have exploded , but they might also have gained their appearance from exterior force and fire. Some had plainly been split open by pres sure ) upon the ends. This looked suspicious it Interior force caused 'tho ' explosion. Eleventh It was discovered that the re- ccrve magazine probably did explode and that empty powder cases of both sizes were there kept. Experts said the ton of black powder there stored could not alone have EO eaten up the ship. By this tlmo tbo In nocence ot the big magazines bad been thor oughly determined. It was also discovered that there might liavo bcn a few six-Inch loaded casca In the reserve magazine , which 'would aid In the general destruction to some extcofrfand would produce some ot the ap parently exploded six-Inch caeca found. NO BOILER EXPLOSION. Twelfth The boiler explosion theory w Anally dlemUtsed as the ones under stein : . that night were found Intact In the wboli portion ot the ship. Thirteenth Spontaneous combustion. Cos thrown out aa coal lUelf was found by dlyen Intact rud unburned. It wai so solid In fae k- s to be mistaken for the turret upon pre liminary aoundlng * . Fourteenth Qua cotton explosion was loni before dismissed as It was stored In the if- ( er and Intact portion ot the wreck. Fifteenth Electric contact ae the causi < waa not considered , because vvhcre the wire ; went through the coal bunkers coal wai found Intact and there were no wires tha touched the magazine * . Sixteenth The turret waa found-wlth IU thin top Intact. Had the big magazine undei U exploded It would have ripped the toj p < e or blown U to splinters. t a . . . _ 4k . . .w gjjjfl ajlBUBltioB Vft discovered. This magazine was Immediately forward the big ten-Inch powder room , big shell room and reserve magazines. It was Just between these anil the nix inch nervlce magazine away forward In the very eyes of the ship. Most of the cartridges found were whole. Some were exploded. All had primers In them end evidently some had been hit thereupon and some not. Also much of the exploded nix pounder and ono pounder am munition was probably remains of the liberal supply of it that the alert Slgsbee had about the decks ready for use In case of a night at tack. The fact was fixed that but little de structive force bad come from the "fixed" ammunition magazine. Eighteenth A protruding plate was Identi fied completely as being the bottom plate o.i the port side ot the keel about the frame seventeen from bow to stern and at about the ship's cecon.d longitudinal and seccnd fore and aft keel counting from the center of the bottom toward the port side. This plate cad the corresponding plato ot the Maine's Inner bottom were proven to have been driven upwards by some- tremendous force which could not have como from the Interior of the ship. They had been close to the reserve magazine and the shock which toro them up also seemed surely to have detonated the primers of the several boxco ot loaded brass saluting catrldges which that Iron room contained and this explosion seemed to have fired the mentioned tea of powder there also stored. Just such en oc currence would have given to the bottom plate its peculiar curl outward. The dis covery of these platca seemed absolutely clinching to all previous Indications. The Maine had been torpedoed or mined against the port bottom well forward as cabled three days after the explosion , when the direction and force of the explosion upon every visible thing seemed fairly to cry out. UPSTKETCHED ARMS. Nineteenth Navy divers found bodice for ward near the magazines not torn by cxplo slon and all with arrris upstretchcd toward the beams over their hammocks In the cvl dent effort to Jump out. This seemed to con firm the report of a double explosion tcstl ftod to by passengers of the City of Wash ington. The men were caught by rushing water , the big explosion breaking up th ship too soon to more than reach upward. Twentieth Spanish divers confirmed the navy divers' discoveries up to that time. Twenty-first Navy men made the start ling discovery that the Malno was broken In two away from the blow against the port sldo as first mentioned. The ram was founi ! out ot line and Spanish divers found th starboard bow anchor Just where it should bi and the ship slewed about from the shock a described. Then the navy divers found th port bow anchor In the proper relative posl tlon. The peculiar direction of the intac portion of the wreck has been explained. Th mooring chiln aided to hold the ram and par ot the boat In its original position , while th other parts of the ship were blown off to on side. Twenty-second Spanish divers find th Maine's starboard bow Intact from under th bow anchor to "forward dead lights , " o within forty feet ot the point of the ram Then they claim to find a big hole where th extreme bow and ram ought to be. Th was yesterday and amply confirms the Amer lean divers' work. These facts are hastily thrown togethe without tlmo for reference to a d'ay ' by da memorandum. There have been many othc aa against the parelcssncsa theory , whlc alone could have allowed an l.t rlor explcslo Wo hive the fact ot Slgsbee's past rccon his coolness In trying situations and the fa of his coming into Havana with ammunltlo holsta in readiness , gun cylinders filled an turrets manned , amply prepared for emer gencies. Other indications are the double guard constantly kept and the fact that no visitor was allowed aboard unwatched or unattended. As to the splendid discipline ot the crew one need but note the individual actions of the few survivors. Bill Anthony's "Sir , I have to Inform you the ahlp has been blown up and ! s sinking. " other marines loadIng - Ing a rifle at the first explosion and asking for orders afterward , etc , go to prove this. Had the Malno blown Itself up the Indicative facts must surely have leaked if not discov ered by actual newspaper Investigations. Members of the board , had they known It , woujd surely have ro stated to allay-the great popular excitement and save much gov ernment money. Captain Slgsbee has known the course of the board's Investigations. It seems Incred ible that he could * o rapidly recover health and keep up constant cheerfulness did ho feel the board would report an accidental cause and end his brilliant professional career. For as bo says : "America doesn't keep captains to lose battleships. " EXT.3RIIOR EXPLOSION. In short , not ono fact has appeared to point to an Interior explosion alone as an nihilating the forward portion of the Maine. The Spanish board' frankly states i't will report Interior causes , but cannot and does not explain why , except to claim that no fish were killed and no water was seen to bo blown Into the air. As to fish , there are few about the spot of the wreck. No dead bodies have shown their marks and had there been J have expert authority who has blown up many wrecks and who says that even with fish abounding only the few Im mediately In contact are really killed ; that most of them always seen are stunned and come readily to life and disappear ; that there are always fewer fUh about the clean bottom tom of a recently decked Iron man-of-war than about weed-grown wooden bottoms , usually observed under similar circum stances. As to columns of water , experts declare that if a torpedo or mine exploded so far under the ship as the second longitudinal or only a few feet from the keel there would not necessarily be much water raised and j" particularly so If such explosion were almost [ most Immediately counteracted by the Inside explosion of the reserve magazine. There arc fifty great and 500 small things , physical and logical , which show that the battle ship Maine was hit bard from the outside whether by a mine or a torpedo is the thine ' for Spain to explain. explain.SYLVESTER SYLVESTER SCOVEL. I'nmlnilvanciinr on I'ut-rlo Principe r.ad HAVANA , Marco 21. Generals I'ando am ady. Salledo , U U announced at the palace today y.ea "continue advancing with considerable forcci of all arms toward Puerto Principe. " Thi insurgents on Saturday ulgbt dynamited thi Iron bridge near Madruga , province ot Matan - ras , partly destroying the structure , and las night they destroyed with dynamite a culver between Roblee and Madruga. Amrrlrnn Slilji Coaling : , ( Copyright , U9S , by Prcn TublUhlng : Compnny. - KINGSTON , Jamaica , March 21.-New ( York World Cablegram Special Telegram.- ) The American cruller Cincinnati and gun boats Outlne and Wilmington have arrived t Port Antonio. They are coaling will cuMtloat ! WILL SUBMIT IT TO SPAIN Decide on Procedure with the Oonrt of Inquiry Findings. FORMAL DEMAND TO BE MADE ON MADRID Ileiiort Will Then Go to CoiiKrruM with lrcnli1ent'M McuNimr , anil Inter- tuutloii IN Opcnl- Pre dicted. .1 . U"- - WASHINGTON , March 21. The proced ure In connection with the submission of the report of the ( Maine court of inquiry by the president to congress Is now clearly outlined and a cabinet officer today ex plained the general line ot action at present Intended to be pursued upon receipt ot the report , -which Is expected to reach Washing ton next Thursday. A copy of It will be laid before the Span ish government early , and as soon as can be consistently done the report will bo sent to congress and made public at the same time. The report to congress will tK > accom panied by a message from the president , stating that after receiving the report the conclusions were laid before the Spanish government and appropriate action from that quarter asked. It Is stated positively that no part of the report and no Intimation of the findings have reached the executive authorities In Wash ington as yet. At the same time It is notlcbable that the current of official opinion Is beginning to follow that of the unofficial opinion expressed so positively and persist ently at Havana and Key West , that the cause of the explosion was external to the battleship. Omclals high in the administration stated today that while they were wholly without Information as to the findings of the court of Inquiry , they found themselves sharing In the apparently Intangible conviction that the cause ot the explosion was not accident Information supplied by the Malno survivors who reached here Saturday doubtless has in creased this view in official circles. BELIEVE IN EXTERNAL IDEA. In this connection It Is underload Ida ono of the officers who arrived Saturday , wh ctatcJ , not as an opinion , but as his persona observation , on the night of the dlcastcr tha there were two distinct explosions. Th * tendency of this is to support the theory ol external causes , as this Is based on the Idc. that the first external explosion was followc by a second Internal explosion. Intense Interest In the report was rnanl tested today at the White House , and at th State , War and Navy departments. The president received a number ot con grcsslonal leaders , among them bcln Speaker Ueed and Mr. Hltt , chairman ot th committee on foreign affairs. Ttie visit o Mr. Reed naturally attracted much attention an he ( seldom makes a call on the cxccutlv branch , and It was Inferred that the purpos of his visit was to confer upon the Cuba situation and Its future before congrcns though neither he nor Mr. Hltt was commun Icatlvc. Secretary Long also had an extended con fercnco with the president , but s > far a could bo learned it developed nothing * ad dltional relating to the Spanish question. The army and navy preparations are con ttflulng without interruption , although the have now become so regular as to lapse In routine en a gigantic scale. No further pu chases of war ships were concluded toda and the negotiations are not assuming promising aspect , except in showing th. the United States can command the mark as against Spain. OPEN BIDS FOR PROJECTILES. The ordnance office of the War dcpar mcnt presented a busy scene today whe : bids wcro opened for the manufacture o about 1,500 cast Iron projectiles for seacoas cannon. The advertisement called for 18' ten-Inch solid shot , 910 twelve-Inch morta shells , weighing SOO pounds each , and 500 mortar shells weighing 1,000 pounds each. There was an unusually largo number of firms who bid for the contract and the prices at which they proposed to furnish the projectiles showed a wide range. So far as figures ore concerned the Petersburg Iron works were the lowest bidders , although there may be other conditions existing which may prevent them from getting the con tract. The company offered to supply the ten-Inch shot at $1,66 each , one-half to be delivered In forty days and the remainder In seventy days. The twelve-Inch shells of SOO and 1,000 pounds each the company bid to furnish at $21.28 and $23.97 , respectively , offering to supply fifty of each kind In forty days and the remainder at quick Intervals. The ten-Inch shot the Rdme ( N. Y. ) ma chine worka offered to supply at $14.25 each , to begin the delivery In ono week , and they agreed to turn over the entire amount in four weeks. The battleship Texas started northward from Key West today , thus nettling the ques tion as to the formation of a second squad ron at or near Hampton Roads. It Is ex pected the Massachusetts will follow in a few days , but the final orders for that move have not been mode. Ttio Navy department received a prelimi nary report today from ono ot its agents , who Is at Havana watching the progress of the wrecking. It Is understood this refecc mainly to the technical' work of salvage , and not to the question of cause. The Judge ad- general's office , where the report wua received , will not dlacloae the details. The short session of the eenatc today w-a quite unusual for the first working day at the week. That no ono was prepared to go on with any prndlcg measure was given an the explanation , but privately the opinion was stated , by some of the senators that while the Cuban question remained In such suspense there was no desire to take up 1m- portant legislation. The outlook 03 to Cuba was dlacusseO > among senators almost to the exclusion ol other topics , and the belief was Quito de cided that the administration la preparing to take positive petition within the next . week. INTERVENTION IS PREDICTED. . Several senators made the prediction thai the United States would Intervene. Beinj pressed for a reason , they said they bail reached this conclusion after more or leee . conference with executive officers , but al the Fame time euylng quite emphatically thai they had no positive Information on thli point. Other senitore thought the recogni tion ot Cuban Independence more probabl < than intervention. Almost all expressed the view that eorm action surely will follow the report of th < Malno court of Inquiry regardless of Ui purport. According to the orders to naval officers iaaued by tbo Navy department today , tbi katUetulp Maine i till la exUtitict. AI least two of the orders would item to give that Impression. They read i follow B : Llcutennnt A. W. Catlln , U. & M. C. , de tached Maine , and home , i Lieutenant O. F.V. . Holfiian , detached Maine , home nnd await onfers. It is presumed that' the Ill-fated battle ship will not be stricken from the naval register until after It has been finally es tablished beyond the possibility of doubt that the shattered hull cannot bo raised and re constructed Into at-least a semblance ot its former self. Although there is scarcely ground for the hope that the vessel can be raised and restored to the navy , the depart ment will not abandon Its efforts In this direction until the wreckers now at work upon It report that It Is Impossible. The navy has particular need of first class guns at this time and would regard the recovery of the Maine battery as a consum mation devoutly to be wished. ( MAY SAVE THE GUNS. ( Although there Is not much prospect of raising the Maine with Its reported broken backbone , thcro is good reason to believe from the reports ot divers that many , If nt all , of the guns may bo recovered eventually from the wreck and put in places where they may 'be able to render good service. Captain William P. Ouvall of the Fifth artillery has reported at the War department - ment under orders for temporary duty In the olTlccs ot the secretary ot war and the major general commanding the army. Mr. Duvall Is instructor In practical military ex ercises at the artillery school , Fort Monroe , and is regarded as an expert in all matters pertaining to the artillery branch of the service. He has been promoted to his pres ent grade as a result of the recent Increase ot artillery regiments. Although not officially admitted at the de partment it Is generally understood that he was summoned to 'Washington ' to confer with the military authorities on questions involving the employment of the artillery In active work along the Atlantic and gulf coasts. The enlistment branch of the navy today Issued a largo poster advertising for men for the United States navy. The recent put ting into commission ot the cruisers Co lumbia and Minneapolis and the prospective demands that will bo necessary as a result ' of the acquisition of the Brazilian ship Amazonas and the American yacht May flower , requires the enlistment ot additional men. Enlistments will bo rnadO'ttt the following places : The navy yards at rioston , Brooklyn , League Island , Philadelphia , Washington , Norfolk , Man ? Island , No. 68 South street , New York City ; on steamship Michigan at Erie , Pa. ; customs house at Now Orleans and the customs housci at Gloucester , Mass. The following classeo of men arc wanted : Seamen 18 to 35 years of ago , at $24 per month ; ordinary seamen , IS to 35 years of age , $19 per month ; chief machinists. 18 to 35 years of age , at $70 per month ; machinists , first class , 18 to 35 .years o age , at $55 per month , and machinists , , second class , 18 to 35 years of age. at $40 per month. The requirements for t-nllstmcnt provide that all candidates must r/dis / a physical ex amination , showing' ' them to' be free from disqualifying ailments. . Seamen and ordi nary seamen must- pass examination in sea manship and must have had experience at sea. Machinists are required before cnliot- mont to pasa an examination 'showing that they arc machinists by trado. The orders of General William M. Graham , assuming command of tha new military De partment of the Gulf , have been received at the army headquarters hero. It is said hero that no immediate movement of troops as a result of the change of the lines of the military division recently put Into offset Is contemplated , but that the movements for the present will , be confined to the transfer of artillery troops to man the fortifications recently completed. , VESUVIUS FOR TUB"M2WI SQUADRON. ' Swift Dynamite Crulner Mny Go to Hampton JIuiuU. WASHINGTON , March 21. Lieutenant Commander J. J. E. Pillsbury , commanding the dynamite cruiser Vesuvius , which has Just arrived at the Washington navy yard from Florida , was at the Navy department today .In conference with the officials re garding the future of his unique craft. The pneumatic gear used In operating the dyna mite tubes Is undergoing repairs , which It Is calculated will take about two weeks' time. It lo considered probaule , In view of the speed power of the Vesuvius , that it maybe bo attached to the so-called flying squadron which It Is alleged is soon to assemble at Hampton Roads. According to present plans the squadron to bo organized at Hampton Roads will con sist of the battleships Massachusetts and Texas and the cruisers 'Brooklyn ' , Minneapo lis and Columbia. The Vetv 'us ' would be perfectly at homo In such company , being faster than cither of the battleships and nearly the equal In speed ot the pennant holders , Minneapolis and Columbia. Although no orders to that effect have been given , It is generally believed In naval circles that Commodore Howell will bo as- algned to the command ot this fleet. - Commodore - modoro Howell is now on the San Fran cisco and will accompany It on its cruise to the United States as the convoy of the cruiser New Orleans , formerly the Amazonas of the Brazilian navy. ADMITS OU11A IS tOST TO SPAIN. Should Itt'cnirnlxe Inilrpi'mlenre ut One ' for Commercial Itt-iixoiiH. BRUSSELS. March 21. A dispatch to Lo Solr from Madrid described an Interview with Scnor Pi y Margall ator e time president of the Spanish federal republic and chief of the m'nlstry , In which be Is represented as declaring that Cuba Is practically lost to Spain. "Spain Is exhausted , " he Is reported as saying. ' 'It ' must withdraw its troops and recognize Cubcn Independence before It Is too late. By an Immediate recognition It would obtain payment of a portion of the war debt and commercial advantages. " Fnrrrnut of .SinnllKlrrtlmiN. . ( CopyrlKht , 1E3S , by Press I'ObllililnoCompany. . MADRID , March 21 , ( New York World Cablegram Special Telegram. ) On Sunday the usual preliminary appointment of boards to preside at the general election of deputies on March 25 took place In Spain and the colonies. The nomination of candidates was also made according to the traditional cus tom of the Spanish government and the allotment of constituencies < was made seas as to give what Is considered a fair share of representation to all political groups. If forecasts are confirmed by the polls next Sunday the new House ot Deputies will bo composed of elgbty-flvo conservatives ot dif ferent shades , with Sllvela , Pldal , Tetuan , Romero and Robledo as leaders ; ten republi can ! , with Salmcron Azrarate as leader ; six , Carllsts , and 390 rolnliUrUl literals , under Castelar , will bo elected. ARTHUR B. HOUaUTON. AT- RIGHT MAN IN RIGHT PLACE OOCBU ! General Lee Iqual to Any Emergency , FILLS HIS DIFFICULT POSITION WELL All Who Come In Contact Mlth Amcr- lon'n lleiircmjntnttve nt llninua Coiuiitlnu-iit Illn Alilllty nil a tiood JiulKinvnt. ( Copyrleht , U9S. liy Press rubll hln-s Compnny. ) HAVANA , .March 21. ( New York Worm Cablegram Special Telegram. ) A man who Is well known In politics In Chicago arrived In ( Havana Saturday with a verbal message to General Lee from Frank D. Aldrlch , who was appointed some time ago as his suc cessor. "Tell General Lee , " the message said , "that like every other American I feel that the Interests of my countrymen are safer In I his handd than In any other. General Leo 1 may rest assured that I haven't the slightest desire to take his place In Ha vana until such tlmo as ho may deem It expedient to leave and until the situation cools off enough to permit him to be absent without jeopardizing the lives of American citizens. " 'Louis Klcpsch of the relief fund work , who has "been closely associated with Gen eral Leo for a week past , summed up the dealings of Americans In Havana when he said last night : "Lee Is ono of the grand- men In the world ; te ought to be prcs- : lcnt of the United States. In the midst f this Spanish ferment he has the cool cad of an American. God bless him. " Always courteous but always reserved and Ignlflcd , General Lee 13 carrying the Amerl- an flag through the labyrinth of an inltr- atlonal crisis In u way that will make him conspicuous figure In history , as his nn- cetors have been. Ho seldom leaves the Hotel lugleterra In the ! evening , but slta In ho office , chitting 1n an easy , off-hand way Americans who happen to bo staying t the hotel. He Is an excellent scholar , and n these days of suppressed nervous cxcltc- iient Ma negro dialect stories of Old Virginia ro a relief , for which all Americans have o thank thcilr consul general. He never dta- usses politics or even eo muca a : : hints at .ho chances of war octwcen the two coun- rles. The great joy of his life Is to receive let- ers from homo. On each steimor dally they re delivered to him at his little table where o dines alone In the Ingletcrra. Hla wife ml son forward to him letters from all sorta nd conditions of sympathizers In the United talcs. Here Is a sample the general showed mo last night. It is from anan In New York who has a patent bullet shield for ; alc : "The price per shield Is $5 , " runs thei let- er. "Wo eell a great many of them to do- .cctlves who belluvo their lives to Tfu in danger. The prince of Wales wears one on elate occasions. It you decide to Order glvu me the size of your shirt. " SYLVESTER SCOVEL. HAVANA WOULD 1IUY A CHUISEll. [ Mtbllo Entertainment Given to Help HfllMf FlimlX. 'Copyright ' , 1693 , by Press Publishing Company. ) HAVANA , March 21. ( New York World Cablegram Special Telegram. ) Loyal Span- Co had an opportunity Saturday night to give play to pent-up enthusiasm. The scene was laid at the Tacon opera house. The performance was held under the auspices of the patriotic committee to collect funds to purchase a man-of-war to be named the Isle do Cuba. The movement began about ten days ago by a committee under President nlanco. Committees for collecting subscrip tions in various towns wcro Immediately formed. The idea was taken up with en- thuelasm by native-born Spaniards. The Tacon theater was placed at the disposition of the committee by Us owner. The favorite comic opera troupe now In the city offered Its services for a grand patriotic perform ance. Fabulous prices were paid for boxes and seats by people willing to demonstrate tliclr patriotism In a practical way. About $50,000 was realized. Many Spaniards complain that the affair was precipitated , as no tlmo was given for the committees to work. If It could have been postponed another week It Is possible the receipts would have been" trebled. All the boxes on the two lower tiers cold for $530 each. Many were auctioned off and brought as high as $1,500. It was feared the occasion would be taken advantage of to precipitate another American demonstration. The play worked up to dramatical climaxes , arousing the enthusiasm of the audience , which stood up waving hats and handker chiefs and rending the air with yells of "Ylva Espana. " The temptation to make- some disparaging shout against the United States must have been great , but during all that Ions performance , when the people lost their heads In the frenzy of the moment , not ono remark could bo heard against our nation that could be construed into an In sult. sult.Tho The performance has at least demonstrated ono glaring proof of Insincerity of the au- tonomical government. They were all con spicuous by their absence , and so much so that everybody noted It and commented un favorably. Many Spaniards lost control of their calmness and said many things that would have made the autonomists shudder. "Oh , yes , they are always very anxious to como aboard ships seeking the Invariable ealuto which is duo them on departure , but when It cornea to putting their han.ds In their pockets to help us along they are suddenly Attacked with an aggrevatcd raso of slck- nesa , confining them to their homes. Out It Is of little importance , their force Is about ended , and our day will como soon , and then " The face of the officer who was speaking lit up with a sinister emllo which boded no good for his autonomtcal associates. General Blanco and members of his staff sat through the entire performance. Spanish merchants have agreed to pay their taxes one year In advance , amounting to $4,000,000 , to place sufficient money in the bands of the government to hurry the purchase of a cruiser. Whether the proposition will be ac cepted or not IB difficult to state , but It will probably fall through If the action of the members of the autonoinlcal government Sat urday night may bo taken as Indicating their true position toward the mother country. It was a very undiplomatic proceeding In fail ing to attend , for It has only tended to tighten tension between < he factions and to strengthen the popular suspicion thut their loyalty to Spain is only feigned to accom plish their ttnds. Various autonomists explain the failure to appear In the patriotic performance Saturday night by the fact that it was the feoct day of San Jose. As many lc 3 ° rs ot tbo party arc named alter tb.U < ulot lb rank and flit THE BEE BULLETIN. Weather Forecnrt for Nebratku Talrj Colil Wave ) Northerly Wlm1 . 1 Proof * of KxUTiml Kxttlimlon. A < ! nilnl * < rntlnn'n Simnlxh 1'ollcr- Co m n 11 tnr lit * for Consul I.co. Cnrlnir for Slurvlnw Cnlmtm. S HotiNe rnmir n llelli-f Illll. I'orl Arthur' * Claim * . \vliriinkii . Work on tint Klorpncr Cycle I'ntli. I Killtnrlnl unit Coinnir n .Mc-t-tliiK of the Wont Mnlnrllriiort .Not I'oi ( I Coiiiu-ll HIiilTn I.nriil lena I.cRlNlntlvo I'roj 7 ( Jl'lllTIllIMVM Of till * S IlllnoN nnil tlu * 1Cxii DoilKO St-liool XI-IPIIV' | , ' I O .IiifkNnii'H llmv lthW't Union I'nollle Hnxhn Mot Work. Siilvltlo InnnrniuMJK'JI ( timnl. ! 'IKht for Umnlin It Coninirrvlnl nnil I-M | 12 Klomllko'H Ilflni Flu Work with Condition of fluWcntlicri Hour. lc r. ( I u. in 41 O n. in 4O T n. m : m N n. in It U n. in 4S 10 n. in nt : 11 n. 111 BB 11 ! m 57 felt Impelled by sheer duty to pay their re spects. Jose Maria Galves , president of the council , and secretaries held a large recep tions nt home. Various other shining au- onomlcal lights rejoicing In the name of Toso also held celebrations , by this means .tttiMctlng . tholr satclltcs away from the lore important patriotic demonstration. Sev- .rat prominent gentlemen frankly told me : hey would not permit their families to enter i place ot amusement or any largo reunion luring the piescnt critical period. They are if raid of bomb tNplosons ! > . Thty also added .hat they posltneiy know of various Borcc- ona merchant ! ) who , after expulsion from ipaln , have drifted here. GEORGE BRONSON REA. \V1UJCKIX "CHKW 1IIKS. 'orctiiNtcof Wlint tlic Future Mny Have In Store , CopyrlKht. 1698 , by I'm * 1'ubllsliln.j ) Compnny. ) HAVANA. March 21. ( New York World Cablegram Special Telegram. ) One of the .lerrltt . Wrecking company's men died upon ho barge Chief about three hours ago. He had been 111 two days , at flut with hemorr hage of the stomach. Dr. Dudley of the United States marine hospital service esponded immediately. The man seemed to ally quickly. In the afternoon ho said ho was feeling better and thought he was ccovorlng , but died two hours later of re newed hemorrhage. The men on the wreck- ng work have been dispirited over their work In such surroundings as the Maine , bo < tu above and below water , presents. Today's death , the first of the season , Is not yellow fever , but suggests the results of that speedily coming epidemic. Captain Sharp , In charge of the wrecking company , will ses Consul General Leo early n the morning to ask a special permission to ship the body to Key West , as his com rades earnestly desire his Interment on American soil. Captain Slgeboc will be asked for ono copper lined box now awaiting what ever new bodies como up' from the wreck. The llttlo fleet of tugs and barges are all in mourning , and the whole picture of the wreckekl Malno and the newly dead with these he was diving to secure. Ramcndez , press censor , candidate cf the conservatives In tliu Cardenas district , gives 'tho ' name of the man who died as Henry Williams. No one knows where his home was. Ho Joined the tug at Norfolk , Va. SYLVESTER SCOVEL. COM * AVAVE SKJXAI , IS HOISTKD. Wentlier Huron" Sc-oron Attain on n Northern Predletlon. General Grcely's Justly celebrated signal service scored another on the Omaha public yesterday. It announced a cold wave bright nnd early In the morning. People were gen erally somewhat skeptical as they saw the whlto flag with a black center stand stiff as a board In the brisk southeast breeze. All day long the mercury climbed the tube , till It showed summer heat. It wavered < a llttlo about 4 o'clock , and took a fresh hold at 5 , when the wind died out. What else Is told In this second message of warning , the first of even date and tenor being still due and unrealized : WASHINGTON , ( March 21. Hoist cold "wnvo flag ; te-mporaturo will full thirty to forty degrees by Tuesday night. This was adding Insult to Injury. The cold wave flag bad been up all day ; the mercury had already fallen from. 61 at 8 o'clock to 40 at 9 , a drop of twenty-ono de grees , and was still dropping , and the wind had swung clear around the compass and was blowing dead from the north and as cold as Klondike's glittering glaciers. But It was vindicating the watchtul eye of the wcather- man- _ , ? ? * - \V1NTI2R SITS IN SIMII.VR'S LAP. Terrlllc SiinTiHtiirin In Siveculiitf Over South Dakota. ABERDEEN , S. D. , March 21. ( Special Telegram. ) A severe storm la now raging hero , the worst of the season. A strong north wind U drifting the snow badly -Tho temperature is dropping rapidly. Stock on the range will Buffer greatly. MILLER. S. D. , March 21. ( Special Tel egram. ) A snowstorm , with unseasonably cold weather , prevails here , the most severe storm ot the winter for stock on the ranges. PIERRE , S. D. , March 21. ( Special Tele gram. ) A driving snowstorm has prevailed hero all this afternoon and It Is drifting badly. It Is a reminder that four years ago tonight trains were stalled In the yards hereby by drifts and tonight promises about the s-i mo. HURON , S. D. , March 21. ( Special Tele gram. ) The temperature has fallen twenty degrees since morning and a severe enow and wind storm prevails tonight over the north ern and central portions of the state. Special bulletins from the weather bureau gave ample - plo tlmo to care for stock und no fcerlous results are anticipated , I1ARNESVILLE , Minn. . March 21. A ter rific wind and snowstorm cet In today , the wind blowing at the rate ot sixty miles on hour from the north , accompanied by blind ing enow and < vand. All traffic Is delayed. Tbo etorm promises to last all night. FARGO. N. D. , March 21. The first real blizzard of tha sconon prevails In Fargo to night. There has been quite a fall of snow during tbo day and the wind U whirling the snow everywhere. DENVER , Colo. , ( March 21. A blizzard struck this vicinity this afternoon. Tbo mercury fell from 56 degrees at 3 o'clock to 14 at midnight , with every Indication of going lover befor * morning. The wind blew ft 4lt f Hit ! * MM * I U. CARING FOR CUBANS Details of the Work of Saving Starving Boconccntrados. CHARITY POURS OUT FREE AS WATEr ? America's Great Heart Opens to the Poor Suffir.rj. WORK OF M'KINL'.Y'S ' ' RELIEF COMMITTEE Thousands of Lives Saved by Open-Handed Liberality. BLANCO COMFLLED TO OUTDO WEYLEff Ciiptnln ( ifiicrnl Will .Not Allow Ifm CIIUIIIIH to Till tin- Moll Tilth. / . TeeN l.'iirnlNlied by , AincrlfiitiH. ( CopyrlRht , 1EM , by Press IMibllJlilns Compnny > HAVANA. March 21. ( Now York World Cablegram Special Telegram. ) American * re now feeding all the starving Cubans and pain must now stop complaining or allow hem to work. Tools and seed and ground , ro here. .All that la needed Is permission. Last October 500,000 peaceable Cubans hail tarvcd , and as many more were starving. The farms set apart by Weyler for their upport wcro not cultivated , except in to- lacco and sugar. Absolutely nothing wna clng done for the slowly , wretchedly , pcr- shlng tens of thousandu of Innocent pcr- ions , principally women and children. A1 ew bits of food from the few Cuban families , who had It to give and slim charity fronv no out of 1,000 Spanish merchants was omethlng and nothing. Slnco then hundreds if the remaining thousands have died. Thcscv fere too far gone for food to help. But tlicr hundrcdfl of thousands have been avcd. Those could cat , and within tern ays and as fast as railroads and steam- ihlps can carry It there will be American 'ood ' In Cuba for every destitute person In It. Tlio total hungry and starving people will 10 fed by another people. For the llrst tlmo- n history one .nation will be taking BOO ! and : onjjcto ? care of the charges of another. Other famous relief movements have suc- jorcd many , but this feeds all. The very- Spanish press admits It and Is bitterly at- acklng the fact. La Lucha ot yesterday laysVo : have been unable to find In hls- ory this case of one state > vhlch sustains ho ncccasltles of another state. " What the Spaniards fearfully bate cml what the meat brilliant Havana dally hero first announces In an article Is not that tbo starv'r.g Cubans are being n.adc well , It 1 .bat they are being made Into Americana. A fitomachful of cornmcal U a ctronger bid for allegiance than 20,000 bannered torts and. 200,000 soldiers and the fact that American basics and corn meal arc now as general over Cuba aa Spculsh flagn and bayonets mak.i * : ho Cuban feeling universal. COMPLIMENTARY. La Lucha , after statlivj the sharp con * : rast between the great Spcr.ilah govern mental carnivals in Spain and the great American succor to starving Spanish subjects .n Cuba says : "Not only have our neighbors not forgotten , but they have augmented their charity , which Is Irumcrao and each tlay It { iromlscs to be greater Ln attaining1 the ends \\blch Its beginners and supportcra have in mind. Truth , as it began In a email governmmt donation of $30,000 , later in the distribution of email quantities of food , then clothes , medicines cad other things and to morrow tli 1.5 charity will have organized throughout the Island a great economic- iltchen and a hospital capable ot feeding tr.il sheltering each Its hundreds of persona. How beautiful is charity. Do you not think ro ? And all this has bcrci realized without noise , without machinery of any kind , with modesty which really causes admiration and respect and which weall _ ought to applaud , that late to eay , all of us who are not men of govern , ment , because wo ought not to sco In thcso great humane actions which our neighbors are doing with the greatest disinterestedness and solely upon Impulses of their generosity any other end than humane attention fre quently forgotten In their own country. " Editor Sea Miguel , no matter how llttlo ho appreciates tl'o real cause ot America' * cfcarlty , fully kaows Its International re sults , for sotne time Spanish papers hav been virulently attacking American charity. All have repeatedly made the point that In feeding tall hungry Cubans America la mak ing permanent the great pauper class. This In the ono great fact used by all to force tha liberal DIanco to curtail the privileges al ready granted and to refuse any new re quests. And this wmo clamor has caused the captain general to decline to allow Americana to completely euro tbo 111 they proclaim. Spain refuses to allow the hun gry to work. DIanco refuses permission for Cubans to use American , tools and American purchased tioa-l In raising their own food. Tlio soil Is not allowed to support the Cu bans. Spain condemns every ono of the des- tltuto to die or American charity must con tinue. Spain forccti the very thing It ob jects to by refusing to allow the Cubans to eupport themselves. BLANCO OUTDOES WEYLER. And Blanco xcems to have becci compelled to outdo Wcylcr. Wcylcr established zoned of cultivation about the concentrated towns and n Inn co so far has refused the American Cuban relief committee permission to put tools and seeds in the reconcentrailow' bauds. Wcio Weyler'a zones of cultivation cnly cul tivated , were Ihe people only allowed to hep ! > themselves , then American ( fiarlty would eoon become superfluous in Cuba , there would bo no pauper class , as Indeed there never was on rich Cuban soil in peace times , and Spaniards could then demand withdrawal of outsldo aeals'anco ' without Insulting human ity , The present great work is the result of publicity , knowledge , eymratby , money and lately good vigorous management. Whca Weylrr ordered tbo country people Into the towns of Cuba , many prophesied gome of tbo results , but not ono foretold tbo fact ot Cubans having died by starvation and lla. attendant dlicaie which lias really resulted. No ono paid attention even to the facts sus taining prophesies. It took the proofs of the Spanish prelates , of Spanish statementsand even of the Spanish prws to convince ami conviction came after half a million unarmed ] people bad died. Out since then American charity has poured forth to an extent , I believe , not generally understood. H l true that within j ten days no one In Cuba need hunger. Their I food will be coarse , but enough. Prom tb lima tvbcn lb bumiM CvhM 4wtt W H