Demorrali iat Bellefonte, Pa., May 13,1898. ————————————— CT ——————————— Continued from page 2. Spanish officers will be paroled and the forces at the arsenal will deliver all their arms.” Capt. Sostoa then pleaded for more time. The talk had all been in Spanish, and the time when Commander Wood was to open fire was already nearly up. Consequently Commander Lamberton gave the Spaniards two hours’ time. If the white flag was not rehoisted over the arsen- al at noon he said we should reopen fire. We returned to the Petrel just in time and started back across the bay to report to the commodore. At a quarter to 11 o’clock the white flag was hoisted, but when we went to take possession of the arsenal in the afternoon we found that every seaman had marched off to Manila, carrying his Mauser rifle with him. Having learned that evening that the governor of Manila had refused to let the cable company transmit our messages, Commodore Dewey sent the merchant steamer Zafiro a short distance down the bay and had her cut the cable. Having no instruments for working a cable, we could not keep up communication, and the gov- ernor would not let the cable company send its operators to our ship. No one can complain that Commodore Dewey has been slow in finishing off his work, but he would have done it even sooner but for an accident to one of the Raleigh’s pump, which detained him in Mirs bay two days, and also the slow speed of which transport vessels are capable. But for these delays the Spanish ships would have been destroyed on Thursday instead of Sunday, as in all other respects Commo- dore Dewey’s plans were complete. Dur- ing the passage of the forts at the entrance of Manila bay on Saturday night, Frank B. Randall, chief engineer of the revenue cutter McCullough, died suddenly from heat and prostration. He was buried at sea the next day. Although the McCul- lough was of no value as a fighting ma- chine, Commodore Dewey several times made use of her to overhaul sailing craft. She kept at a safe distance from the scene of action on Sunday, but went down the bay to meet the English merchant steamer Esmeralda, which was coming in, and made an excellent record for speed as a dispatch boat while bringing us over to Hong Kong on Thursday. There were three civilian spectators of the battle at a distance of 10 miles from the fighting line, but that incident hardly warrants the claim of any newspaper that it had a steamer specially chartered to accompany the squadron. As soon as the natives ashore learned that the Spaniards had been driven out of Cavite they began coming in crowds to pil- lage. Finally they became so bold as to attack the hospital, and it was necessary to send a guard of American seamen to pro- tect the wounded or to transfer them to Manila. The latter was done on Wednes- day, Commodore Dewey utilizing captured steamers for this duty. All the houses of the Spaniards in the town of San Roque, near Cavite, were absolutely gutted by the natives, who even ventured into the arsenal and carried off many boat loads of furniture and stores before the marine guard was posted at the gates. The Spanish defeat was advertised for miles away by the ships burning in Cavite bay. The Castilla, which was set on fire in Sunday morning’s battle, was a magnifi- cent mass of flames 12 hours later and con- tinued to burn all night with brilliant in- tensity. I boarded the Don Juan de Aus- ‘tria, Isle de Luzon and Marquis Del Duero while the were still burning. I found them fitted up with the Canet rapid fire- guns and most of the modern improve- ments. I did not discover until after we had spent the afternoon in their vicinity that all their large guns had been left loaded with powder and shell, making them particularly dangerous tosmall boats. The guns generally laid level just above the surface of the water. As several of them were pointed at the arsenel their charges were first drawn and then drowned as the fire might reach them at any mo- ment. When our ships drew away for breakfast Sunday morning the temper of the men was well illustrated by the almost tearful appeal of one gun captain to Com- modore Lamberton: ‘For God’s sake, captain, don’t stop now! Let's finish ’em right off! To hell with breakfast !’’ “Old Purdy,’’ a privileged petty officer, because he has served in the navy or army nearly fifty years, was greeted by the Com- modore on Saturday, when the old man ‘‘shifted his cud,’’ and said : “I hope you won’t fight on the 3rd of May, commo- dore.”’ : ,‘Why not ?”’ asked Commodore Dewey. ‘Well, you see,’’ the old man answered, “I got licked the last time I fought on that date.”” Purdy had been with Hooker at Chancellorsville, and he did not like that anniversary. All our men suffered greatly from the heat during the action, for they were shut up below with furnaces blazing and the tropical sun pouring down its heat rays. Probably several of the men would have succumbed but for the excitement of battle. Eighty Spanish bodies were found unburied on Monday night, and we gave them burial Tuesday morning, calling in a Roman Catholic priest to read the burial service over their remains. The bodies presented a horrible sight. One had the head almost wholly carried away. Another had been struck in the stomach by a projectile, cut- ting away everything to the backbone. One very large man, apparently an officer, was not only mangled, but burned, and all the bodies were frightfully bloated. To add to the horror of the scene several lean, wolf-like dogs had discovered the bodies before we had. Probably there were nowhere a more in- terested or more thoroughly happy set of persons than the group of wives of Ameri- can naval officers who had been living in Hong Kong in order to be near their hus- bands. Having heard little news except alarming rumors since the squadron left here, they are now recovering their normal serenity with the certainty that their hus- bands are safe. Thereare about a dozen of these officers’ wives forming a little navy colony here. The Opposing Navies. Full List of United States and Spanish War Craft.— Comparison of Their Strength.—Total number of Our Vessels is 143—The Spaniards Have 113—We Outnumber Them in Nearly Every Class and Have a Larger Variety of Fighting Craft. All the world will watch for the results of the engagements between the United States and Spanish fleets. The following table shows the complete fighting strength of the opposing navies : UNITED STATES. FIRST CLASS BATTLESHIPS. Material. Tons. Guns. Towa.....ccinnmnnn inal Steel 11,340 18 Indiana...............cci..r Steel I 1 10,288 0,288 0,288 SECOND CLASS BATTLESHIPS. POERS civ seers sasnssnarerss sind Steel 6,300 SEA-GOING COAST DEFENSE MONITORS. MONIEIEY. .cocoerrnmnsisersioiross Steel 4,084 Puritan....... ....Iron 6,060 Amphitrite..... Iron 3,990 Miantonomoh Iron 3,990 Monadnock Iron 3,990 Perror......ics.. Iron 3,990 FIRST RATE ARMORED CRUISERS. Brooki¥ilui seereriesssscnneessd Steel 9,215 New York.......coooernsssenenns Steel 8,200 FIRST RATE PROTECTED CRUISERS. Minneapolis.....ceueseecesesnens Steel 7,375 Columbia... Steel 7,375 Olympla.......ccciicresersirsed Steel 5,870 SECOND RATE PROTECTED CRUISERS. Philadelphia............ccceeeu Steel 4,324 Chicago...... Steel 4,500 Newark... Steel 4,098 San Franc Steel 4,098 Baltimore .. Steel 4,413 Cincinnati.. Steel 3,213 Raleigh ..... Steel 3,213 Charleston.. Steel 3,730 Atlanta... Steel 3,000 Boston ... Steel 3,000 New Orleal Steel , 3,450 NON-SEAGOING COAST DEFENSE MONITORS. 2,100 2,100 Mahopac Iron 2,100 Manhattan . Iron 2,100 Wyandotte .. Iron 2,100 Catskill...... Iron 1,875 Comanche.. Iron 1,875 Jason... Iron 1,875 Lehigh ... Iron 1,875 Montauk Iron 1,875 Nahant... Iron 1,875 Nantucket.. Iron 1,875 PaSSaiC. coors carsiiisieisiasrveiy Iron 1,875 RAM. Katahdin... coir Steel 2,183 THIRD RATE CRUISERS (MODERN). Marblehead .. Steel 2,089 Detroit ...... Steel 2,089 Montgomery.. ..Steel 2,089 POPRRR ere cinrienrisinivinnend Steel 1,800 THIRD RATE GUNBOATS (MODERN). Bennington............. lee Steel 1,710 Concord ..... ....Steel 1,710 Yorktown... 1,710 Suwanee .... 1,700 Wilmington 1,392 elena 1,392 Nashville V 1,371 Castine Steel 1,177 Machias..... Steel 1,971 Annapolis... Composite 2,227 Vicksburg . omposite 1,118 Wheeling 1,081 Marietta. 1,054 Newport. 1,008 Princeton. . 1,000 Dolphin.. Fern Bancroft. Cushing (No. 1) Ericsson (No. Foote (No. 3).... Rodgers ty 4)... Winslow (No. 5)... Porter (No. 6) ...... Dupont (No. 7) . Rowan (No. 8).. 20) 5. rrne ron, tunsnnsts Farragut(No. 11). Davis (No. 12)...... Fox (No. 13)..... Morris (No. 14) Talbot (No. 15) Gwin (No. 16)... Mackenzie (No. 17).. McKee (NO. 18)..cccvvrernnnne Stringham (No. 19) ........! Goldsbor’gh (No. 20).......8 Bailey No. 21 Stiletto... Somers .. Plunger (submarine)...... 839 | BO BO BD 1D BO BO BD BD BO BO BD 10 I'S tb hd pd ao ooO ooo Ow Lo] Fil FEL EV PELE BATTLESHIPS UNDER CONSTRUCTION (FIRST RATE.) Kearsarge.. Steel 11,525 22 Kentucky.. Steel 11,525 22 Illinois... Steel 11,525 18 Alabama... ...Steel 11,525 18 Wiseonsi....cccinirnrvinns Steel 11,525 18 OLD STYLE WOODEN CRUISERS. 1anCasSter ..icirrrrs. iiiise irri 3,250 12 Hartford... - 2,790 13 Alert...... 1,020 3 Adams 1,375 6 Alliane 1,375 6 Enterp: 1,375 4 Essex 1,375 6 Marion .. 1,900 8 Mohican... 1,900 10 Ranger... 1,020 6 Thetis....... 1,250 1 Monoeacy......c.cccersnrsnene 1,370 6 AUXILIARY FLEET. CRUISERS. Yankee (50). Harvard. Dixie (51) Resolute. Prairie (52). Jamestown. Yosemite (53). Badger. St. Paul. Panther. St. Louis. Shawmut. Yale. Nichteroy. REVENUE CUTTERS. Hamilton (1). McCulloch (7). Hudson (2). Grant (8). Manning (3). Corwin (9). Morrill (4). Rush (10). Windom (5). Perry (16). Woodbury (6). LIGHTHOUSE TENDERS. America (11). Maple (13). Mangrove (12). Suwanee (14). YACHTS. Eagle (20). Restless. Hawk (21) Illawari. Hornet (22). Viking. Wasp (23). Au Revoir. Vixen (24). Corsair. Scorpion (25). Penelope. Thespia. TUGS. Algonquin (30). Potomac (38). Alice (31). Choctaw (39). Nezinscot (32). Powhatan (40). Osceola (33). Fearless (59). Sioux (34). Vigilant (60). Tecumseh (35). Active (61). Uncas (36). s Vigilant (No. 2). Wompatuck (37). Philadelphia. HOSPITAL STEAMER. Solace (17) REPAIR STEAMER. Juniata. SUPPLY STEAMER. Zafira (18) COLLIERS. Merrimac (45). Niagara (43). Lebanon (46). Sterling (44). Nanshan (47). Irawaddy. Saturn (48). SPAIN. FIRST CLASS BATTLESHIP. Names. Material. Tons, Guns. Pelayo.....ic...connrnisiniiene Steel 9,900 35 THIRD CLASS BATTLESHIPS. Numaneia......ccceeieiinenen Iron 7,305 27 VIOPIR ciiiiiiiionsionensansn Iron 7,250 28 FIRST CLASS ARMORED CRUISERS. Emperado Carlos V ...... Steel 9,235 26 Cardenal Cisneros.........Steel 7,000 24 Cataluna................ Steel 7,000 24 Princesa de Asturia: Steel 7,000 24 Almirante Oquendo .....Steel 7,000 30 ViSeaya............i0 in Steel 7,000 30 Infanta Maria Teresa ....Steel 7,000 30 Cristobal Colon.............. Steel 6,840 40 SECOND CLASS PROTECTED CRUISERS. Alfonso XI11.........cco00iun Steel 5,000 25 1.epANL0... uiiseerncrnninsnnss Steel 4,826 25 THIRD CLASS PROTECTED CRUISERS, Marques de Ensenada.....Steel 1,030 13 Isla de Cuba..........cooeeerend Steel 1,030 12 Isla de Luzon........ccceee nad Steel 1,030 12 SECOND CLASS PARTLY PROTECTED CRUISERS. Alfonso XIlL.......cccvevneens Steel 3,000 23 Reina Cristina.... + oes Steel 3,520 21 Reina Mercedes ............. Steel 3,090 21 Castilla..... .. Wood 3,342 22 Navarra .. Wood 3,342 16 Aragon .... es ..Wood 3,342 14 THIRD CLASS UNPROTECTED CRUISERS. Conde de Venadito ......... 1,130 13 Don Antonio de Ulloa 1,130 11 Don Juan de Austria. 1,130 14 Infanta Isabel........ 1,130 13 Isabel II ‘ 1,130 13 CRUISFRS (UNCLASSIFIED IN PUBLISHED LIST). uiros.. 3156 4 Velasco 1,152 1 Villalobos 315 4 DISPATCH VESSELS, Fernando El Catolico....... Iron 500 4 Marques del Duero.......... Iron 500 4 SLOOP OF WAR. JOrZe JUM suse sersssnisassirsin Wood 935 i’ TORPEDO GUNBOATS. Don Alvaro de Bezan .......Steel 830 8 Dona Maria de Molina .... Steel 830 8 Destructor.......c.ccc ve Steel 458 4 Filipinas.............. Steel 750 6 Marques de la Vit teel 830 8 Marques de Molina.. teel 571 8 Galicin. .........o.ceuedvs . Steel 571 6 Martin'Alonzo Pinzon...... Steel 571 6 Nueva ESpana .......ceeessnen Steel 630 6 Rapido.......... teel 570 6 Temerario 590 6 Vincente Yanez Pinzon... Steel 71 6 TORPEDO BOAT DESTROYERS. 400 6 380 6 380 6 380 6 380 6 380 6 Knots. 26. 25.5 24 24 21.3 19.5 21.5 20.5 20.1 25 ve 8 Besides these there is a fleet of 13 vessels of the Compania Trasatlantica of Cadiz available for arming as cruisers; 4 iron gun- boats mounting 3 heavy guns and a machine gun each, of 500 tons displacement, but suitable only for coast defense; 4 iron and 7 steel gunboats, slow and suitable chiefly for police duty, with displacement ranging from 100 to 525 tons; 2 composite gunboats of a light class; 18 small steel gunboats for service in Cuba, carrying 2 small guns each. —New York Post. The Philippines. Much has been written and printed about the Philippine islands, but the victory of Commodore Dewey practically in the harbor of Manila adds renewed interest to these faraway is lands. Never before has the United States conducted extended mil- itary and naval operations so far away from its own shores. There are several hundred islands in the Philippine group, but only nine are of any considerable size. The island of Luzon is the principal, it is about the size of Penn- sylvania and has about the population of this State. The total area of the group is estimated at 114,326 square miles. They extend from four degrees above the equator to twenty north latitude. The population is put at from 7,000,000 to 10.000,000. The islands are separated from Asia by the China sea, and can be reached in two or three days’ steaming from Hong Kong. This distance was traversed to carry Com- modore Dewey’s official reports to a neutral telegraph station at Hong Kong. The ca- ble from Manila to Hong Kong was under Spanish control, and was cut before the full news of the victory reached here. Manila, the capital of the islands and the center of Spanish power, is on the southwestern side of the island of Luzon. It contains with its suburbs a population of 350,000, of whom 10,000 are European. These include the soldiery, clergy, officials and foreign business and professional men. The English-speaking residents do not ex- ceed 600. The city proper is surrounded by a massive stone wall more than 200 years old, and it is sparsely mounted with obsolete cannon, The people living inside the wall do not number more than 25,000. It is, however, for a tropical city an ex- tremely busy place. It is the principal port of export, and the exports last year amounted to $40,000,000. Manila bay, on which the city is situated, is a capacious land-locked harbor and has been well forti- fied, but with the exception of a few mod- ern guns mostly in an antique way. It was in this bay Commodore Dewey fought his brilliant battle with the Spanish fleet and land defenses. The bay is about 120 miles in circumference. The city of Manila was founded by the Spaniards in 1571 and established as the capital. It was captured by the British in 1762 in the war of the Spanish succession, about the same time the British and Ameri- can colonists subdued Havana. The Span- ish commander at Manila when the British captured it ransomed the town for $4,000,- 000, besides delivering up all the military and naval stores. The British commanders accepted bills for the amount of the ransom drawn on the Spanish government, but when the bills were presented the ministry refused to pay them, and the victors lost their share of the spoils. The British fleet, however, did not return empty handed, as soon after the operations at the Philippines it captured two Spanish treasure ships valued with their cargoes at $8,000,000. One of them with $5,000,000, was the rich- est prize ever brought into a British port. If the British commander nearly 150 years ago exacted $5,000,000 as the ransom of Manila, Commodore Dewey may enforce a like business adjustment. As to the seven or ten millions popula- tion of the Philippine islands the informa- tion is vague. They are mostly of Malay extraction, the exception being a race called the Negritos. The latter are dwarfish blacks and degraded to a degree that can hardly be imagined. The tribes of Malay origin vary in development from a state of absolute savagery to civilization. A meas- ure of the intelligence of the lowest tribes is their knowledge of mathematics. Their numerals usually stop at three, but their teachers count up to twenty by making use of their fingers and toes. The more civil- ized natives are classed as adherents to the Catholic church, and are held in strict sub- jection by the friars and priests of that church. They are kept in extreme poverty by the heavy burden of Spanish taxation. If the islands were given a stable, enlight- ened government they would quickly be- come rich and prosperous. Spain, however, has used the islands only as a source to draw a revenue from. The condition brought about is described by a high au- thority as follows: ‘‘While the officials fatten the natives are left to die like cattle if epidemic disease breaks out among them, or to starve if their crops fail. There are as a rule no roads worthy of name. There is no justice except for those able to pay lib- erally for it, and worst of all, there is no opportunity for education except in one or two of the largest cities and even there the facilities are very poor.’”’ They have had 330 years of Spanish rule. The loss of the Philippines to Spain will be a grievous blow. She has exacted heavy tribute from them and had the benefit of a lucrative commerce. The resident Spanish popula- tion is comparatively small. The thrifty element is the Chinese, in whose hands are the chief industries of the country. The climate is enervating for the unacclimated. There is nothing in the Philippines to in- vite American occupation for any length of time. A temporary occupation may be necessary as a sequal to the success of the American fleet. As to the insurrectionary movement on the part of the natives, of which there are cable reports, it is to be said the Philippines have been in a state of revolution for sev- eral years, brought about hy the same Spanish policy of despotism and oppression that has driven the Cubans into insur- rection. The Spanish government some time ago announced that the revolution had been suppressed, but all accounts seem to indicate that it was only smothered and has broken out afresh. It will co-operate with the Americans in driving the Spanish power from the islands. The chief of the insurgents, with other leaders, is reported to have accompanied the American fleet to Manila and will organize a co-operating land force. If it should obtain control in Manila and other towns held by the Span-. ish there are grave apprehensions, accord- ing to the cables, it will go hard with the Spanish population, as the natives have a big reckoning to make. What the Boys Will Eat. When Militiamen Become Real Soldiers They Will Have the Army Rations. The question of what they are going to eat is disturbing the minds of the militia. It is generally supposed that the annual encampment is a week for regular army life, and while this is true of the drills, guard mount, police duty, and many other features, it is not altogether true of the daily bill of fare, for this is augmented by many delicacies which are purchased from the private purses of the some-time sol- dier. The government ration is the allowance of one person for the day, and consists of the meats, the bread, the vegetable, the coffee and sugar, the seasoning, and the soap and candle components. When troops travel otherwise than by marching, or when for short periods they are separated from cooking facilities and do not carry cooked rations, soft or hard bread, canned beef and canned baked beans, together with coffee and sugar, are issued, and after troops have subsisted upon this for four consecu- tive days they are allowed canned tomatoes at the rate of one pound per man per day. The kinds and quantities of articles com- prising the ration for troops where cook- ing is practicable and the quantities com- puted for one ration are as follows : Fresh beef, 20 ounces, or an equal quan- tity of fresh mutton, when the cost does not exceed that of beef; or pork, 12 ounces ; or bacon, 12 ounces ; or salt beef, 22 ounces ; or, when meat cannot be fur- nished, 14 ounces of dried fish, or 18 ounces of fresh or pickled fish. : Flour or soft bread, 18 ounces, or 16 ounces of hard bread, or 20 ounces of corn- meal, When troops are in the field and it is necessary for them to bake their own bread, 16-25 ounces of baking powder will be issued. Vegetable components, beans or peas, 2, 2-5 ounces ; or rice or hominy, 1, 3-5 ounces ; potatoes, 16 ounces, or 12, 4-5 ounces of potatoes, and the balance to be made up of 3, 1-5 ounces of onions, making a total of 16 ounces. This can be changed another way by decreasing the allowance of potatoes to 11 1-5 ounces, supplementing it with 4 4-5 ounces of canned tomatoes or other fresh vegetables not canned, when they can be obtained in the vicinity of the camp or transported in wholesome condi- tion from a distance. The trooper gets 1, 3-5 ounces of green coffee or 17-25 ounces of roasted coffee. If he is fond of tea he may have 8-25 of an ounce instead. Sugar is allotted at the rate of 2 3-25 ounces per day, with 16-25 gills of molasses or can syrup as an alter- native. Seasoning components consist of 8 2-5 gill of vinegar, 16-25 ounces of salt and 1-25 ounce of bl pepper. Cleanli- ness and light are provided for by 16-25 ounces of soap for the forner and 6-25 ounces of candles for the latter, when il- luminating oil is not furnished by the quartermaster. Spanish Losses in Cuba. The following article comes to us {from an of- ficial source which we are not at liberty to dis- close.—EDpITOR.] Some ideas of the losses suffered by the Spanish regular troops during the present insurrection in Cuba may be formed from the following figures : Between March 1st, 1895, and March 1st 1897, Spain sent to Cuba 10 generals, 615 field and 6222 subaltern officers, and 180,- 435 soldiers. To these must be added the 12,000 officers and men forming the regu- lar Cuban establishment at the outbreak of the insurrection, making a total of nearly 200,000. Of these 1 general, 7 field and 53 subaltern officers, and 1314 men were kill- ed in battle, 1 general, 6 field and 55 sub- altern officers, and 704 men died of wounds while 463 officers and 8164 men were wounded and presumably recovered. The losses caused by the enemy are then small, being but little more than five per cent. of the total present for duty. The case is al- tered, however, in the jmatter of disease : 318 officers and 13,000 men died of yellow fever, while 127 officers and about 40,000 men succumbed to other maladies. A writer in the Revue Scientifique of Octo- ber 16th, 1897, gives the following rates of loss per thousand : Killed or died of wounds.....cc.ccoeeuneus Died of yellow fever.....cccuueecrrnnnins Died of other diseases.............. " Sent home (sick or wounded)........... 143.0 As all the sick and wounded, however, have not been sent back to Spain, the num- ber of these left behind must be taken into account in estimating the total losses of the Spaniards. While this number cannot be accurately determined, yet there is reason for believing that it cannot fall far short of 20,000. Accepting this estimate, we have a total rate of loss of 521 per thousand for the two years considered ; or, of the 200,- 000 constituting the regular Spanish forces in Cuba, but 96,000, in Jround numbers, were left to hear arms on March 1st, 1897. These numbers have more than academic interest for us just at present ; for if we may assume the foregoing ratio of loss to hold good from March 1st, 1897, to March 1st, 1898, then. after adding the re-enforce- ments sent out during the year ended March 25th, 1898, there cannot be in Cuba to-day more than 100,000 regular Spanish troops to bear arms. It is probable that the number is somewhat less than this, but the assumption of 100,000 gives us a small factor of safety in estimating the number of men we shall need in order to overcome Spanish resistance on land in the island. It must be recollected that the foregoing figures are only approximately correct, as there is ground for the belief that the Span- ish medical returns have purposely misstat- ed, is not understated, the losses of the Spanish army in Cuba. But for that very reason we may feel tolerably sure that the results here given are not in excess of the trath.—Harper’'s Weekly. Poor Little Alphonso. Alphonso XIII, the 12-year old king is small for his age, and delicate ; his face is wan, His father was brought back from exile because the Italian Amadeo had proved a failure. Alphonso married his first cousin, the daughter of the duke of Montpensier. After a few months she died, leaving Al- phonso disconsolate and childless. The necessities of State required him to provide an heir, so he was easily convinced of the urgency of an immediate marriage. There was only to be found one woman practicable. This was the Archduchess Maria of Austria. Alphonso died unexpectedly in 1885. Two children, both daughters, had been born to the queen, but, fortunately, the king left a poethumous son and, heir, born May 17th, 1886. The Carlists saw their hopes dashed. The cabinet officers and members of the regency and privy council were all present as his birth, as a report had been circulated that a bogus heir to the throne was to be palm- ed off. Each Spanish queen had, theoretic- ally, been subjected to this ordeal, but never, at least in modern times, had this been strictly enforced. The Spaniards ral- lied around the queen regent and the baby king, doing everything in their power for the continuance of the Bourbon regime. The boy king knows that his situation is precarious. He has had no real boyhood life and knows there is no one in the pen- insula whom he can count upon except his mother. From his cradle he has been surrounded by the ceremonials. He can have no play- mates, because he has no peer. He attains his majority at the age of 15 years ; so, but for Cuban trouble and the political dilem- ma which is a result of it, he might have ascended the throne with some prospects of a fairly peaceable reign. But the country is bankrupt ; the war in Cuba is at an acute stage ; the insurrection in the Philippine islands is serious, and withal there is the menace of the United States. The Carlists hope that little Alphonso may never live to wear his father’s crown. Should the king die, no woman with Bourbon blood in her veins will be allowed to ascend the throne, as the very disastrous reigns of Queen Christiana and Queen Isa- bella II. are fresh in the memories of all. The probable solution of the sitting is that, if AFphonso should die, his eldest sis- ter would marry Don Jaime, the son of Don Carlist pretender. This would satisfy both parties and free Spain from the possi- bilities of civil war. New Advertisements. 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SCHAD & BRO. No. 6 N. Allegheny St., BELLEFONTE, PA. 42-43-6t Roofing. Nov IS THE TIME TO EXAMINE YOUR ROOF. During the Rough Weather that will be experienced from now until Spring you will have a chance to Examine your Roof and see if it is in good condition. If you need a new one or an old one repaired Iam equipped to give you the best at reasonable prices, The Celebrated Courtright in Shingles and all kinds of tin and iron roofing. W. H. MILLER, 42-38 Allegheny St. BELLEFONTE, PA. Fine Groceries FINE GROCERIES. Fine Teas, Fine Coffees, Fine Spices, Fine Syrups, Fine Fruits, Fine Confectionery, Fine Cheese, Fine Canned Goods, Fine Syrups, Fine Dried Fruits, Fine.Hams, Fine Bacon, Fine Olives, Fine Pickles, Fine Sardines, Fine Oil, Fine Ketchups, Fine Oranges, Fine Lemons, Fine Bananas, But all these can talk for them- selves if you give them a fair chance. NEW FISH, Bright Handsome New Mackerel, New Caught Lake Fish, Ciscoes, Herring, White Fish. Lake Trout, New Maple Sugar and Syrup, Fine Canned Soups, Bouillon, Oxtail, Mock Turtle, Vegetable, Consomme, Mulligatawney, Tomato, Chicken, Gumbo, Queensware, Enameled Ware, Tin Ware, Brooms and Brushes. Best place to bring your produce and best place to buy your goods. SECHLER & CO. 421 ; BELLEFONTE, PA. Saddlery. $5,000 $5,000 Qs.000 ——WORTH OF—— HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS, SADDLES, BRIDLES, PLAIN HARNESS, FINE HARNESS, BLANKETS, WHIPS, Etc. All combined in an immense Stock of Fine Saddlery. sabes NOW IS THE TIME FOR BARGAINS...... ___] To-day Prices | ___ have Dropped THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. JAMES SCHOFIELD, 33-37 BRL EPON TE, PA Insurance. “A COIDENT oe HEALTH INSURANCE. THE FIDELITY MUTUAL AID ASSO- CIATION WILL PAY YOU If disabled by an accident $30 to $100 per month If you lose two limbs, $208 to $5,000, If you lose your eye sight, $208 to $5,000, If you lose one limb, $83 to $2,000, If you are ill $40 per month, If Killed, will pay your heirs, $208 to $5,000, .| If you die from natural cause, §100. IF INSURED, You cannot Jose all i income when you are sick or disabled by accident. Absolute Yotection at a cost of $1.00 to $2.25 per month. : The Fidelity Mutual Aid association is pre- eminently the largest and strongest accident and health association in the United States. 1t has $6,000.00 cash deposits with the States of California and Missouri, which, together, with an ample reserve fund and large assets, make ite certificate an absolute guarantee of the golidity of protection to its members. For particulars address J. L. M. SHETTERLEY, Secretary and General Manager, 42-19-1-y. San Francisco, Cal.