,V * N , * GETTING READY FOR ANOTHER SHOT. FORWARD, MARCH! Three UcKimcntH Leave Camp Tltoiuaa ami Ht'Kin a Trip »o Porto Xtleo. Cliiekamauga National Military Park, (ia., July 23. —The actual move ment of troops from Camp Thomas for the Porto Uiean expedition began Fri day when (ien. Haines' brigade, the Second of the First division. First corps, broke camp and marched to JJossville. The regiments included were the Fourth Ohio, Fourth Penn sylvania and Third Illinois. The Fourth Pennsylvania, the last to load, did not leave Kossville until last night. Their route is to Cincinnati over the Cincinnati Southern and thence to Newport News, via the Chesapeake H. Madrid, July 2.'!.—lt is asserted here i that the Spanish prisoners comprised | in the capitulation of Santiago de Cuba do not exceed 10,000 men and i that the ammunition captured is al- I most useless. i Three Men Killed l»y an Explosion. Dutch Flat, Cal.. July 2.'!. Fngine i No. 993 on an east-bound extra, blew up j at the station here Friday, killing ICn j gineer Tom Kelly, Fireman Terry and j a coal passer, name unknown. The | hotel of.l. K. Fuller was completely i demolished and four people injured, (■rant N Aligned to a Command. Washington, July 2.'!. It rig. (ien. Fred I). (Irant ha* been assigned to the | eomand of the Third brigade of Ceil. | Wilson's division of the First army ' corps. Two brigades of this division I are already assigned for duty with flit j I'orto liico invasion. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1898. SPANISH SHIPS. They Will Convoy Shafter's Pris oners to Their Native Land. Tlie Government Award* » Contract Worth 000 to a SteaniHliip l.lne Whose Owner* are Spaniards Tin* Klll - to liegin Inside of a Week from Santiago. Washington, July 21. Arrange ments practically were concluded by the government last night for the transportation of the Spanish prison ers iit Santiago from Cuba to Spain. The contract was awartled to the Spanish Trans-Atlantic Co., represent ed by .1, M. Ceballos <£- Co., of New York. The company agrees to carry the prisoners from Cuban ports to Spain at the rate of S2O tor each en listed man and $55 for each commis sioned officer, subsistence to lie fur nished by the company on the army ration basis, as provided for in the government's advertisement for bids. The award provides also that the com pany shall have five ships at Santiago in nine days from to-day, two in 17 days from to-day and enough to com plete the transportation of the prison ers in 21 days. Three days ago Col. ffecker, in charge of the transportation of troops in the quartermaster general's depart ment of the army, went tw New York to consult with shipping companies concerning the transportation of the Spanish troops surrendered at San tiago. Bids which he had previously advertised for were opened yesterday at the army building in New York. Col. Ileeker returned to Washington last evening and had a conference with Secretary Alger, Quartermaster General Luddington and Adjt. Gen. Corbin. The bids of the several companies were considered, that of the Spanish Trans-Atlantic Co. finally being ac cepted, as in all resoeets it was re garded as the best made. On the basis of 24,000 enlisted men and 1,000 offi cers it will cost the government, $535,- 000 to transport the prisoners. The ships will fly the colors of Spain and will be manned probably entirely by Spanish crews. It was remarked as one of the curi ous developments of the war that this government should enter into a friendly contract with a company, many of whose vessels are auxiliaries to the Spanish navy and some of which have been captured or de stroyed by the navy of the United States. IS GEN. GARCIA DEAD? The Famous Cuban Leader 1- Heported tn Have Iteen Shot l>etalls are l.a<-klu£. New York, July 21. —A Kingston, Jamaica, cable to the Evening Post says: "Cubans arriving from Siboney report the death of Gen. Garcia. They make a mystery of it, saying that it should not be known in Cuba yet or in the United States for reasons of state and give no particulars except that he was shot." New York. July 21. —The last word directly received by the Cuban junta in this city from Garcia was dated before Santiago, July 11. It stated that he was well and that the progress of events was satisfactory. At that time Garcia was west of Santiago, guarding the approaches from expect ed reinforcements for the city. Horatio S. Rubens, counsel to the junta, when given the information contained in the Post's dispatch, said that news of Garcia's death had not been received at the junta, but that at best communication with the Cu bnn forces in the field was irregular. "I am greatly surprised," he said, "but I do not find it hard to credit the dispatch. "During the assault on Santiago, Garcia was in the west with his com mand. with.the special duty of inter cepting reinforcements and cutting off the retreat of the Spanish soldiers. "When the city fell, his duty there was at an end. The attack on Man zanillo was then planned. Manwin illo lies to the west, and it is. there fore, probable that Shatter detailed Garcia's command to cut off reinforce ments there. Ilolguin lies near Man zanillo and was garrisoned by a con siderable force, as Ihe American gen eral must have known. It is not un likely that Garcia and his men came into conflict with a body of Spanish soldiery bound from Ilolguin for Man zanillo." Course of Cuban War Leaders. Washington, July 21.—Sena** Que seda and other representatives of the Cuban junta consulted yesterday with officials of the war department. The United States officials were assured that there was no dissatisfaction with the management of affairs in Cuba so far as the Cuban representatives were concerned, and that if Gen. Garcin and other Cubans operating about San tiago were not in harmony with the United States authorities there, it arose from a misunderstanding of the president's proclamation and of the intentions of the United States gov ernment. The Cubans at Santiago, it was stated, probably thought the ac tion of Gen. Shaffer meant the con tinuation of Spanish rule and Spanish authority. It being well understood here that such was not the case, it was the belief of the Cuban represent atives that when the matter was made plain to the Cuban officers in the field, they would acquiesce in the action of the United States and render the United States army hearty sup port . Ilroujrht Two I'ri/.e* Into Port. Key West, July 19. The schooner Three Mells and the sloop Pilgrim, captured by the gunboat Dixie near Man/anillo on July 0, arrived here Monday under prize crews. Marrvat never imagined a more grotesque tale of marine misadventure than was ex perienced by these men in bringing their spoils to port. They encount ered suicide and Spanish bullets and. buffeted about by hostile winds, drift ed helplessly about in strange seas un til well nigh hopeless of ever reach ing shore. Both prizes were under the British flag, bound from Kings ton, Jamaica, for Manzanillo with food TREASURE SHIPS RETURN Miner* from the Klondike llrlng Hack Cp wardi of 53,000,000 to tiold Hunt and Draft*. San Krftncisco, July 18.—The steam er St. I'aul arrived last . from St. Michael's, bringing men and treasure from the Klondike. There were 170 passengers on her list and the amount if the earnings, in gold dust, nuggets, ind bank drafts is estimated by ship's jffieers at $3,000,000. The largest imount brought out by a single pros pector is in the possession of N. I. Pickett, who has SSO,OOO. The returning miners say that if is idle for prospectors togo to the Klon like now expecting to locate claims. ;is all the mining land of any value lias already been staked out. Seattle, Wash.. July is. Seventeen miners who left Dawson City June 28 have arrived here on the steamer City of Seattle, bringing with them gold 3ust and drafts estimated at SOOO,OOO. Of this amount SIBO,OOO was in dust. The largest individual amount of dust was brought by K. M. Sullivan, of Cos Angeles, who is credited with $50,000. The largest individual amount of dust and drafts was carried by K. Lewin, of Seattle, whose sack is esti mated at SIOO,OOO. The other indi vidual amounts range all the way from $2,000 to SIO,OOO. There were a few who had barely enough to reach home. The Klondike Nugget, the first newspaper published at Dawson, tin ier date of June 28 says: "Washing up is still in progress and will proba bly not be completed until the latter part of July, owing to a scarcity of water. Opinions as to the amount of the total yield differ. Estimates run ill the way from $15,000,000 to $20,000,- :>OO. The most conservative place it below the former sum. "On June 13 a nugget worth $l7O was picked up on No. 42 Eldorado. The hippy claim. No. 10 Eldorado creek, will, it is estimated, clean up from one-third to one-half a million. "Oil Kldorado, not many above 45 were worked. No. 8 Kldorado, owned by Charles Lamb, has been sold for $350,000. One man on Sulphur creek •leaned lip SI,BOO after two days' sluic ing. R. I). Rhodes' claim on N'o. 21. above Bonanza, yielded 245 ounces in i single clean-up. Many claims on El lorado and Bonanza will yield SIOO,OOO or more. "The most remarkable strike this season was made on French Gulch, a Mnall tributary of Eldorado. Pay dirt was found on bench claims at an ele vation of 700 feet above the bed of Kldorado. In one day $2,900 was panned out. Victoria, B. C„ July 18.—Editor Shippy. of the Skaguay News, who r-anic down on the Cottage City, says this year's clean up at Dawson will be i trifle less than $20,000,000. The May West had $750,000 and more and the other boats which left June 28 and Tilly 4 carry the balance of the output. There is no fear of a famine in Daw Adore 111 in —II i« lleeord UH a Military Man. Few of the gallant soldiers in tli« United States army are able to look back over a career so varied and so full of useful activities as that of llenry C. Corbin, the [(resent adjutant gen eral. Inheriting from his patriot an-r cestors an ardent spirit of American ism he determined early in life to de vote himself to the service of his coun try, and since he left his father's farm, a hardy, untrained but ambitious lad, he has known no other calling- than that of a soldier. At the first summons to arms in IStil, young Corbin down his farming implements and, with godspeed from a loyal father, he hastened to enroll himself among the union volunteers. Up to that period he had spent 19 > ears on the paternal farm in Clermont county, ()., where he was born in September, 1842. Although he enlisted as a private, Corbin speedily rose to the rank ol first lieutenant of the Eighty-third Ohio infantry. He went immediately to the front and soon afterward ha was transferred to the Seventy-ninth Ohio, in which he served for more than a year. In the fall of 1803 he whs ap pointed major of the Fourteenth United States colored infantry, and much of the high reputation attained by that regiment for discipline and ef fective service was due to his efforts as a drillmaster and leader, lie was successively promoted to be lieuten ant colonel and colonel of that regi ment, and in March, 1865, he received the honorary brevet of brigadier gen eral. Throughout the war his com mand was frequently engaged at im portant points, and not only did he win personal distinction as a brave and cool-headed officer, but the regi ment was cordially commended in of ficial Teports. The young officer earned his first brevet for "gallant and HBKKY C. C'OKlilN. (Adjutant General of the United States Army.) meritorious conduct" at Decatur and Nashville. After the Fourteenth infantry was mustered out of service, early in the spring oi 1800, Col. Corbin was at onto commissioned a second lieutenant in the regular United States army and attached to the Seventeenth infantry His ability as a tactician and an ex ecutive officer soon secured his ad> vaneemvnt to the rank of captain, and in November, ISG9, at the age of years, he was transferred, with that rank, to the Twenty-fourth infantry. In 1877 Capt. Corbin —more famil ly known even then as Gen. Corbin — was detached as military attache to the president, and during the inter esting period of his service at the ex ecutive mansion he developed not only an admirable degree of tact, but those sterling social qualities which resulted in the establishment of strong and lasting friendships with some of the most distinguished soldiers and states men of his time. His relations with Presidents Hayes and Garfield were of the most cordial and confidential char acter, and Presidents Harrison and McKinlcy have each held him in high esteem as a valued friend. lie was with President Garfield when the lat ter was shot, in the Pennsylvania rail road station ir. Washington, in July, 1881, and he was one of the sorrow stricken family group that stood by the assassinated president's bedside at Klberon when death came a few weeks afterward. President Haves appointed Capt. Corbin to his staff with the rank of major in ISSO. and also made him an assistant adjutant general. At various times he served on the staffs of Gens. Hunt, Sehofield, Terry, Cooke and Miles, proving himself at all times a most trustworthy and valuable aid to his chief. He .vas with Gen. Miles in the exciting and successful cimpaigii against Geroriimo, and also during the Pine Ridge campaign, which continued through 1890 and 1891. Subsequently while with Gen. McCook in Arizona he was vested with the personal direction of and responsibility for the campaign against the Moquis. and he dischargee his obligations with customary promptness and thorougness. About this time he was promoted to be lieu tenant < olonel. and in 1892 he was sum moiled to Washington for important duty at the wnr department. After lie had been in Washington foi n few years Col. Corbin was trans ferred 10 Governor's Island. New Vorl harbor, as chief of staff of the depart ment of the ea-t. ir. which capacity h< served until October. 1897 when ht was ordered lrick to Washington it consequence of tlip apnronehinfir re firereent of Ad it. Gen. Samuel I'.reek President McKinlcy appointed Col Sorbin as Gen. ?'i-?ek*.= si ecc sscr in tln t<«|. pj. oi° last Febru uy COMMODORE WATSON. The Man Who lint JteeelveU tioaia t» Annihilate A4 inches wide. The stars are 31'/ s inches in diameter. Hira weight of the flag is 203 pounds. Mexico's Huhher Output. Last year the output of rubber from Mexico was 1.0tt0,000 pounds. Hun dreds of thousands of rubbertreesare being planteJ, and in a few years most of our supply of rubber will come from that country. Chinese lluritlar* Are Shrew»l. In a recent book on China the author says that Chinese burglars are difli eult to catch, as they oil their bodies ill over and twist their pigtailr into bunches stuck full of needh'S. 3