CI) VOL. VIII THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, APRIL .29 1895 NO 101 DIPLOMATIC CIRCLES Event of the Day the Turn of Affairs in Nicaragua, r SHREWD MOVE OF NICARAGUANS AtMr tne Brlti.h - Bad Landed Tber '- Abandoned the Town and Declared Corinto m Closed Port. Washington, April 27. The events of the day in diplomatic circles here were the landing of the British troops at Corinto, the abandonment of the town by the native officials and the popula tion, and the shrewd move of the Nica , raguans in declaring Corinto a closed port. The 'first news of the event came in the afternoon. Dr. Guzman bad been waiting several hoars at the state department to see Secretary Gresham. He was in a fever of anxiety, and, in the absence of news from his own govern ment, came to learn what the depart ment bad received as to the British movements at Corinto. He was unable to see the secretary this morniug, for Mr. Gresham ' was suffering from a se- j yere toothache and was obliged to pass some time in the dentist's chair.. a . r :.. . 1 A.J Li. borne for luncheon; and found there two telegrams from bis government, for warded from San Jnan del Sur, the Nicaragnan cable port, about 125 miles sooth of Corinto. The first cablegram j Mated that the British troops had landed j at Corinto, and that the British flag was flying over' the town, which bad been deserted by the Nicaragaan officials and tne native innaoitants.. ine second cablegram showed' that the authorities had gone to ban Joan del Sur, cutting the wires connecting the cable port .with Corinto, so that the British forces at the "latter place could not communicate with, their home government except by send ing a boat .to the cable etation. . The , ' jaairi body of the Nicaraguans who. had abandoned Corinto bad crossed a lagoon which separates the town from the mainland, and had strongly intrenched themselves. . .This information was promptly communicated to the state department. Dr. Guzman, wbo has "been in ill health and has suffered so from the ner vous strain of the' last few weeks am to be obliged to take to his bed I his after noon, would not do so nntil he had gone . through the rain to see Secretary Gresh am and officially communicated the substance of his cablegrams to him. The news, it was apparent, was not ex pected b the state department, which had never believed that the Nicaraguans - would go to the length of permitting the occupation of Corinto in preference to paying the indemnity. That the only difficulty in the way of a speedy settle- : ment ' of ' the trouble was that, arising . from the trouble experienced by the ' Nicaraguan government' in 'raising the money hastily, and that the British ad miral would be indulgent on this point when satisfied of the disposition of the Nicaraguans to comply with the terms . of the ultimatum.-otherwise bad never been doubted by the department. For this reason the first reports of the occu pation of Coiinto received at the depart- , ment from unofficial sources were dis credited, and doubts expressed as to their accuracy. The secretary bad been unable to obtain any definite informa- . tion from his own agents as to the action . nt t It o Rritish nrnhaKlv inn - "4hat Mr. Baker, our minister, is not at present in that country, and there is no . . charge at Managua. ' There is a consular " agent at Corinto, Henry Palaxio, but - he is not American, and could scarcely be relied upon in a matter of this kind to keep the department informed in the absence of orders. The situation at Corinto is now regard Highest of all m 3eavemng Power. mm A CV ... ed as ominous of serious trouble, for the dispatches indicate that the Nicaraguans are disposed to resist any further ad vance by the British. The information reaching here is that the Nicaraguans may further isolate the British at Corinto by burning the bridges across the lagoon separating the town from the mainland. The" British position is said to be very bad from a strategic standpoint.' The town is prac tically on an . island, being separated from the mainland : by a stretch of marshy ground,' This is traversed by bridges, and those well informed on the situation believe that if the British make any movement to cross the lagoon the bridges will be burned, and the little band of Nicaragaan troops will , make a stand against futher encroachments. The British are evidently apprehen sive of trouble on this score, as indicated by the cablegrams from Colon, showing that three vessels, the Royal Arthur, the Wild Swan and the Satellite, have been so placed as to command the town with their guns. It is probable that this disposition has been made so as to insure the occupying forces, numbering about 400 armed men, from an attack from the Nicaraguans, rather than with any deliberate purpose of bombarding the town, for there is no evidence that British desire to advance into the in terior at present, and it is certain, y : not a part of . the original . programme of operations as made known to our government. . The news of the situation - at' Corinto created a commotion here, and particu larly in the state department.' Sir Julian Pauncefote,the British ambassador ,came to the department, and after remaining in private consultation with Secretary Gresham for a short time the two re paired to the war department to consult with Secretary Lampht. The latter was absent at the time, but, coming in later, repaired immediately to the state de partment and talked over matters with the president. ; Latter the news came to the department by the press dispatches from Colon that the Nicaragnan' govern ment had made a sharp move by declar ing Corinto a closed port. This was evidently'a disturbing element in the calculations, "for . Assistant ' Secretary Uhl' was at once dispatched to the British embassy to confer with Sir Julian Paun- cefote, a most unusual proceeding in de partmental etiquette. ' . It was said at tne : embassy that Sir Julian Pauncefote had not received con firmation from the foreign office of the British occupation of Corinto up to ' the close of the embassy, at 3 o'clock.' The embassy did not except direct informa tion from London, as it is said the for eign office has no occasion to communi cate with the. British representative at Washington. '-..' ' ' There can be no doubt that the action of the -Nicaraguan government in de claring Corinto a closed port has serious ly complicated a most troublesome ques tion, and even if there is no resort to hostilities at present, it opens a prospect of alarming events in the future, which may, and in fact, are, even regarded as likely to involve -the United States di rectly in the affair, in spite of the earnest disposition of the administration to avoid the entanglement. The action means that' no goods can now be entered at Corinto, a port which has heretofore received over half of the imports into the country, without violating the national law of Nicaragua. The British may collect duties if any goods enter the place, but the latter would, be liable to seizure the moment ' thev crossed the British lines into .the interior.' ' They most do this to find a market, for 'the coast, being unhealthy, is thinly popu lated and the great consuming class of the population lives in the interior. ..The first effect of the decree closing the port, therefore, will probably be to divert nearly all, if not the entire import trade of the place to San Juan del Sur, or per' haps Realajo, a seaport near by, for it is improbable that many .merchants will take the chances of getting their goods into Nicaragua through the British lines Juest U. S. Gov't Report . under the circumstances. In this case, the length of the stay of the British at Corinto is problematical, conditional, as it is," upon collecting enough revenue from customs to make good the indem nity demanded. Bat another consideration arises at this point, for oar government has been assured that the occupation will not be permanent, and, indeed, tne first para graph of the Clay ton-Bulwer treaty ex pressly pledges Great Britain - against occupation of Nicaragnan territory. - So the problem will arise, how to collect the indemnity within a reasonable time. This may be settled summarily by sim ply extending the occupancy and block ade beyond Corinto, so as to include all of the Pacific ports of Nicaragua. From the disposition shown by the Nicara guans at present, this can be done only by force, and is likely to add very largely to the expense incurred in the collection of the ' indemnity, which items will surely be added by . the British to the original sum. This course, moreover, will seriously embarrass the commerce of the United States, and 'on this point Great Britain baa given Secretary Gres ham certain assurances of the manner in which the British may be sure of attain ing their ends by a prompt declaration of war and an invasion of Nicaragua, in volving the capture of the capital, Ma nagua, and. the imposition , upon the Nicaraguans of the British terms as the price of peace. ' '! It may be that the British government will be driven to the latter course in thq interest of trade, our own as well as that of her own. merchants, which she - is bound to safeguard. If goods entered at Corinto, after payment of 'duty to the French occupants, should be seized in the interior, the owners, British or American, would have eyery claim for reparation. The only, question is as to whose duty it would be to secure this; whether the United States would feel bound to intervene in the case of an American merchant in such case, and therein lies one of the' features, which may involve our country directly in the dispute. ; ': ,0 .. , '. ,' . It has been asserted as a bard and fast rule of international law that duties can not be twice collected,; and bur own gov ernment has taken an advanced position on' this question. At one time, when' the diplomatic relations between Great Britain and Mexico were interrupted and a revolutionary movement was in progress in the latter country, a British ship, entering one of the revolutionary ports of Mexico, paid duties upon her goods to the insurgents. Afterward the Mexican govern mont again assessed the duties upon the same goods, holding the insurgents had no authority to make the' first collection, and refusing to re cognize it. The . British minister, Sir Edward Thornton, appealed to our country, Great Britain haying no repre sentative in Mexico, to secure the re lease of the goods from this imposition! We acted very promptly and obliged the Mexicans to release the goods .and to acknowledge the principle that the duties cannot be twice levied. This case differs in many important, features from the present one, ths clo sure of Corinto, and it is difficult to as certain the application of international law in this case, although the general broad principle would seem to be simi lar. . ' - -.' ; lOO Reward SlOO J The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. .Hall's Cure is the only posi tive cute known to the medical frater nity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treat ment. 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