nutioki I,. .,; ......i.-jt r ---"-, 1 THE DAILY AST0RIAN ll the tljiest and belt MP" on the Columbia River THE ASTORIAN Das ttie largest circulation of an" tatr on the Column River FULL ASSOCIATED PRICSS KKPORT. VOL XKVI1I. ASTORIA, OHMiUX, TliTUSDAY .MOKMMi, FfclSJiUAKY 17, 181MJ. NO. 41. Klondike Supplies MlticrH OtitfitH AND CniupcrM UtCMHllM mid PtovIhIohh Foard & Stokes Company Diaries and Calendars For 1898... vt Blank- Books arid Office Supplies GRIFFIN & REED W. F. SCHEIBE, FINE CIGARS Bl Plp aa Atitf' ArtUWs. 4T4 l'oiiiiiiri lal HI KKCKIVED IN Til PHIUAHY. ORAMMAR AND; AOADIMIU OhAOKM J.M. THE SISTERS OF THE Convent of the ...Holy Names ASTORIA. OREGON. IUVK OI'K.NKU TIIKIIl IIOAKIHSd AM) 1AY HCHOOL For rl, .to., addrwM th HuirtorwM INMTHU- MENTAL MCH1C, PAINTING AND VOICE CULTURE POKM A SPECIAL DSPAKTMENT i imm 99 Kopp's "Best A DELICIOUS DRINK.... and ABSOLUELY PURE Tlie North r.ciflo llrrwcr, of wbiob Mr.JuliD Kopp ii proprietor, tuake lri for domestic (nil Alport traoV. UuIIImI Iwr for Istiiilv ti, or keg br .npplinl at njr time, delivery in the city Ire. NORTH PACIFIC BREWERY -- SHIELD r t ;BRAND r- . UNION MEAT COMPANY A I.I. KINPH tK CANNKI) MKATi Hams, Bacon and Strictly Pure Lard ilusinnteed The Mel In th Mark! Cor. fo.rtb ltd (illsai Streets rortliad. Ortgot. mmm Tb. Bast, Atwolut.tr Pur. Ry. "Keystone Monogram" Whiskey LOSS OF LIFE IS APPALLING Of the Maine's Crew 258 Met With Death. ilo, or III explosion of a mine hnniti th hi. Tli large maturity of th naval officers are Inclined to bllf tlint th (iloitlon r(null-l from r"ntn-ou rornliuitlon of the rnnl liunkr ly tht OYfrhitlnK ot Hi pnrtHlon htw-n th boll-r nl the rnilnt, or the eiplonlon of the boiler, thouh th lent thorjr flnrtu llttl .upjK.rt. A lint of the mirrlvlore thnt mm to the nevjr rtc .rlni'nt thl nft.moon In nwr to tlt-Krame wa Inarrurate, and made the loaa eight more thin the eummary orlKlnally rlvn by Captain fllifnh. In the arllr trl.iram; ao Htrrttnrf lmg tkrraphl for another correted Hat and alo one that ahould ahow who were and ho wr not wounded of the eur vlvore. It waa found wcwery to do thla. owing to the rat numbr of pitiful appeal for Information aa to the nMj of the unfortunate on the Maine that came from all parta of the country. Naval conatructora, In light of th dlpt h-f thui far received, aay It la by no mi-ana rrtaln that th Maine cannot be rained and a.lln carry the flag. Thty aay thai, while he I a llg ahlp. other, aa large nave l-n ,-alacd. and at Havana the new flouiing ilryd'x k would rr. ve h r If he could only ttr gotten above water. MANY VIEWS ENTERTAINED Statements From Naval Officials Hint at Base Treachery. THE MAGAZINE ALWAYS KEPT LOCKED Events Go to Show That the Terrible Dis aster Was the Work of Demons and War May Ensue. t j TWO HUNDRED AISD FIFTY-EIGHT WERE KILLED. HAVANA, Fcliruary i. Out (if 354, the total number of the crew of the battleship Maine, but 96 escaped with their lives from the terrible explosion which occurred aboard the vessel last niht. The remaining 158 are known to have perished with the ship. STATEMENT OF CAPTAIN SICSBEE. H AVANA, February 16. Captain Sigsbee was interviewed this morning by a correspondent of the Associated Press with reference to the cause of the explosion, and said: I cannot determine the cause, but competent investigators ill decide whether the explosion was produced from an in terior or an exterior cause. I cannot say anything until after such investigation has been made. I will not, ami cannot, conscientiously anticipate a decision, nor do I wish to make any unjust estimate of the reason for the disaster." LOOKS LIKE TKCACHEKY. Washington, Fh K. Naval ottlrtrn cannot agree upon any theory to arrount fur the dratrut-tlon of the Maine. Perhapa the majority are Inclined to th be lief t In. t the ixplotlori wan purely acrldenatl. Another conaldrrable number feel that a lori-do waa iploled uiidr the ve-l. and a third theory la that vimt In fernal ma hlne wa miiii;l'l aboard th Khip and aet off. In the present lack ot knowledge, It l not thought pomlble (o aay toward which theory the b.ilance ot probability Incline! Th'-r waa no amok-le ikiiIt on board the ahlp and the ten-lmh ammunition waa made up of brown prlamatic powdei. Not omy i thru powder moat i a re run y packed In hermetically copper caaea. but Ita heat remittance qualities are ao great that it cannot he Ignlt'd by the flame of a match, all hundred d-gre,-a f-r-enhelt being th amount of h'nt that muat be applied for aome time to aet off the r. The Maine hail three magaxlnea. The one forward waa uaed for the alorage of ammunition weighing 'j,'" pouncra Thla quantity of uplotiven ta ao large that naval onVr here can acarcely believe It waa poaatble for any human !erng on Ix.anl to hae encapvd had the magazlnr exploded entirely. In Ita vicinity a aentry atanda on duty continually. Tb. doora are cloacd hermetically except when the uhlp l cleared for action. At t o'clock every night the temperature la takm and the keye of the locked door are placed In the caplain'a handa for the night. The record of the navy department ahow that ST degreea waa the maxi mum temia-rature In the Maine's niag.mne during the paat month a very low and aafe teinerature. Th f.ict make It extremely difficult to account for the xpl lon. THINKS UAK KILL FOLLOW. Chicago. Keb. It Commander J. E. Montgomery, one. of th' United State nary. commanding officer of the confederate fleet during the civil war, and the man who .raird the frigate afterward the ram Merrimac. waa -very emphatic today In de claring the alnklag ot the balllcahlp Maine In JHvnna. harbor to be the reault at treachery and an act without parallel the world', hlatory. In hla opinion war muf fnevltably follow. THE TWO MISSING OITICEKS. Washington. Keb. 16. -The two office of the Maine unaccounted for. and who It I feared are dead, are Lieutenant (Junior grade) F. P. Jenkins and Assistant Engineer Pnrwtn I). MerrltL Jenkins was born In A!legb.eney City. June M. IStai. and appointed naval cadet September 2S. lSSt. by Representative Boyce, of the Twenty-third congrt-sslon.il district. After a short cruise on the Atlanta he was graduated June 11, ISSS. after which he solved succensfully on the Galena, Kear iarge and Sumatra. He was attached to the coast survey and served with It un til February. 1. when he waa agnln ordered to aea on the gunboat Bennington. From June. IsM, to Septemlier, 1S. he was on ordnance duty at the naval proving ground at Indian Head. Md.. and In September. 1SS5. he was ordered to the bat tleship Maine, and aince haa been attached to the vessel. He reached his present grade of Junior lieutenant In 1S9T. Assistant Knglneer Merrill was born at Red Oak. Montgomery county, Iowa, April 11, 1S71 He waa appointed to the naval academy September 10. 1SS1, gradu ating at the head of his class four years later. He went to aea on the Amphrttite and was subsequently transferred to the Indiana, and received his final gradua tion July t. 1S9T. After a short service at the New York navy yard he. was or dered to the Maine, In September. 1897. Tot Bl. at Th. Occident Hotat Bar, Ttiw Offloe BaJoon. Aa4 all h leading bars In Aetorta. 8au I' raiicisco uin' rortltind . , , . . 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Feb. l(. -Tonight, after a day of Intense excitement at the nary rpartment and elsewhere, growing out of the destruction of the battleship Maine, In Havana harbor Inst night, after the exchange of a number of cablegrams he- wee ti Washington and Havana, the situation can be summed up In th word, ot Secretary Ing, who replied, when asked, a. he waa about to depart for the day, If h had reason to suspect that th disaster wa. the work of th. enemy: I do not; In that I am Influenced by th fact that Captain Slgsbee ha. not yet reported to th navy department on the cause. Ita Is evidently waiting t. write a full report. So long ns he does not express himself, I certainly cannot. I should think from Indications, however, that there was an accident and that the maga line exploded. How that enme about I do not know. For the present, at least, no other warship will be sent to Havana." Tho appalling nature "f the disaster, and the gravity of the situation that woulci arise should an Investigation give basis for nn undercurrent of suspicion ot treachery and foul ploy, thnt ran through all minds had a sobering effect upon publlo men of all shades of political oplnton. Tho fact stands forth, and It Is llttlo less than remarkable In that not a single resolution was Introduced, or a single speech mnde In either house of eongress, save one of condolence with tho fami lies of the killed, offered by Mr. Routelle, and adopted by the house of repre sentative.. Public men express their opinions with reserve when approached, but every where there was n demand for nn Investigation and hill dotnlls In the light of which the horror may bo Justly viewed. Secretary Long undoubtedly summarised the general opinion of the majority ot the nnvnl experts In finding It Impossible Just now to stnto the cause of the de struction of the Maine. There arc a great number of theories, but most of them are of a character thnt nuikcs It easy to prove or upset them by a single Investiga tion. Lute this afternoon he telegraphed to Admiral Slenrd, at Key West, to appoint n board of nnvnl ofllcers to pro eed nt once to Havana, employ divers and general ly to make such Inquiries as the recommendations of the navy department de mand shall be made In the cane of tho loss of the ship. It Is expected thtit this work will tnko some time and, while there arc ofneers who say thnt, In their opin ion, It will pot be possible, owing to tho probably disrupted condition of the hull of the ship, to make out tho cause of th e explosion, the opinion of the majority Is thnt the question will caBlly be sottlod by a simple examination of the condi tion of the ship's hull plate and the location of the hole which sank her wheth er the plate, bulge out, as would be tho onse If the explosion cam. from th. Inside, or whether they are driven In, aa would bo the case If the explosion esme from the outside, or whether they are driven in, a. would result from an attack of a torpe- SI'AXIXKDS EXPRESS DEEI' REGRET. Washington, Feb. It-The news of the Main, disaster wa learned at the Span ish legation with horror and occasioned many expression of profound regret and condolence. Early In the day Senor Duboac, 8panlah charge d'affaires, re ceived a message from Captain-General Blanco, which had been filed at Havana at I o'clock this morning, a follows: "With profound regret I have to inform you that th. American ship Maine, In this harbor, blew up, an undoubtedly chance accident, believed to have resulted from an explosion of the boiler in the dynamo. Immediately following the a cl drnt all disposable elements of the capital hastened to the spot to extend every aid possible. These included s forco of the marine fire brigade and all the gen trals In Havana, among them my chief of staff. There have been deaths and wounded. I have sent nn aide-de-camp to offer every assistance to the North American consul that he may wish. I will forward further details as they be come available. (Signed.) Rlaneo." Senor lieboso expressed tho most profound regret at the occurrence. When askeel If the disaster could have any adverse eftect upon tlie relations between Spain and the United States he responded with a decided negative and the statement that the affair was wholly an accident. Senor Pubosc hastened to the state department toon after receiving the Blanco cablegram for the purpose of expressing his deep condolence to the authorities and of communicating Captain-General Blanco s dispatch to Secretary Sherman and Mr. Day, assistant secretary. To both ot them he expressed personally and officially the most proiound regret. Members of the Spanish legation called at the navy department and left their Individual" cards as an expression of their per sonal condolence. The Spanish naval attache, Senor Sebral, who Is in New York, sent a telegram to tho secretary of the navy expressing profound regret at the news of the loss of American navnl companions. THE NEKS IX MADRID. Madrid. Feb. 16. The following semi-official note has been Issued: "The news of the disaster to the Maine has caused a painful Impression In Mad rid. It was at first feared thnt there had been some act of Imprudence to which tho catastrophe was attributable. Afterwards, as details arrived, these fears were dispelled, giving way to feelings of sympathy and sorrow for the misfortune which has occurred. The Captain-General, the commandant of the arsenal, tho sullcjrs of the cruiser Alfonso XIII, the crews of the merchant vessels and all nvallntile forces hastened to succor tho Injured. The government has expressed to Minister Woodford tho regret It feels at the catastrophe, more specially as It oc curred In waters within Spanish Jurisdiction. "An admiral In full uniform, In the name of the minister of marine, and the en tire Hpnnish cabinet called on General Woodford today and Informed him that tho government had telegraphed the authorities In Cuba to do their utmost to rolieve the distress and furnish th. officer and the crew of the Maine with everything which they may need." HAY REACHED DOLLAR MARK Brought an High as $1.05 oa tie Chi cago Curb Yesterday. HEAVY FOREIGN SHIPMENTS Talk of Lirne EigaQtsie.U tor Llshoi nd Rcdsetio of rort.gae Craia Dsty Sett the Trice I p. Chicago, February 11 Trouble for shorts In wheat was Indicated on the curb before the regular opening. May was bid up lo II 03 on rumor of large engage ment of wheat for spec ial to Lisbon and talk of reduction of th Portuguese grain duty. The bullish feeling waa greatly In creased by Interviews regarding the Eu ropean situation by a prominent Chicago broker, who ha been traveling through Europe. In which he confirms th reports Of almost unprecedented small stocks, and said that Europe wa dependent on the I nlted States for her upplls. Th opening prices for May wheat ranged from VtiW. compared with yes terday' close of W.4. There wa perfect rush of short for cover at once, a wa the case yesterday, and almost no wheat wa offered for aale. lnsld. of fifteen minute, the bid had hn raised lo Mi Thl wa above call nrle. and for the first time wheat came on tb. market in considerable quantities, mostly offering against these privileges, though everything offered was taken; prices agged off to U' and the excitement, which had been Intense, died down to a certain extent. It wa evident the trad. wa thoroughly alarmed over the appar ently unshaken hold Joseph Letter boa on May wheat, and the official announce- ment that he ha contracted for the mov ing of liO.OuO bushel of hi wheat to seaboard, with a promised movement ot I7.QuO.iMO bushel, served to Increase th. activity of short to get out Thl fact seemed to be the only factor In trading. Apparently no attention waa paid to the new of the blowing op ot the battleship Maine, and the usual new wa colorless. At the close July wa at '-,. May, In the meantime, had been bid up to l'CH. and was bringing ldj'i as the closing bell sounded. On the cur after the regular session it sold a hlg as lv5'i. GREAT VHEAT BATTLE RENEWED. Chicago. Feb. 15. The Post today aayt: Joseph Lelter nas securely cornered th. May wheat market, and plays fast and loose with fears of a tremendous short interest, and Is showing himself to be by all odds the moat remarkable factor ever encountered In the local market One more the battle between Armour and Letter is being waged. THE LONDON MARKET. New York. eb. 1 The Evening Pott'. London, cable says: The stock market here was dull today. Americans were flat on the disaster to the battleship Maine. The disposition here Is to regard the matter as a lament able accident, but It Is feared the United States may think otherwise. Anyhow, It la recognised that the disaster may serv. temporarily as a fresh Incentive to th. lingo party and for this reason the mar ket, after a small rally, closed at tb. worst. The incident has revealed on. fact at least, namely, that the bull account her. Is much Isrger than had been supposed. THE MARKETS. Liverpool. Fb. It Wheat Firm; No. 1 standard California. Ms M. Portland. Or.. Feb. lt-Wheat-Vfalla Walla. 7SW?: bluestem and valley. 7SH97. IN THE HOUSE. Washington, Feb. 11 Th. debate on th. bankruptcy bill, which Is to continue un til Saturday, when a vote will be taken. opened In the house today, but attracted little attention, the interest of the mem bers being entirely absorbed by the dis aster to the Maine. The hall was almost deserted, the members being congregated in the lobbies or cloak rooms discussing the accident and speculating upon its probable consequences. Just before the house adjourned, Bou- telle, chairman of the naval committee. presented a resolution, which was unan imously adopted, expressing regret for the disaster, and condolence with the families of those who lost their live and sympathy with the Injured. DE LOME INCIDENT ENDED. Madrid, Fob. 16. El Correreo, the offi cial organ, announces that the United States minister, Mr. Woodford, tonight received Spain' reply concerning the De Lome letter, and It ays that the Incident Is regarded as terminated. Royal saake the food pur, wholeson aad dellcloa. mi til FQVi'0R Absolutely Pur aovM. autma powoe eo., arm vox.