Image provided by: Washington County Cooperative Library Service; Hillsboro, OR
About Washington County news. (Forest Grove, Washington County, Or.) 1903-1911 | View Entire Issue (April 19, 1906)
LAVA C O O LS AND ASH E S F A LL. » THE NATIONAL HALLS OF CONGRESS Tuesday, April 17. \Ptil 1 7 .- T o clear u b i-tive i«:0" ’ decks lor pending money support of the government, ,or «orked uninterrupt- |009e il 30 to 6 o’clock. In that n lneral hills were passed under •ion ol the rules. Wll to provide for entry of agri- , .ml within forest reserves was ‘ „n motion of Dixon, Montana. ^ Wyoming, thought if the b ill ' , would bring vast areas direct- - , tbe bureau of Forstry that did » tree or bush. So far as these ^'concerned, it would repeal the ' iDd stone section of the present , d tbs commutation clause. ‘ hill was passed with one amend- .lik in g out the paragraph giv- :be secretary of *ric u ltu r e the to set aside such forest reserve ” B pot occupied by a bona fide i]ft J.nuary 1» 1 u | ing much time in useless debate end wrangling, the house took up the i oat- office appropriation bill. 1 The bill was finally perfected at 5 -45 o’ clock, when Moon, ol Tennessee, en- tered a motiou to recommit to the post- office committee with instructions to report the bill to the house immedi ately with the Southern railway mail subsidy stricken out. On this motion Crmpacker, of Indiana, demanded a rollcall, which was ordered. Moon’ s motion was lost, 96 to 99. This re tained the subsidy in the bill, and without furthor objection the bill was passed. * „bington, April 1 7 .-P receed in g lin g up of the railroad rate bill , l j a t e today, Tillman called up „solution directing the senate com- 4«on finance to enter upon an in tuition ot the question of campaign itr butions by the national banks and ' resolution was referred to the fi- ■ * committee. Tillman said that would not confine the inquiry to the bliceo committee, hut would ex- il it to the Democratic committee, iter spoke for almost three hours on ’ rate bill, contending for the valid ol the proposed legislation. Monday. April 10. Washington, April 1 « . - I t took the M of representatives just one min- to pass Representative Jones’ hill jropriating »400,000 to continne ikon the jetty at the mouth of the .iambi* river. In accordance with promise, Speaker Cannon this after an recognised Mr. Jones to call up ■bill reported by the river and bar- ir committee last Friday. fThe bill was read, and without a Bin- word being eaid in its favor or in KMition, the speaker announced that ■ bill "would be considered as read ^third time, engrossed and passed.” was all there was to it. It hap- ied so quickly that few members ■sent knew that nearly »500,000 was ng appropriated. iCrnmpacker, of Indiana, called up bill extending until April 11, 59, the date for applying the coast- laws ol the United States to the jilippines. Under the present con- jtions, these laws will apply July 1 ¡Opposition to the bill was made by «mphray, of Washington, who said e was ample American shipping the Pacific coast to take care of the amerce between the United States 1 the Philippines, and, if the time _ss not extended, these American ships old get the business. |The bill was passed by a vote of 217 27. Thursday, April 12. Washington, April 12.— The featnre of today’ s proceedings in the house of representatives was the speech made by Cochran, of New York, who, under an agreement made on a previous day, was given an hour to elucidate the subject of “ general debate” on appropriation bills. In view ol the announcement that Cockran would speak, the galleries were crowded and a very large propor tion of the members were in attend ance. Cockran, after a short discussion of the fiction of “ general debate” and the failure of members to attend the sit tings of the house while subjects cover ing the widest possible latitude were being illuminated, launched into a de fense of the Hepburn rate bill and the high position taken by the house, not only in the exceptional character of the legislation, but in the dignified way in which the billl passed the lower branch of congress. In this connection he ridiculed the constitutional debaters in the senate. Washington, April 12.— After a brief speech by Lattimer on in support of the house railroad rate bill, Foraker today took the floor on that measure and consumed practically all of the re mainder of the day’s session of the sen ate. He spent some time in the discus sion of some of the amendments he has suggested, aDd then entered upon the consideration of the entire question of railroad rate regulation, arguing against the constitutionality of the pending bill from various points of view. He was frequently interrupted by other senators. Lodge spoke briefly in support of the practice of granting lower rates on goods intended for export than on those used in domestic con- snmption. Wednesday, April II. Washington, April 11.— Among the many bills passed by the senate today was one granting land on Morton is land, in Snake river, Oregon, to that state as a fish hatchery. Other bills passed follow: Authorising the allotment of land to natives of Alaska; prohibiting the use of diving apparatus in the taking ol sponges; authorizing the state of Mon tana to select lieu lands; prohibiting aliens from gathering sponges in Amer ican waters. In response to a request by Tillman to fix a time for taking a vote on the rate bill, Aldrich expressed the opinion that before the end of the week the speeches would be so far disposed of as o enable the senate to foresee the end of general discussion. Naples Recovers From Panic and is Cheered by King and Queen. Naples, April 13. — Frequent deton ations are still heard on Mount Vesu vius, The main crater is . but „ faintly. , _ „ The most con Kradually enlarg.ng «ohm» i „ the lava is cooling soling news is . that on alt sides. Ashes are failing everywhere, houses »re collapsing and burying their occu pants. Koads near the volcano are no sooner opened than they are closed again. The heaviest fall is now over Somma, Santa Anastasia, Ponticelli and other villages in a section opposite and distant from the city. The people have recovered from the panic of yesterday, are less sullen and downhearted. It is largely due to the presence ol the king and queen. They are mingling freely with the populace, doing everything in their power to alle viate the condition of the injured and mingling their tears with those who have lost friends ot relatives. The inhabitants of this city are en during the yellow gray atmosphere of yesteiday, which is even more oppres sive than before. The popular costume of those who can afford it consists of an automobile coat, cap and goggles, which enables the wearer to maintain a semb lance of cleanliness, but the people generally have to be contented with paper masks and raised umbrellas The drivers of trolley cars are wearing masks of some transparent material under the visors of their caps. More shops were opened today and the city is slowly resuming its normal life. The latest reports Bay that 243 houses have been damaged at Portiei, 195 at San Giovanni and Teduccio, 432 at Resina and 1,000 at Torre del Greco. It is impossible to determine the ex act number of buildings demolished at Torre Annunziata. It is estimated that about 5,000 houses in all have been partly or entirely destroyed. In villages on the Ottajano side ol the mountain all the houses are dam aged. At Nola desolation'reigns, the place having been almost entirely abandoned. A committee has been formed to col lect funds and organize assistance lor sufferers. It is presided over by the Puke of Aosta. The government heads the subscription list with »100,000. The amount collected up to the present time is »300.000. Firemen have been sent from Paler mo, Sicily, and other places to the vil lages in this vicinity which have suf fered the most from the fall of ashes, to assist in removing the asbee from the roofs and relieve the exhausted soldiers. Camp kitchens have been established and free meals are being served. CO AL TRAFFIC IS POOLED. Eastern Roads Admit They Have an Agreement as to Rates. Philadelphia, April 13.— That rates are fixed by the Traffic association com posed of various coal carrying roads was the admission drawn from railroad offi cials at the final hearing o* the Inter state Commerce commission investiga tion into the affairs and abn ee of the coal trade. Through Joseph G. Searles, coal traffic manager of the Pennsylva nia railroad company, who is also chairman of the All-Rail Traffic ass' - ciation, it was learned that this organi zation not only fixes the percentage of tonnage alloted to each read, but also establishes the rates. Counsel for the commission produced the minutes of the meeting of the Tide water Bitmninns Steam Coal Traffic as sociation, held on September 19, 1900. The records Bhowed that a resolution offered by the Norfolk & Western com pany permitting that company and ¡be Chesapeake A Ohio railroad to carry tide vater coal at the rate of »1.25 a ton was voted down and that the rvate was fixed at »1.40 a ton. Mr. Searles ad mitted that there had been an agree ment as to the tonnage to be allowed each road, and that, if one road ship- p d more and another less, a ettlement was made. He adds that there had been no settlement since 1896. Mr. Searles denied that there was an under standing to maintain rates between all rail and all water associations for the I orpoee of preventing competition. 1 ALL OF ONE bPIMION me jffr&rrBS’R D am ESE House Committee Unanimously Favors Jetty Bill. ITS PASSAGE IS NOW ASSURED Statements of Langfitt Remove All Doubts— Amendments Will Be Shut Out by Rules. Situated In a narrow ravine on the aouth fork of the South l’ latte river, 48 miles from Denver, la the highest dam on earth, known as the Cheesman dam. Its wall o f solid masonry Is 221 feet high. Impounding more than 30,- 000,000,000 gallons o f water. From an engineering viewpoint. Its nearest rival Is the famous Groton dam that Im pounds New York city’s water supply. This contains more masonry and cost more money, but It does not hold as much water, and Its construction was not attended with so many or so great engineering difficulties. It almost seems ns though Nature It self had Intended the site of Cheee- man dam to some day be utilized as a great reservoir. The canon of the South Platte river at this point Is not more than 35 feet wide at the bottom, and the sides are almost vertical for nearly 100 fe e t At this point the canyon begins to widen, so that 200 feet above the bottom It Is 600 feet wide, and 220 feet above the bottom Its width Is shout 700 fe e t From the bottom of the canyon to the summit of the dam the side walls are of solid granite. Before the masonry was laid, the looee boulders, rocks and debris were re moved. This work developed the fact that while the bottom contained pot holes, and the side* many irregulari ties, yet there were no seams nor crev ices. The dnm was constructed o f granite rubble masonry laid In Portland ce- Washington, April 14. — The houee committee on rivers and harbors today voted unanimously to favorably report the bill appropriating (400,000 for con tinuing the construction of the jetty at the mouth of the Columbia river, Rep resentative Jones was directed to make the report. This action was taken after Major Langfitt had submitted to the commit tee his charts and drawings explained in these dispatches yesterday. The showing ma-lc was so strong as to con vince every member of the committee of the advisability of immediatly mak ing this appropriation. The committee reported the Jones bill, which is iden tical in every respect with Senator Fulton’ s b ill that passed the senate several weeks ago, because several members believed appropriation bills should originate in the houee. Once the house passes the Jones bill, the senate w ill readily pass it, inasmuch as it is identical with the Fulton bill pre viously passed by that body. There is every reason to believe this bill will soon pass the house. The re port w ill be printed immediately, and some time touky M r. Fulton and Mr. Jones will call on the speaker to get h’m to agree to let the bill be called up for consideration and vote. Mr. Jones believes he w ill be allowed to call the bill up under suspension of the rules on Monday. I f be can do this he w ill successfully shut off all amend ments and probably secure prompt passage of the b ill. I f the hill is not H ERR MOST. brought up Monday, Mr. Jones w ill aBk unanimous consent for its consider I n I l o y H o o d F o o t b a l l o f F a t e , H e ation at an early date. In that event B e c a m e the A p o e tle o f H a te . the bill w ill not be subject to amend *Herr Johann Most, who died In Cin ments. cinnati the other day, was the high priest of anarchy. Brought up under the moat adverse circumstances, disflg TH REE A G A IN S T O NE. ured from boyhood. Ill-treated, by his first employer, kicked ana cuffed about Great Britain, France and Russia Unitij Europe by soldiery and police, he grew Against Germany. Into one o f the moat rnntankerous phil St. Petersburg, 'A p r il 14. — Great osophers and reddest revolutionists of Britain has begun vigorously to press modern times. Most wits born In Augs negotiations for an Anglo-Ruseian en burg, Germany, Feb. 5, 18-46. His tente, with the purpose of completing fnther hold an office at the court and the triple alliance of Great Britain, managed to give the hoy a fair elemen France and Russia against Germany, which has long been the aim of British policy. The development at the Alge- ciras conference, wtiere Great Britain, France and Russia acted in unison, and the participation of English bankers in the big Russian loan furnish a practi cal and favorable moment, and Great Britain is striking while the iron is hot. Besides, the British government has recently given Russia proni of her de sire to Bettis outstanding difficulties by inducing English bankers not to take the Persian loan, on the ground that it might be regarded as prejudicial to Rjssian interests. mant mortar, with tbs exception o f tbs upstream face, which is o f rough-point ed granite ashlar. For the downstream face, granite blocks o f moderate size are used, making It one o f the most handsome reservoirs to he seen any where— as well as one that should last almost as long as the eternal hills. T o the beauty of this work of man, are added the glories o f the Rockies—■ towering mountains rising In the dis tance capped with everlasting snow, whispering pines, rugged boulders and sapphire skies. The width of the dnm on top Is 18 feet, with a 14-foot road way. A t the bottom It Is 176 feet wide. The elevation o f the top of the parapet walls above the sea Is 6,865 feet. The primary object o f this great en gineering work Is to supply the city of Denver with water. Incidentally water is supplied for the Irrigation of several thousand acres o f land In the valley of the South Platte river. The artificial lake created by the Chessman dam covers an area of 84 acres, extend ing up South Fork valley five miles, up Goose creek two miles, and up Turkey creek one mile and a half. This reser voir Is filled with the melted snows o f the Rooky Mountains, furnishing prob ably the pnrest water enjoyed by any large city In the world. So capacloua Is the reservoir that the water always In storage would suffice for the 200,000 Inhabitants of Denver and Its suburbs for five years.— Williamsport (P a .) G rit and Moat was arrestea, tried, found guilty and sentenced to 10 months hard labor at Clerkenwoll prison. On his re lease ho sailed for New York, arriving In December, 1882. He Rpent thrtxt terms on Blackwell’s Island for Incen. diary utterances, HU last liuprU'ju- ment was for publishing In Frelhelt on the day Pcesldeot VoKlnlev was shot “ a article entitled, Murder vs Murder. Most was not taken seriously by many o f his brethren. He w h s a the atrical and earnest talker anil had a fine flow o f adjestlvea, chiefly denuncia tory. He achieved some success as nn actor In 185M by appearing at the Thalia aa Old Itaumert In tile Weavers, lie had not been conspicuous as an ad vocate of force In recent years and the rndlcal anarchists of the Emma Gold man strli>o were at odds with him. E lectric L l v h l « from W in d m ill. Wind-made electricity holds out the Washington, April 16.— A speech on promise o f becoming n great boon to t railroad rate bill by Heyburn, of rural districts; and the (lay Is nenr at iho, in advocacy of his court review band when every farmer who has n lendment, led to more than two windmill on his grounds can enjoy elec- ars’ technical debate in the senate rlc lights and the mnny other servlcisi !»y. The Indian appropriation bill vhlch electric power Is capable o f yield s taken up for committee amend ing. For many years, men have been nte, bnt was not completed, and trying to convert wind power Into elec Washington, April 11. — When «¡deration will be resumed tomor- tricity. It. W. Wilson, o f Westfield, <■ Tillman, of South Carolina, at Speaker Cannon called the house to Ind., has worked out a practicable opening ol the session, offered a order today, a senate bill ratifying an method o f aeeouipllshlng It. lo ion providing for an inquiry by agreement with the Lower Brnie hand BO TH MEN ARE C O N V IC T E D . In producing wlnd-nmde electricity, »committee on finance into contribn- of the Sioux tribe of Indians, in South Wilson calls upon the windmill to per Dakota, was passed. The postoffice ap is by national banks to campaign Gaynor and Greene May Get Sentence form Its customary function o f pumping imittees and why facts concerning propriation bill was then taken up. HERR .lo i I A X N MONT. water, lie lend» the water Into a hy o f 17 Years. The military record of General Jacob m had nut been disclosed by the Savannah, Ga., April 14.— Benjamin tnry education. In 18o;i young Most draulic regulator built on the prlnclplo H. Smith was the subject of a speech imptroller of the currency. D. Greene and John F. Gaynor were became LI, and nn o|>eratlon was per o f a water-lift. In whloh the pressure la by Banon, Ohio, who defended the ac found guilty of conspiracy against the formed. which disfigured hU face for controlled hy weights, and from which Friday, April 13. tions of General Smith, in the Philip government for presenting false claims life. This did us much as anything It Is released by means o f automatic Washington, April 13. — Owing to pines, stating that General Wood’ s and embezzlement in the Federal court else, perhaps, to sour his disposition. valve*. act that none of its members were achievements were a complete vindica This regulator Is the means o f main for the Southern jurisdiction of Georgia Then his mother (lied, and an unsym tion of the case of General 8mith. spared to speak on the railroad rate yesterday and Judge Emery Speer will pathetic stepmother came Into his world taining the even pressure under all con } , that measure was tunporarilv laid Hayes, Cal., spoke in favor of an in ditions, whether the windmill Is revolv pass sentence upon them. to torment him to rebellion. '! loJa7 >n the senate, permitting creased salary for postal clerks. ing fnst or slow. The defendants were found guilty, motion of the entire time to the He was apprenticed to a bookbinder Under the uniform pressure, the wa with no recommendation, on each of Cannon Gives Aid. and after learning the trade went wan !1 eri,i°n of other bills on the cal- the indictments. The verdict was re dor Ing through Italy, Switzerland anil ter Is passed from the hydraulic cham Washington, April 14. — Speaker 01 ll‘ese more than 300 were turned a few minutes before 2 o’clock Hungary. He found It difficult to get ber through n water motor to which a Cannon today assured Representative bill«10*1 °* tbetu be‘ DB Pr' vate pen- after the jury had been out three and work, because, ns lie says In ids auto dynamo la attached. Jones, of Washington, and Chairman a half hours. Mr. Wilson demonstrates the success tii og tde general bills passed was Burton, ol the river and harbor com biography, his "facial disfigurement The maximum sentence that the T "'creasing the pensions of ex- mittee, that he will permit them to kept customers away." Moat went to of the Invention nt Ills own shop in court may impose is an aggregate term Wild Stampede for Gold. ers who lost limbs in the service; call up the Columbia river bill on Mon Zurich In 1867 and got work, escaping Westfield, which Is brightly lighted with wind made electricity, nnd to all Carson, Nev., April 13 — The report of 17 years in the penitentiary ami a military service because of his deform *r retiring and pensioning petty day under suspension of the rules. fine of »575,000, the amount of the al appearnnees It equals the steam-umde ar' rnen of the army, navy and This is the most satisfactory arrange ed strike of gold in Churchill county Ity. He Imbibed socialistic Ideas and product that city folk enjoy. Early this leged embezzlement. e ' orP' titer 30 years of service ment that could be bronght about, for has stampeded Carson. started a cnismle against all organized it means that the bill must be consid morning there was a string of vehicles government. In Mny, 1809, he made a M i l l i o n B u s h e l * o f W b e u t W n x l r i l . * i r d K r h#tb?ir re* ular pay; and Durnovo Will Soon Fall. ‘ 'i increasing the pensions of ered solely on its own merits, and can and automobiles heading for Churchill violent speech denouncing the clergy, ‘‘During 1005,” write* George It. St. Petersburg, April 14. — Appear county to reach the Cooney Springs the military, the police and the middle Metcalfe, M. K„ In the Technical World rith tnA Wi.r 8oldie« to »20 per under no circmstances be confused or ances indicate that, Premier W itte hav strike. The town seems to have been Tuna \ riia^lnK Ihe attainment of associated with any other river and class. He spent a munth In Jail for Magazine, “ the railroad* o f the United harbor or appropriation bill. The almost deserted today in the pell mell ing the better of the fight with Minis tills outbreak. After passing other time 8 of a«e evidence of disability. State* ordered new locomotives to tha merits of the bill are so apparent that rush. News comes from Virginia City ter of the Interior Durnovo, the down In Jail for similar offenses. Moat wan number o f 0,300, together with 3,300 ^ ^ g o n ^ p r i l 13— After spend- it cannot be assailed. and other towns that the stampede has fall of the latter is only a question of a passenger cars and 340,0110 freight car*. The government today au selected by the Socialists as n mission affected them in the same manner. few days thor zed the holding on May 4 of a ary In Austria. The nuthi iliics ban These last figure* give a good Idea of Tonight there are rumors ol another g f>^0* Pes, Reclamation. Quick to Protest. ished ldra on May 2, 1871, and he was the relative Importance o f |>a**enger strike within 20 or 30 miles of this caucus of Constitntional Democratic Washington, April 16- — Since the •AprU 17— T he third and freight traffic to a large railroad. (legislates to the national parliament. escorted to the frontier by a large pro city. -fflittl* * .,nqair7 Of the house debate on the railroad raie bill warmed The rail mills started the new year Minister Durnovo has been compelled cession o f workingmen. In Saxony he was not allowed to with order* for 2,500,000 ton* on their »Mion of , reKardin* the up, certain eenators have grown very officially to warn the governors of pro Makes Troops Work Hard. rn j ^ e national reclamation s e n s itiv e about allusions to railroa^ vinces to exercise greater care in em- speak publicly, but he carried on the book*. Manila, April 13. — Major General br„lr r ht0^ - 8ecretary of the senators” and “ iriends of the railroads, “ In sidle o f these great order* and In Wood has» bad the troop* constantly • ployment of troops and police in re- propaganda In the homes of wagework and have lost no opportunity to deny ers. He was made editor o f the Chem spite of the best effort* o f the rnllrond engaged in maneuvering and practice pressive measures, projects under con- that they themselves are unduly friend nitz Frele I’ resse by bis pari», and manager*, idle after pile o f thousand* ,0ft110,>. those which are contetn- ly to the great transportation corpora marching. The officers and men com Killed by Other Pashas. served a month In Jail for making an o f bushel* o f corn ha* been hea|ied up plained that they are being wo-feed ex- . * tpproved P P r°ved but not be- tions. Up to the present session, • t*"!.tb^ there London, April 14. — The Constanti- Incendiary speech. He was summoned on the ground In Iowa, Kanaaa, and Gen- *'11 have been spent on whenever there was talk of ‘ corpora ceesively in this severe climate eral Wood has since directed that th e ' nople correspondent of the Post tele- to appear In court 43 times and wns Nehrnakn, for want o f storage roean or tion senators,” these men were not so ¡ & 2 J ; rci- » r p:, » u (rom .« « * r while In companv drills in front of the barracks , graph* that inquiry into the murder of convicted of 23 violations of law. He trnn*iM>rtatlon facllltlp*; the opera sensitive; they did not jump to their law !,=> abandoned. At present, battalion, Ii-.lvan I’isha, n -p refect of Constan had then become an anarchist o f the North Dakota alone, over a million feet then to continually disclaim any <**, mor. , y P t0Ltl" “ time wil1 ^ regimental and brigade drills cover tinople, who was assassinated March most radical type, advocating the use bushel* o f whent ha* rotted on the han that amount. particular friendliness for corporations. miles of territory, officers and men car 24. ha* resulted In a report that Rha- of force, even assassination hy poison gronnd for want o f freight cars to mil Pasha and Ahdur Rezak Beder had and bomb, lie was elected to the move It.” Heyburn Talk, rying heavy field equipment. More Talk Coming. to Desks. conspired for the murder of other* be- Reichstag twice. After passing many T h e il»*» nla f » l W n y. APril 17.— Twice .......... Washington, April 16.— Speeches on dur- . aidee Redvan Paaha, including the min- months In prison he was ordered from Castro Quits Temporarily. Thankful we wander la bloom and In ’bum prifti ! T r h Teeterday Senator the railroad rate bill will be the feature ia'ere of war and public work*. The Germany. New York, April 13 — General Cipri- blight. Wl* h * ^ I « “ Pried the sen- in the United States senate the present ano Castro has retired temporarily from government propose* to bring them He went to London In 1879 and he And reap In the red thorn* the Hilen of '»ft, and *enators gradn- week. Notwithstanding the assurances the presidency of Venezuela. from exile and try them. light. General liegan the publicaran o f Frelhelt. When ^ hetjii^i . n *be middle of hie to the contrary which were r ™ “ b7 we’ll whisper Juan Vicente Gomez, first vice presi Alexander If. o f Russia was killed by And, toil being ended, no mmed.- "Goodnight,” T ro o p * Leaving Pekin •°«l<liiotu w , * qnornm- 80 that senators last week, there dent of the republic, is the present ex nihilists Most published Freltielt with a *?0°*r hsdtK 10 *“ ^ 7 desks, tu t ate prospects for securing an Tientan, April 14 .— Three hundred red border and an editorial expressing And dream of a beautiful morning 1 ecutive. This information was con ' tained in an official cable dispetch re ’'* * * * » than1* *Tn* tor* answered to upon a time for voting upon Russian troops arrived from Pekin this j a wish that all tyrant* might be served —Atlanta Constitution. ^"«riiiiion n tel K in ,n vetired. No one has at any time co-nted upon ceived oday from Caracas by Carlos morning and 11,100 Japanese troops are ] nke the Czar. The Russian and Oer I>ld yon ever encounter a lazy man ' b** » tter. •Peech there g siting such an agreement nnt'l ‘ h Benito Figuerdo, vice consul general A pr' ' T !>* ren,* inder o f j man governments railed the British w I m > didn’t attribute all hla tria l« and handful ol senators general speeches shall have been ex- the G rman troops w ill embark today, gorerumeut'a attention to the article, tribulation* to bad luckT in this city. baueted. i ¿ H im