Show LETTERS fROM TilE NORTH Joseph Lippman Writes of the Trip to Dutch Harbor and of the Persons and Their Ways on BoardThe Steamers and Their CargoesA Lively and Beautiful Beauti-ful Panorams at Dutch HarborPersonals Qn Board Steamer Ohio Wednesday Wednes-day May 1000 3 p in Editor Tribune I am AvrltlnG1 this letter on board ship In latitude 53 degrees de-grees north and longitude l 15S degrees west oC Greenwich Wo arc about 1190 miles west or Seattle and withlh 300 of miles of thc southwestern point Alaska Tomorrow wewi probably reach Dutch harbor and 1C I have n chance to mall this I will do so It not I will mal it at the first opportunity Wo arc saiflng on n sea that is as smooth aa glass and IC I did not hear the engines pumping1 as I write I would not know whether I was on board ship Third street I or in our library at 603 writing to you There isn t a tremor to this vessel now nor has there been any rocking for four days past Tho Pacific roccng 13 I wel named It is the mos t peaceful and quiet body of water I was ever on I can scarcely realize that II am at sea I havent been sick at alL although I had to stay in bed all day lasb Friday and parlor Saturday Wo left Seattle about 330 oclock p the weather was m last Thursday and CS delightful until late that night I I grew stormy as we passed through the straits of San Juan dc Fucn and Friday Fri-day was an awful day Nearly everybody every-body on board including doctor waiters wait-ers id nf lyOr the hands became Bick Tho storm grew in fury and by Saturday morning it was blowing n perfect per-fect gale We made 220 miles the first day out but from Friday noon to Saturday I Sat-urday noon we only made 111 miles We had to go out of our course to avoid the fury of the waves which lashed and washed over our sides like demons We were rolled arourjd and mauled like n pigskin tn football inatch Dishes were thrown from the table and the crash every nowlnnd again sounded as though l bull had broken loose in a china shon Men and women were thrown from their bunks like shot from a gun One gentleman from Phoenix Ariz who Is a friend of Mr Bcnbrook and whose name is W A Freeze was thrown from one side of the smokingroom clear across to the other side a distance of ten feel and so violently was he thrown that he broke loose from its mooring n heavy I card table that had been screwed to the floor lie was badly bruised but the doctor was so ill he could render Mr Freeze no aid and he had to be waited on by other passengers Several women who were on deck came near being washed overboard and the tables were practically deserted Every one In my cabin except myself was seasick but L lay perfectly calm and had the steward brInG me my food and I never missed a meal Sunday the weather cleared up and ever since that day the weather has been simply beautiful The air is invigorating and most everybody is having an enjoyable time b 00 There are 319 firstclass and 347 sec ondclass passengers on board These together with the officers crew waiters cooks etc numbering about 1J5 hands bring tho total number on board to about 52L You can imagine that this motley gathering makes an Interesting study There aic all kinds and conditions condi-tions of men and women and several babies on board We have fairly good food and while there Is not much variety va-riety my appetite is such that I am glad to get anything to appease It Last Sunday morning Just ao I sat down to breakfast I was startled by the cry man overboard I rushed to the deck Instantly and found the sailors rushing to and fro throwing life preservers pre-servers overboard and starting to lower 3 lifeboat We were sailing at the rate of about eleven miles an hour and before the steamer could be brought to a standstill or the lifeboat lowered the man was considerably to our rear I seemed an age before the boat was lowered but they say it was only three minutes I was a beautiful sight to see those strong brawny stalwart men pull on their oars In their little boat as they made for the place where the man was supposed to have struck the water wa-ter They got his hat but that was all The man as we subsequently learned had deliberately jumped Into the ocean to end his griefs His name wan Charles II Bryan and he was about 27 years of age He was fairly well educated having graduated from thf Lincoln school in San Francisco His uncle was at one lime postmaster of that city Bryan had been drinking hard and it Is supposed that in n lit of desperation and perhaps while suffering suf-fering from delirium produced by excessive ex-cessive Indulgence he Jumped overboard over-board lie left 50 with the purser and some say he announced his Intention the night before of committing suicide or course his death threw a gloom over the whole ship for a while but we soon got over and forgot tho Incident Inci-dent c Sunday afternoon we parsed an En gllqh ship and yesterday wo sighted a Failing vessel and these are the only things wo have seen outside of the ship we aie on saving the vast an unending un-ending Immensity of water since we got out of sight of land People on board pass their time plny Ing cards chockors reading playing on the piano singing sewing writing etc l kinds of card games are going be tween each meal In the large and small diningrooms and the smokingroom on deck I have kept a memorandum of this ships log and you can see how far we have traveled each clay since last Thursday We take observations each day at noon and the time is I changed at that hour We sailed from Thursday May 24th 3 pin m to Friday May 25th noon 220fi nautical miles Friday noon to Saturday noon 1113 nautical miles Saturday noon to Sunday noon 2578 nautical miles Sunday noon to Mon day noon 25G7 nautical miles Monday noon to Tuesday noon 2055 nautical miles Tuesday noon to nautcol 3141 nautical miles making a total of 145C nautical miles up to noon today Since noon we have gone thirty or forty miles We will probably reach Dutch harbor which is about 17CO 160 miles from Seattle tomorrow night I is about 850 miles from there to Cape Nome We may learn at Dutch bar bor aa to whether the ice Is out of Ber ing nea sufficiently to permit of out en I trance into Nome When we sailed out of SeatJJe the I ofFicers made a thorough search for stowaway and succeeded In finding fnding six or seven of them They were compelled com-pelled to work their passage to Nome Home being put on the PUI1S and others oth-ers at more or less laborious work Jut one young fellow escaped wor search of the ofjlccra and he has been having a line o0cel eating at the ships expense and enjoying himself general ly The Utah contingent i rather proud of him and ilifl exploit us he halls from Salt Lake He Is 0 lad about 18 years of age and he worked at the Vienna cafe and TortonJs for awhile as waiter Ilia name Is Karl Gerald Being a waiter he 1ms I received material assistance ns sistance from the flstaoce hashallngers on board nhlp In his efforts to elude the marine sleuthu There are sixteen Salt Lakers on board this boat They ore C M Tay t e t t i li rfifef v a i a J t = if lor n brotherinlaw of John E Dooly Capt C B Rustin an oldtime Utah mining mann man-n B Schonck 0 son of the SMicnck of the Dalton Lark S S TorrllU a mining man F M Ayers 0 brotherinlaw of Attorney Frank Pierce W I Frank who hud a dam ago suit against the BullionBeck f fcy years ago Charles Powell Dr G W Harveyof the Sanitarium who Intends In-tends establishing a hospital at Nome and Mrs A J Ilubbell who will nurse for him Gilbert Babbagc who was once superintendent of the Deer Trail mine at Marysvale for 0 J Salisbury G IT panaway the colored gentleman who recently applied for admission to l the Utah bar S IF Bcnbrook J Morley Mor-ley I Mrs M H Nught and James T i Fulton W B Schuyler now of San Francisco but who was the first Gentile Gen-tile Probate Judge of Tooel county i is also a passenger I also sec on board two men who formerly lived In 1 Salt Lake One IsJ F Col lint who did an undertaking business there a few undartaldng years ago but who Is now located at Seattle and the other Is Charlos Sutherland 1 now of San Francisco but who once lived at GunnlMon Cnlo Tho latter IB a friend of Judge Colborn Jim Skinner and the rest of the Colorado contingent contin-gent JOSEPH LIPPMAN II I In Sight of Land J Thursday 1030 a m I Is I foggy this morning and about an hour ago wo sighted lund Of poursc everybody was on board and although the atmosphere was damp and moisture was everywhere the sight of land felt good The land was part of the Aleutian Islands and it looked dark and rocky and unforbid dinS These little islands dot tlc ocean and as they shoot their heads up out of the water they look like weird and unnatural things The mal I bag hangs at the head of the stairway ready to receive the loiter and I must close We will probably reach Dutch harbor in a few hours where this letter let-ter will bo sent eastward We cannot learn whether we are to stop at Dutch harbor or note nor whether the Bering sea is sufficiently opened to permit of our passage to Nome Some say we will have to lay over at Dutch harbor u week or ten days Bunking in oul cabin with us is a man named Hultsberg a Swede who has been at Nome for the past seven years There arc many passengers onboard on-board who have spent from one to two years in Nome and vlclnlty and quite a large number who have been In various parts ot Alaska I Is Interesting to hear them converse about the country and one learns considerable of what one may expect to find there JOSEPH LIPPMAN I AT DUTCH HARBOR Grand Sight on Entering the Bay The Loads of the Steamers Dutch Harbor Unalaska June I 1900 Editor Tribune We have been lying 1 In this harbor since last Thursday afternoon af-ternoon May 31st and the present prospects arq that we will remain hero for at least five days more and perhaps per-haps a week We are anchored out In the bay about a mile from shore In sixty fathoms SCO feet of water We sighted land early last Thursday mornIng morn-Ing and during the afternoon had an exciting chase after the Zealandla n San Francisco steamer owned by Spreckels She was twelve miles ahead of us and we finally overtook her and when we came abreast of her we had one of the most exciting races you ever saw Both captains put on all possible steam and the sight of these two large craft fighting for supremacy was beautiful Wo were so close together that the shouts could be plainly heard and the handkerchiefs and flags which were waved made 3 picturesque marine event The Zcalandla carried about 000 people and our boat the Ohio 800 The Zealandla crowded us inshore in-shore by crossing our bow and our captain who is a very conservative mariner in order to prevent any possible pos-sible accident allowed them to enter harbor ahead of us This of course under maritime custom gives the Zealandla the right oC way at the coaling station and we will have to He here until she is coaled and watered The sight as we entered this harbor was grand I is almost as fine n harbor as San Diego the ns only surroundings sur-roundings are more Interesting The hills rise abruptly from the bay and as we entered the harbor the snow still covered these foothills The mountains back of these his were covered with a deep fall of snow and as peak on peak arose the snow at their summit was lost In 3 mist that was wafted hither and thither by the shifting winds As we enter the harbor the town of Una laska shows up to the left and that of Dutch Harbor to the right si peninsula about two miles wide separating the two settlements Unalaska Is a town of about 250 inhabitants built almost down to the coast line and the houses of frame stretching along the coast for fully a mile The houses arc painted white with red roofs and with the undulating un-dulating hills and snowcovered peaks for a background you can Imagine what 0 dainty picture I makes The Alaska Commercial company a wealthy San Francisco corporation has Its headquarters here and owns the harbor har-bor and coaling station There is 0 modern steam laundry here va home called the Jessie Lee home which Is under the control of the wqman6 missionary mis-sionary society of the Methodist church and which takes care of orphan children of the natives Esquimaux whites a fine Greek chinch of frame which is under the charge of a Russian bishop n Russian mlsslqn school a United States school saloons gambling halls restaurants etc At Dutch Harbor the North American Commercial company has 0 large sore I 3 hotel a goodsized house with a grass ylot In front of It for tho use of the manager and several warehquses That Is about all there is there but It Is the busiest upot you ever saw I Is the coaling and watering utatlon for nearly all the ships that go to Nome and It Is n veritable mint When we arrived here there were some twelve or fifteen ships In harbor each woHlne I their turn to get up to the North American Amer-ican Commercial companys wharf to coal and A ater and Mlilpw have been arriving at the rate of two or three a day since we anchored here These vesselS take their turn In getting up to the wharf and tho company gets the first whack at the ship by charging 25 0 day for wharfage I inkcs the large shlpit about three dayu to coal and Va tel the process of loading bqlng a slow I and tedious one The coal IB brought here by the North American Commercial Commer-cial conipany from British Columbia and stacked up In their huge yards neal the dock From tho yards It Is shoveled Into small iron cars which run on Iron tracks to near the edge oC tho wharf where It Is first weighed und then dumped Into whcelbat rowp and then wheeled onto the ship The ships take on from 100 to 10 lonn of coal and tons of water Tho coal sells at 1 a ton and half a cent 0 gallon Is charged r i i 4 tvA P for water Our ship wU take on 00 tons of coal and as s we will not reach our turn at the wharf until Wednesday or Thursday and as it Will probnHy take three days to load our coal our chancus are good for binS hers until next Monday the 10th of June e C I C The day before we reached here the revenue cuter Bear left for Nome I Was reported that there were 2X I miles of Ice in Bering sea between eru and Nomp and the general impression Prevails that no ship will get Into Norn1 before Juno 20th As It is ony SPO miles from here to Nome and as the trip can easily be made in three days if 1 the sea Is clear we might as wHl belying I be-lying In this landlocked harbor PS to proceed and be compelled to lie in the Ice floes of the north Of course It gets awful monotonous on hoard ship but as I am enjoying excellent health l nvd my appetite has a razor edge on It T can put up with It The thermometer shows the temperature to be about HO to CO degrees and when the sun shines through the mist it pots up to about 70 degrees I Is very pleasant on shore and the atmosp ere is not unlike n1 May day In SaiL Lake with sufficient moisture In the air to keep I your skin r and velvety to the touch I never I gets below S degrees above zero In the winter hero on the coast although up In the mountains fresh snow has been falling some part of every day since we I have been here Most of the passengers passen-gers go about with the same clotljing I they wore on the streets of Seattle There are f great number of women on i all the boats that have reached here and In the evening on shipboard they dress In fairly good M style i One of the chlefctfl amusements is going ashore from the ship There arc little boats plying between the shore 1 and all the ships which are anchored in I various parts of the harbor These I boats take you to shore for 25 cents and charge you a similar price to bring you back Some of the oarsmen have made as high as SCO a day taking people backward and forward They start I I early In the morning and keep Itun I until 1 oclock at night Until a ship gets up to the wjiart there is no way of landing except by means of these small boats After one lands at Dutch Harbor and sees the hundreds of people standing around the wharf and the I North American Commercial com panys store one wonders what they I are all going to do In Nome to Ire a living The store at Dutch Harbor Is so crowded with people purchasing supplies sup-plies and outfits that It looks like a I bargain day sale at Walker Bros store I only instead of wild women doing the buying there are crazy men People I stand in line for hours to be waited I upon and there arc never less than 100 people at and In the place to be waited I upon The store Is about sixty feet long and fifteen feet wide and In one I corner of It the poslofllce Is located The I merchandise is reasonable in most cases only 10 to 20 per cent in advance of San Francisco and Seattle prices I being charged The stock carried by the oompany is not only large but It Is of 0 varied character Last Saturday I Satur-day they eloped for two hours In the middle of the day to replenish the stock I am told that the Hothchllds I Rockefellers and other wealthy men arc the stockholders in tills corporation corpora-tion which has wharfage coaling watering wa-tering sealing and other valuable privileges priv-ileges throughout Alaska besides running run-ning ships to and stores In all parts of Alaska There are three companies which practically corral everything In I Alaska one Is the North American Commercial company the other Is the I Alaska Commercial company and the I third Is the Alaska Exploration company com-pany rhey control about all the ships that sail these seas except the Ohio Ion I-on which I am sailing and this Is owned by the Empire line which has no Interests in this fiction I am beginning begin-ning to think that the three companies com-panies above named have systematically systemati-cally boomed Nome for you can readily read-ily see what n snap it must be for thorn What with passenger rates freight rates and the profits on coal 1 water and merchandise which Avlll pour Into their laps this summer the gold taken from Nome Avlll be as a mere drop In the bucket In comparison And then It Is L surething game There are no chances to be taken t tt The North American Commercial company have fenced In 160 acres at Dutch Harbor and no one can build on I their ground without their permission The hotel which Is about forty fet from the store has 0 sign up marine Ye Baranhoff Inn When AVO landed I here last Thursday Wyatt Earp of Dodge City and Arizona fame waR running run-ning 3 wideopen game In this Inn called Klondike He had two tables running and the suckers were fnlllng over ojic another In their anxiety to enrich Earp The game is played with five dice the house throwing the dice first and the outsiders then throw to beat the house Whatever bet the outsider out-sider makes the house covers and there arc from ten to n dozen men trying to bent the house If the outsider merely ties the house the house gets the moiey bet by the outsider but that is the only advantage the house has The percentage percent-age In favor of the house is so largo that in one week s time while Earp was lying In the harbor here waiting for his ship the Alliance to coal he made 1000 He left Saturday night for Nome but before going he turned hi vbuslness here over to Benbrook of Salt iakc and his partner W A Freeze of Phoenix Ariz They AVlll probably run the game until the Ohio sails out They pay 20 n day rent for the use of the 10x12 room In Ye BaranhofC Inn U C it The trip from Dutch Harbor to Una laska Is a source of much Interest to the people One goes over a trail about two miles and gels glimpses of tho bay and snowcovered mountains and small streams and lakes und arriving at another an-other arm of tho bay tak s a ferry across to Unalnska This boat ride which Is only oneeighth of a mile in extent costs 10 cents there and 0 cents back The native Aleuts pronounced Alloyoots row these boats These Aleuts are quiet Inoffensive floW and arc not unlike the Japanese In appearance ap-pearance l although not so Intelligent looking There are several hundred small islands Which make up thi Aleutian island group but many of them are uninhabited I saw a group of native boys playing baseball the other day their ages ranged flomf tQ S years and It sounded comical Ito hear them say with their Aleutian accent ac-cent one strike two strike three Blrlkc out I met quite a number of Aleut children at the J KO Lf o home There are about twenty children there and they are well taken criro of and educated In cooking waBhlr ant the common English branches They have a custom of smiling at you when they greet or address you and unless you ri turn the smile they leftibc to notice you thc next time you meet them The first day AVC went to Unalaska Jimmy Fulton of Salt Lake wo taken suddenly sudden-ly I ill while we were In the AlasIra Commercial Com-mercial companys store We took him to tho Jessie Leo home because there was a doctor there The doctor put him to bed and ho remained there jUit of two days Jimmy had been operated on In Salt Lake City about a ear ago I for appendicitis and the membiancs I about those parts were still quite doll cate ho look cold In dome way and It settled there and ho was In great agony until the doctor gave him a hypodermic Ho Is all right again and today 1 umpired um-pired a frame of ball at Dutch Harbor played between men from our ship i and a picked crew taken from all the vessels in the harbor At the end of I the fourth inning the picked cia 10 ot sxied the score standing 17 to 10 in favor of our tc mtho Ohio d o There arc some curious dugouts that the natives In Unalaska live In They I are plastered all ovei with sod aiid I It looks curious to sec grass growing all over the sides und fronts of these I houues and then peep In at the windows I and fee lace curtains draped on cither i Ml i iiii j i ± ih side Kodakn and cameras are everywhere every-where and I sometimes wish r had n kodak with me to ratci glimpses of odd and curious things that strike my eye There are in the harbor at pioaent about GOO people all Availing for their ships to pull out for Nome You can picture for yourself What a motley gathering these people make as they t I congregate about the wharf at Dutch Harbor and as they tramp across the I trail to Unalaska and crowd the bcmh front there Men and women In every conceivable kind of toggery arc there and lo see this crowd Is alono worth the price of admission The following named boats have bten In harbor since I reached here and with their hag Hy ing to the breeze and their tall n lists towcrlp skyward against u background I back-ground of snow It makes 1 fine marine i picture Alnha from San Francisco curryIng curry-Ing 200 South Portland from Seattle carrying 350 Discovery from Seattle Seat-tle carrying 1 Oregon from Seattle Seat-tle carrying COO Alliance from Seattle Seat-tle carrying 350 Charles Nelson from Seattle carrying 350 Aberdeen from Seattle carrying 400 Zealandla from San Francisco carrying 000 Sin Pcdro from San Francisco carrying oOO Mercury from San Francisco carrying ICO Ranicr from San Francisco Fran-cisco carrying 300 Homer from I San Francisco carrying Hoaitokc from Seattle carrying 650 Luclla from San Francisco carrying 100 Gco W Elder from Portland carrying 300 Ohio from Seattle carrying SOOThe SOO-The revenue cutter Wheeling arrived ar-rived here yesterday after two years in Japanese watels She Avlll assist the revenue cutter Bear In looking after United Stales Interests In the Arctic Avaters The Robert Dollar Portland and several other ships loft l here for Nome before we leached here and the Senator Sen-ator Garonne Bertha Dora Jeauncc Alpha Olympla and Cleveland went direct toward Nome without touching at this port at all These ships Avlll all be blocked in the ice I helucon IerG and Nome od It Is doubtful whether any of them can reach Nomo before we db that Is I i the reports e heal conoelin the Ice I I r blockade bo rile The captain of th > I Ohio told me today that he hod 1 heard that the Bering sea was fioyn I I I clear across to Siberia the Ice being f from twenty to thirty l feet thick Wi > are very comfortably housed on this t ship and our food is excellent an 1 Is served abundantly and cleanly Our I fate however Is different from that of I tho passengers Aon < many of the other vessels Complaints of poor food furnished I fur-nished miserable cabins to sleep in I uncleanly linen and awful service are I heard on allsides On the Aberdeen I the live stock was kept on the hurricane hurri-cane deck Just above the diningroom I and not only was the stench awful but the manure drippings came through onto I on-to the tables below This ship had a temporary top built on It to accompany I the cattle and so hurriedly was the work done that the caulking was not 1 efTecltve to Ieej > lOU t the heavy seas that lashed over her sides and came I Into the cabin much to the discomfort of tho passengers Four horses died at sea either from scoslcknes or from bruises received in being tossed t abtnU ft LI a 1 On the Robert Dollar on which were E D Miller Mr DC Kalb and Mr Pratt of Salt Lake the water eime Into the cabins and the beds were so wet that people could not He down In them Passengers had to stand up to cat and when the ship reached this harbor seventeen passengers deserted the ship refusing to go further with heron one oft J the l Qrps there was only one toiletroom for too passengers On other ships pnssengers were so crowclcd that they had to sleep all overlie over-lie diningroom floor In some Instances In-stances the facilities for feeding the passengers were so meager that breakfast break-fast began at 5 oclock a m and the table was kepi continually going from then until 0 oclock at nlghl and people had to fight for places all the timeOut time-Out boat made the quickest time to this harbor of > any vessel teaching teach-ing here In seven days and iwo hours after leaving Seattle We have commodious diningrooms and the 700 passengers are all fed at two sittings 350 people being fed at a time Our crowd Is at the first table and by tipping the walter we get the best of everything Everybody hag to bo tipped if l you expect to get things as you want them I had 0 fine hot salt water bath > pn the ship yesterday There was a man who had been trying to got one of these baths for three days but the bath steward was always busy or had some one ahead of him but when I came along with n big iron dollar and touched the palm of the I stewards hand with It it proved the open sesame and I got my bath prepared pre-pared In the twinkling of an eye There Ire grafters everywhere The barber on board sold lemon drops l the first two or three days out of Seattle at 10 cents a box the fifth day out he charged 25 cents a box U IOn I-On the Oregon which reached here 0 week ago today and which Is now finishing coaling and leaves tonight for Nome 1 met following Utah people E I Onion Arthur E Smith n nephew of Judge Sherman W W Stoddard of the Daily Hotel Reporter Orson Smith the expostmaster of L gnu Jerry Langford formerly with the salt works DeWltt B Lowe and wife and his son Irving Lowe They were all Avell and some had grown quite fleshy on the trip DcAvllt 1 Lowe is Interested In a number of good claims at Nome and Is taking In 0 lot of machinery ma-chinery to extract the gold from his various properties On the Charles Nelson I met Geo OReilly who lived In Salt Lake City up to two years ago but who now resides re-sides at Seattle He married Mrs Minnie Min-nie Morley of Salt Lake City They are going to Nome ho as halfowner In the Cape Nome Liquor company and she to opon up a lodginghouse On May 30lh Dan OShea of Butte G l off the gangplank of the Oregon and struck his head against a pike He was paralyzed on his left side and has been In a critical I C011 tOner since Duns brother has been looking after him It Is reported thai the OSheas were saloon men of Butte and that they have on board the Oregon 10 OCfl Acrth of saloon fixtures liquors and cfgiirs James Ferguson one of the stewards hands on the Oregon died of delirium rium tremens and he was buried from the Greek church at Unalaska and his remains deposited In the cemetery that overlooks the harbor A A Last Saturday nlghl June 2nd Red Meredith who formerly ran a gambling pliue at Mcrcur Utah opened up a Black Jack game on the Xealandlu A negro named Daly and who hails from San Francisco wa playing against the game and had lost 200 lie had but 10 left at 5 oclock Sunday morning the game having kept I up all night The negro thought he had been robbed and struck at Red but Red dodged and n third player was hit A mixup was the result re-sult and the negro giabbcd all the money In sight about 300 and ran onto on-to tho adjoining ship the Oregon I which wag anchored to the wharf Tho negro threatened to kill Red und when Red was about to cross over flom the Zealandla to the Oregon the negro took aim at Red with n revolver re-volver but missed fire and Red shot at the negro but missed him Tho ball from Reds gun went through tho pursers window Both men wen placed 1 t qndor arrest by the captain of the 1 1 Zealandla and placed 1 In Irons In the 110 h of tho vessel They will probably be taken to Nomo for 0 preliminary I henrlngi unless lie captain of the Zea landla can liuluco the caotaln of the United State1 revenue cutter Wheeling Wheel-ing to lake charge of the two menThe men-The ftoanoke which reached here last Saturday brought fortyfive sacks of mall Cob Unnhisku and ten tons for Nomc I expect u part of the ten tons iA f < Vv t l 1 c 1 H H Is for me but when I Avlll get It Is another an-other question JOSEPH LIPPMAN |