Page:Under Dewey at Manila.djvu/67

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THE DESTRUCTION OF THE "MAINE"
45

about now. It's the teetotal busting up of the battleship Maine and the killing of I don't know how many of our gallant jack-tars! See here, the newspaper from San Francisco is full of it, with type six inches long!"

And Captain Ponsberry held up the sheet in question, so that not only Grandon but all the others might see the flaring head-lines.


THE MAINE BLOWN UP!

Total Destruction of Our Battleship in the
Harbor of Havana!

OVER TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY OFFICERS
AND SAILORS KILLED!

The Shock Comes at Night, and Without Warning. Captain
Sigsbee Safe, but Several Officers Known to be Lost.
A Partial List of the Saved Ones—How the
News Was Received at Washington.

THOUGHT TO BE THE WORK OF SPANISH
AGENTS.

Captain Sigsbee Telegraphs to Withhold Judgment—He Says,
"It is best not to think, it is best to know."


A whole page of reading followed, in smaller type, which Larry could not catch. The youth stared at the head-lines, with mouth agape, and instantly he thought of Ben and Walter, and