Pe — REEF DRAWING NEAR MAFEKING. WAR’ S EN END NEAR. Free Staters Surrendering—Lord Roberls’ Forces Receiving Rifles Faster Than a Factory Could Turn Them Out. The news from South Africa Monday is entirely satisfactorily to the British public. The relief of Mafeking is not ret announced, but it is extremely prob- able that this is already accomplished by Col. Plumer's advance. The actual relief movements have not been public- y developed in detail. but it seems that org Methuen only started very recently and is rather engaged in dis- versing the Boers oi the district than aiming at actual relief. The officer commanding at Belmont reports that some deserters have come in with a Maxim. a ninc-pounder and another gun. Another nine-pounder has been brought into Colesberg. The cavalry Srigade has gone to Thaba Nchu in or- der to reassure the inhabitants of that district and to distribute copies of the proclamation to the people of the Free State. These proclamations are being :agerly sought after. We are getting rifles surrendered faster than a factory could turn them out. It is quite certain that if a British official can reach the northern laagers with Lord Roberts’ proclamation the whole Boer population will declare for peace. el Events have occurred which induce some to predict that the war will last only so long as it takes to march to Pretoria. The educated Boers, even the Transvaalers are ready to accept the inevitable. J It is reported that a corps of 2,000 women have been formed at Pretoria. [t is called the Amazon corps. All the members are uniformed in kilts and are armed. . Lord Roberts probably ascertained from Mr. Fraser, the new mayor ot Bloemfontein, before dispatching Gen. Pole-Carew southward that, in all like ihood, the railway was clear. The next move will be to collect at Bloemfontein, by railway, sufficient stores for the im- mense army Lord Roberts will have when the Orange river forces have oined him. This will probably occupy from two to three weeks. Therefore the next important operations may be expected in Natal. The cavalry brigade which Lord Rob- erts has sent to Thaba Nchu, 35 miles east of Bloemfontein, is destined to cut off some 2,000 Boers who are escaping from the southward. According to reports there are 14,000 Boers with 20 guns in the Biggarsberg range. They will have to be caught The British troops are and the feeling is gen- will be per- sooner or later. anxious to try, eral that before long they mitted to do so. o A dispatch from Ladysmith, dated Sunday, says: Our advanced camp is on Sundays river, two miles north of Elandslaagte. The Boers hold two po- sitions on the Biggarsberg range, about 10 miles north. The strongest is on the New Castle road. where several guns have already been mounted and where they are digging extensive trenches The second position, which is on the Dundee road is not so strong. A dispatch from President Kruger says: “The burghers will only cease fighting with death. Our forces are re- turning in good order to our lines of de- fense ou our own soil. The Natal campaign was longer in our favor than we expected. The British will never reach Pretoria. The burghers, Steyn, Joubert and myself, as well as all the others, are united. There are no dif- ferences. God help us.” STARVATION IN PUERTO RICO. Suffering Inhabitants Ready to Agree to Any Legislation That Affords Speedy Relief. Governor General Davis has received petitions for work and food from 6o county women who marched from Nar- anjito to find relief from starvation. The women presented a most pitiable sight. They were barefooted and rag- ged, half nake dust-covered and weary from their ‘journey. Some of them were lame: all were discouraged. The petition which they presented to the governor general tells the story of the depressing times; no work, and the price of rice, beans and bread beyond reach, fruits destroyed and the relief supply discontinued, bringing them and others where ther came from almost to starvation. Gen. Davis promised relief to the party and requested the mayor to pro- vide transportation. His reply was that there was not a peso in the treasury and that the police were yet unpaid for their last two month's work. The party of women dispersed quietly, some retracing their steps afoot, others begging casier conveyances to Naranjito, which is 20 miles from San Juan, a portion of the road being almost impassable. Similar parties are expected from other towns. The feeling of uncertainty regarding the tariff holds business practically at a standstill, the merchants being afraid to order goods or to adv ance funds on the ras accounts. ‘he merchants here will be satisfied to accept any deécision of Congress, either free trade, the 25 or 15 per cent. ta¥®f, but they ask for a seftlement of the question, so that business activity may be resumed EXPANSION IN WEST INDIES. Our Government Will Buy the Danish Islands for a Reasonable Price. The purpose of the government to ac- quire the island of St. Thomas for a reasonable consideration from Den- mark, has not been abandoned, notwith- standing the statements attributed to the Danish ministers not to part with the island. It is believed that the last announcement is only evidence of a pur- pose on the part of the Danish authori- ties to secure a higher price for the island than the United States had re- garded as proper. It is probable that no active effort will be made by our government to hasten the negotiations, but having learned that the finances of the island showed a deficit last year of $75,000, in spite of the most rigid econ- omy in the administration, a sum charg- ed up against the home government, it is believed that our terms will ultimate- ly be accepted. if reduced to a con- crete proposition to pay $3,000,000 for St. Thomas and St. Cruz. FOUGHT WITH YAQUIS. Americans Wer2 Killed by Mexicans During a Battle. George W. Vaughn, superintendent of a mining company at Lower Sonora, Mex., says that just at this time the Yaqui Indians are quiet and Mexican soldiers are also quiet. Vaughn re- ports that a young American prospec- tor named Bostwick, who for months has been a prisoner in the hands of the Yaquis, has been released and that he returned to Hermosilla last Tuesday. Bostwick said the Indians have no idea of surrendering. They are wel armed and number not more than 2,000 Bostwick was not mistreated by the In- dians and did not know why he was released. He was simply led to the outskirts of the camp and told to go. Vaughn says Gen. Torres is friendly to Americans, and that the only two Amer- Mexican icans killed by soldiers, were fighting with the Indians and were slain during a battle. The s on the Academy of Music. the leading theatre of Quebec, destroy- ed by fire Sunday morning, was $Ro. 000. and the St. Louis hotel, adjoin ing, was damaged to the extent oi $30,000. ~ I -.n LATEST NEWS NOTES. On the Jack's Wade creek, Klondike, some dirt has assayed $3 to $5 of gold per bucket. A colony of 400 Missouri farmers is to be established in the Coucho River Valley, Mexico. Sunday the Port Gibson (Miss.) com- press. in which was stored 2,000 bales of cotton, was burned. Governor General Leary, of the island of Guam, has issued a proclamation do- ing away with slavery. Secretary Root leit Havana Saturday for Charleston, where he will inspect the new fortifications. The unveiling of the Vance statue at Raleigh, N. C., has been postponed from May 20 to July 4. A strike by union machinists of Cleve- land is imminent. Employers refuse to consider a nine-hour day. The Armstrong Steel Works, at Flint. Mich., were burned Wednesday, the loss being $150.000. 3razil will close her ports to Argen- tine vessels on account of reported bu- bonic plague in Argentina. The National Steel Company's steel and bar mills at New Castle, Pa, re- sumed operations Thursday. King Menelik, of Abyssinia, is threat- ening to seize Italian provinces in Af- rica and a war is imminent. The total number of deaths at Kim- berley during the seige was 1,076, of which 600 were caused by disease. The Joliet (Ill.) Limestone Company has gone into the hands of a receiver. The liabilities are estimated at $400,000. The Oil Well Supply Company's plant on Second avenue, Pittsburg, was damaged by fire to the extent of $60,000. The Senate commerce committee has reported favorably a bill to change the name of the steamer Paris to the Phila- delphia. Webster Davis, assistant secretary of the Interior, arrived at Naples on his return from South Africa and sailed for New York. The Illinois Manufacturers’ Associa- tion has begun a movement, by resolu- tion and petition, for the repeal of the war revenue law. Kansas will have a big exposition in 1904, in celebration of the fiftieth anni- versary of the organization of the ter- ritory of Kansas. The Prince of Wales is growing more like his mother and is now looked upon by Englishmen as promising to make a good king. M. IL. Harbeson, late William Goebel, Kenton county, Ky., in the State Senate. Applications for the exchange of old bonds for the new two were made Sat- urday to the treasury department to the aggregate of $27,000,000. Lady Roberts and her two daughters left England to join Lord Roberts in South Africa and were given a popular demonstration in London. Mexico's grand canal, part of the val- law partner of the has been elected in to succeed Goebel ley of Mexico drainage system, was in- augurated Saturday with grand cere- monies in the City of Mexico. The pope sent a message to Irish Catholics in America with his benedic- tion and expressing the hope that the Irish race may live in peace. The will of Isaac Gordon, the no- torious money lender of London, has not been found. Scathing obituaries of him are published by the papers. At a meeting in Dublin the lord may- or presiding, a committee was appoint- ed to fittingly receive the queen and €1,400 was subscribed for decorations. The war department is preparing ad- vertisements for bids for five addition- al buildings to be at once erected at Egmont Key, commanding Tampa bay. Mrs. Ida M. Law, wife of F. W. Law. of Pittsburg, Pa., strangled her baby while temporarily insane. Four years ago she cut the throat of another baby. J. Pierpont Morgan, of New York, has announced the closing of the Brit- ish war loan. The amount of applica- tions received here was about $30,000, 000. Secret service officers have arrested in New York four Englishmen accus- it coins and seiz- quantity of bad ed of making counterie ed their plant and a money. Thomas Pooley, a saloonkeeper of Jutte, Mont., shot and killed his son- in-law, Thomas L ittlejohn, and the lat- te wife, Lyda, during a difficulty on the street. John R. Haines, a Topeka ticket broker, has been sentenced to 50 years in the penitentiary for murdering Charles Watson, formerly a rich Ohio lumber merchant. Senator Cullom Friday presented in the Senate a memorial from Illinois for the construction of a ship canal. 24 feet deep and 300 feet wide, from Lake Michigan, through the drainage canal and the Illinois river, to the Mississippi. The attorney general of Nebraska has brought suits against the Union Pacific railroad for $310,000; the Mis- souri Pacific for $210,000, and the Rock Island for $150.000, for alleged viola- tion of the maximum rate law. Prince Anandsing Ajectsing Advasi of Bombay, India, has been sentenced to three months in jail and fined $30 for fraudulently obtaining board and lodging in New Haven. Trouble is looked for between Rus- sia and Turkey if Prince Ferdinand, of Bulgaria, backed by Russia, carries out his announced determination to declare himself king of Bulgaria. A movement has begun in Russia to abandon the Julian calendar, which is 12 days behind that — by other na- tions, and secure, if possible, the adop- tion of a universal calendar. Cardinal 1. Di Canossa, bishop of Verona, Italy, is dead. He was the oldest member of the Sacred College and was Austria's candidate in the con- clave which elected Pope Leo. The Duke of Veragua, who claims to be a lineal descendant of Christopher Columbus, was highly insulted because certain creditc his seized his bag gage during his visit to Paris. Republicans are s of Texas endeavoring to start a boom for Republican State Chairman E. H. R. Green, who is a son of Hetty Green, of New York. for vice-president on the ticket with Mec- Kinley. The, Americ charged its York factory an Tobacco Company dis- 300 employes at its New and will remove the plant to Baltimore, Cincinnati, Richmond. Va.. and lancaster, Pa., where labor is cheaper. Application has been made for a char ter for the Franklin (Pa.) Air Compres- sor Company. Capital, $300,000. one half of which has been taken by Frank- lin people and the balance by J. W Duntley, of Chicago. The Shamrock was worn by nearly everybody in England on St. Patrick's day and the whole country united in doing honor to the bravery of the Irish soldiery in the South African war. Some disturbances took place during the mayor's parade in Dublin. 2 It is reported that a Kenosha, Wis, tannery has been sold to the leather 1st for $4,000,000. Last week it was >orted the big combine made the mpany an offer of $3,000,000, but s was refused and the company held to their original demand of $4.000.0c0 Massacres of the missionaries red in the Tien-Tsin district of China and the American battleship and cruiser New Orleans are near ie scene of the expected It is expected that part of the in the Philippines will to China if trouble breaks out th 15) [INSURGENT JUNTA STILL RGTIVE INCITING FILIPINOS. Their Idea is to Force the Best Possible Terms From Congress—Brigandage Takes the Place of Organized Warfare. Gen. Otis considers Manila the most troublesome center in the situation. The insurgent junta there, in conjunc- tion with that in Hong Kong, is grow- ing active. The military authorities have been forced to put a stop to Ma- bini’s intercourse with the public. The press considers his recent utterances calculated to incite the Filipinos to a continued revolt and prejudicial to American control. Flores. Aguinaldo's surrendered secc- retary of war. who has just arrived in Manila, says he comes trusting to Amer- ican leniency and that he would not have dared come to Manila if Spain were in control. He cherishes the hopes] which actuated him when in the field and desires to watch congressional ac- tion upon the question of the Philip- pines. The insurgents, he says, do not expect to vanquish the Americans, but are maintaining a resistance with the idea of forcing Congress to accord them the best A ossible terms. A num- ber of representative insurgent leaders from different parts of Luzon have re- cently been in conference in Manila. Some have been placed under arrest, but the others thus far have not been interfered with. Louis Spitzel, head of the firm of Louis Spitzel & Co., contractors to the Chinese government, and himself a sus- pected filibuster, came {rom Hong Kong to Manila last week and was tem- porarily detained in custody on suspi- cion. Tt is asserted upon good author- ity that three loads of arms and ammu- nition have recently been landed on the east cost of Luzon. Capt. Taylor, of the Thirty-ninth regiment, recently cap- tured 12 new mausers near Calamba. It is also reported that the rebels are reorganizing in the province of Zam- bales, under Mascardo. Brigands are committing atrocities in the province of Nueva Eciga, where they have mur- dered 20 natives and Chinamen. Eight other murders have been committed near Tarlac. The Nueva Eciga insur- gents are heavily taxing local traders and farmers. with the result that busi- ness is paralyzed an! there is a general scarcity of food. The funds for main- taining this guerrilla warfare are col- lected from the various towns of the island, whether occupied by the Ameri- cans or not, even including Manila. Travel between the towns garrisoned by the Americans is becoming more dangerous. All wagon trains must be escorted by heavy guards in order to insure their safety. Two ambushes were narrowly averted recently; small traveling parties were attacked: single travelers frequntly disappear or are found dead. Spaniards and Filipinos conversant with the Tagalo character say that Agui- naldo’s capture would terminate the revolution. Three months have passed since he was actively pursued A FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH. An Eccentric Jersey Doctor of 123 Years Who Beats Ponce de Leon all Hollow. Dr. Smith, who claims to be 123 years of age, and whose marriage in At- lantic City a few months ago to a wo- man of forty caused something of a sen- sation, has removed to Egg Harbor City, where he is diligently pursuing a plan to erect a huge sanitarium for those afflicted with disease. His only cure is the water of Union creck, which he claims possesses peculiar medicinal properties. Dr. Smith, even during the cold weather of the last three months, has been regularly administering this to his patients who could adapt themselves to the treatment. It consists of a daily bath in the waters of the stream at all seasons. The danger of contracting cold is counteracted by taking what Dr. Smith calls his elixir of life, which, he says. has been the means of prolonging his life nearly a century and a quarter. He is very uncommunicative in regard to his plans, and apparently wants to avoid notoriety. ONE GOOD INDIAN GONE. Washakie, Chief of the Soshone Tribe, Buried With Military Honors. Washaki, for nearly 70 years head chief of the Shoshone Indians, died a few days ago at Fort Washakie, Wyo- ming. He was buried with military honors, Troop E, First cavalry, escort- ing the coffin, which was draped with an American flag, to the cemetery. The Episcopal service was read by clergymen of that church. one, Sherman Coolidge, being a full- blooded Arapahoe Indian. About 2,000 Indians and whites were present to pay a last tribute to a chief who had always been a firm friend of the whites, always en- deavoring to have his people live after the manner of the white man, and to set an example to them in the attain- ing of a higher civilization. Capt. McCalla Pardoned. President McKinley has granted a full and unconditional pardon to Capt. Bowman H. McCalla, of the navy, now serving in the Philippines. In 1890 Capt. McCalla, then a commander, was convicted by court martial of several offenses. including the striking of an- other person in the navy. and was sus- pended from rank and duty for three vears. The pardon, which was granted for conspicuous service in the war with Spain, restores Capt. McCalla to his old rank and position. A War Inevitable. A telegram from Matagulpa, Nica: ragua, says that war between Nicaragna and Costa Rica is unavoidable Recruiting is going on in the district of Matanzas. The heav- test recruiting is in Leon prov- ince in the west. President Iglesias of Costa Rica, has suspended the constitu- tion. He expects an invasion by the Nicaraguans under Nora, a renegade Costa Rican. Yields $36, 000 a a Day. MacAuley has returned to Victoria, B. from the Klondike with a story of the riches of claim No 46, on the Sulphur, sehichl is known to be the richest mining claim in the world. The owner whose name Mac- Auley could not recall, is a Gen and he will before long be the ri man of all the Klondike claim, he says, is now rate of $36,000 cach gg Norman Hundreds Homeless. Reports have been received that Fox. Jllinois and Sangamon rivers ed their banks, doing [ Ottawa, Ill, is under w and etadreds of families near Havana, 11., have been driven from their homes ere is an ice gorge at the Santa Fe bridge at Chillicothe, 18 miles above Peoria, and the water is up to the ties Attempts are being made to break the gorge with dynamite. Peoria is threat- ened with flood. Murdered by a Maniac. In a Paroxysm of rage Olof Pallesen. a Norwegian, stabbed and killed his wife Josephine, murdered Julia Henges- bach, the three-year-old daughter of Charles F. Hengesbach, a mail carrier. and murderously assaulted the child's Hengesbach, W ednesday front of his home, Wash- mother, atternoen, 1 ington. D. C. Mrs. Hengesbach lies near the Yong ge of death with seven stab wounds in her body. Pallesen was ar rested. It is believed he has become demented through sickness, { made to United States Consul WAR MUST GO ON. Great Britain Peremplorily Refuses to Accept Petition of Burghers—United States In- tervention Not Wauted. Offers to aid in bringing about peace in South Africa have been respectiully declined by Great Britain. Lord Salis- bury has rejected the Kruger-Steyn proposition to end the war. The United States government, at the request of President Kruger and Presi- dent Steyn, offered to the British gov- ernment its services as mediator, with the view of bringing about peace in South Africa. The United States charge d'affaires, Henry White, saw Lord Salisbury at the foreign office Tuesday evening and received a formal reply from the British government, declining the good oi- fices of the United States in regard to peace. The representations made to Great Britain were so put that they assumed nothing of a desire to intervene. but simply transmitted the communications Adelbert S. Hay, at Pretoria, with the accom- panying assurances that anything the state department could do in the inter ests of peace would be gladly undertak- en. The well known aversion of the British government to any foreign in- tervention does not appear to have been aroused, and while Lord Salisbury was unable to comply with the offer, he ex- pressed his appreciation of the United States efforts in behalf of humanity. The offer of mediation sprang from Pretoria, where Mr. Hay, with the oth- er consuls, subsequent to Presidents Kruger and Steyn sending their peace cablegram to Lord Salisbury, were ask- ed to endeavor to secure the good of- fices of their respective governments, apparently with the view of bringing outside influence to bear upon eo Salisbury’s reply to the Boer over- tures. These seem to have been fruit- less, except in the instance of the Unit- ed States consul, whose representations to Secretary Hay were forwarded to the United States embassy in London with instructions outlined above. These Mr. White, the charge d'affaires, per- sonally presented to Lord Salisbury, who received them cordially. As the Boer overtures had already been answered to the effect that no propositions including the retention of the republic’s independence could be considered, the presentation of the American offer was already too late, but the premier apparently deemed it a matter of sufficient importance to put himself on record with a formal reply. The government will not allow the Kruger-Steyn appeal to influence in any way their ‘determination not to spare any effort to prosecute the war. There will be no diminution of measures cal- culated to maintain the full efficiency of the field force, and whatever rein- forcements were previously considered advisable will still be sent out. Lord Salisbury’s reply meets with un animous approval among Conservatives and it is the universal opinion that the Boers, by their extravagant claims and canting tone, meant to influence for- eign powers, have again overreached themselves, as they did by the ultima- tum. FRANCE CANNOT INTERVENE. For Her to Offer Mediation to Britain Would Act as Oil on Flames. A responsible mouthpiece of the French government says: “As far as France is concerned, she certainly will not take the initiative in offering Eng- land mediation, nor will Russia, for the dual alliance is naturally working together in this question. “We fecl that in the present excited state of public feeling in England, and especially as regards ourselves, any step taken by the French government would defeat its own object, and instead of cpening a way to honorable peace would act oil on flames and proba- bly create fresh complications. “We consider that overtures for me- diation can emanate from some power whose cordial relations with England prevent such a suggestion being con- strued as an unfriendly act. The em- peror of Germany, for instance, might take the initiative, or President McKin- ley, without fear of creating the friction which would follow any such action on our part, and, after this is done, full reliance can be placed on the unquali- fied support of France and Russia,whose only desire is to sce the end of the bloodshed and who are eager to lend their good offices in bringing about this end.” The Gaulois, referring to Lord Salis- bur ’s reply to the Kruger-Steyn appeal, s “England no longer hides her es She confirms by her attitude the object she evidently had in view when opening the campaign, that of a war of extermination and conquest. One can consider the step taken by Presidents Kruger and Steyn as dic- tated by a desire to place England in a difficult position before the civilized world, since she has been obliged to reveal her designs publicly.” Negroes Must Leave. Citizens of Parium, a fine residence suburb of the big mining camp of Cal- umet, Mich., have appointed a commit- tee to rid the town of negroes. They object to having it called a vigilance committee, and announce that only peaceable and legal methods will be used, but that the negroes must go Colored men were almost unknown there unti! a sewer contractor brought in several carloads from Tennessee and Alabama 18 months ago. Several white girls have eloped with negroes and constant trouble has led to this action. Taughter and Husband. Pool Shot © Thomas Butte. Mon his son-in- law. by accident the latter's wife, v. a saloonkeeper, of nnday, shot and killed Thomas Littlejohn, and Lydia, the shot being intenued for Littlejohn, dur- ing a difficulty on the street. The trou- ble dated from Littleiohn’s marriage to. Pooley’s daughter without the fath er's consent. Iittleiohn had knocked Pooley down and v king him. when the latter drew his revolver and fired. Mrs. Littlejohn was carrying her baby at the Will Cost Thirly Millions. The Wellman- Seaver. 5 Zygineenny Company. of Cleveland, has closed a contract with the eed Steel Co., Hane, Ont.. to design and build what will, when completed, be the larg- est 1d iron plant in Canada, and one ee will have few superiors in re- gard to size in the world. The total capacity of the plant will be 2.400 tons per day. In addition to the steel plant there will also be constructed a bloom- ing mill of the largest size. a billet il and two plate mills. The 1 | cost nearly $30.000,000 Ferly Cocr Faclories Closed. Forty sash and door factories in Chicago have decided to shut down as result of the struggle of the con- and the building and trades council. This throws 6,000 more men, mostly union wood workers, out of employment. In activity in buildnig circles and interference by the employes with the delivery of goods to non-union forces caused the action. tractors council Trek From Missouri to Mexico. A colony of 400 Alissouri farmers is to be established in the valley of the Con- cho river in Mexico. The promoters oi the colonization scheme have pur ~hased 200.000 acres of rich valleys, an: ew of the cole ts have already ar- The remainder of the families ach here in time to put in this Connellsville, factory. mobile DENTH IN A FURNACE EXPLOSION. SHOWER OF HOT METAL, One Man Burned Up Complefely—Another! | Victim’s Flesh Falls from His Bones. Three Others Badly injure A terrific explosion heciizred in Mo- | nongahela furnace No. 1, a department | of the National Tube Company’ s plant, | at McKeesport, Pa., at 5:40 o'clock Fri-' day afternoon. One man was killed, an- other so badly injured that he cannot’ recover, and three men very painfully burned. The indirect cause of the explosion was the clogging of the furnace, which is 60 feet high. A lot of ore, limestone and coke had become fastened to the side of the furnace 20 feet from the top. This is called a “hang.” But the men at the top, Martin and Curvan, kept filling in more ore, coke and limestone. | Finally the weight of the stone, coke | and ore thrown in caused the “hang” | to break loose. It then fell down to the bottom of the furnace, 40 feet be- low. At the bottom of the furnace was a large mass of molten metal and gases. When the ore and stone came tumbling down, the explosion ensued. Fire, molten metal, ore, coke and stone were sent flying high into the air. i Some of the pieces of ‘stone and ore fell to the ground a block away. The | noise made“by the explosion could be | heard all over the cit The yard about the furnace was strewn over with metal, ore and stone. The top of the | furnace was blown off, and some of the | fixtures of the furnace destroyed. Be- | vond this little damage was done to the | furnace. | The report of the explosion and the | wierd scenes attending and following | it were indescribable. People rushed | to the place from all over the city, and the greatest excitement prevailed. Nothing whatever could be discov- ered of Martin's remains. His hat was found on the top of the furnace, near the edge. The force of the explosion seems to have been directly upward and | downward. Martin had been working | at the place eight years. i MORE SUBSIDIARY COIN. = At Least $20,000,000 to oe Minted and Put On the Markzt Under the New Monetary Law. Mr. Roberts, the director of the mint, has announced his intention of speedily taking steps to increase the stock of subsidiary coin under the new financial act. As quickly as possible at least $20,000,000 will be coined and put on the market to meet the demand for small money. Speaking of the matter, Mr. Roberts said: “The new monetary act, approved March 14, authorizes an increase of about $20,000,000 in the stock of sub- sidiary silver coin. The last authority | for the issue of subsidiary silver was | given by a joint resolution, approved | July 22, 1876, in preparation for the re- sumption of specie payments. It au- thorized the issue of an amount which, together with the fractional paper cur-| rency outstanding, should at no time ex- | ceed $50.000,000. ! “July o, 1870, the act providing for | the redemption of subsidiary silver in | lawful money was passed, and forthwith | our old quarters, dimes and halves, which had been driven to the West | Indies and South America by our paper money, began to return. They were presented for redemption until the treas- ury held over $30.000,000 of them. In | this way the $50,000,000 limit was ex- | ceeded, for the treasury officials paid this stock out in the regular course of business until it was practically all ab- | corbed. The present stock in the coun- try thus reached about $80,000,000. Under the new law it may be $100,000,- 000, and bullion purchased under the Sherman act may be coined. The new | authority was sorely needed and will scarcely suifice for the growing needs of the country more than five or six | years.” caBLE. FLASHES. Officials of the Paris exposition say that the exposition will be opened April 15, advertised. The Prussian Reichstag is discussing a bill to purify the stage. It prohibits the presentation of anything calculated to produce a feeling of shame. The Prussian Reichstag has adopted a coinage bill providing for calling in gold five-mark pieces and twenty-pfen- nig pieces, issuing silver up to fifteen marks per head of the population and calling in provincial coins, for remint- | ing. Dr. Arendt, free conservative, of- fered an amendment proposing the purchase of silver bullion for minting the new coins, but it was rejected by 161 to 61 votes. (T THE NATIONAL CAPITAL Representatives of the Philadelphia | produce exchange were before the! House agricultural committee in favor of the Grout anti-oleomargarine bill. Mr. Wise, the newly-seated Republi- | can representative from Virginia, has introduced a bill to encourage the or- ganization of industrial schools for the benefit of the freedmen of the south. The State department has been advis- ed formally of the willingness of the French government to extend the pe- riod of time allowed for the ratification | of the pending French reciprocity! treaty. Yellow Fever in Havana. H. J. Ormsby, of Wisconsin, who has spent the last five months in Cuba agent of as a special the war depart- | ment, says that yellow fever is now and has been for some time past raging in i{avana. The reports of the actual deaths from yellow fever, he said, are not allowed to go out For the first n the history of t Central Penns ylvania a new agreed on by arbitration be- miners and operators at the Al- convention. Omaha destroyed the Tent and Rubber minin scale v tween toona Fire in of the Omaha stocks Com- pany, Schmoeler Mueller, pianos, and the Nebraska Seed Company; loss $150,000, fully insured. The directors of the Anaconda Cop- per Mining Company Friday at New York declared its regular quarterly dividend of $1.25 per share, and an ex- | tra dividend of 75 cents. Before the Idaho investigation com- mittee at Washington IL. T Simpkins, | an electrical engincer, testified concern- ing extreme brutalities committed by the colored soldiers at Wardner. It is rumored tha: John Hay will re- as secretary of State because the sign i Senate committee on foreign relations | has amended the Hay-Pauncefote | treaty regarding the Nicaraguan canal. | The Chicago association of machinery manufacturers is out with a signed | statement saying that all negotiations | with the international association of! machinists are 3k | an end, its effort for arbtiration having failed. County Altornoy W. B. Barger. o Charlton, Towa, was shot and perhaps | fataily wounded by 1) George Pyle, | who is under arrest. She was recently divorced and blames Barger for her trouble. | A big coal deal involving 11,000 acres | is being closed for the land in the | neighborhood of West Alexander, Pa, | and when the sale is completed, some- | thing like $425,000 will pass into the hands of the land owners in the neigh- | HYorhood of West Alexander. The] block lies south of the Baltimore & | Ohio railroad and w 5 Spits last | July for Carmichaels Coal Co. Mrs. | fairs | of that rank. oo | Congressional Record. | in the northwest border {| vote was reached. | 000,000 tons. FIFTY-SIXTH CONGRESS Senate. FIFTY-FOURTH DAY. The Senate committee on foreign af- reached an agreement on an amendment to the ay-Pauncefote isthmian canal committee intended to meet the objections of those who op- pose the clause forbidding the fortifica- tion of the canal. Discussion of Mr. Mason's resolution expressing sympathy for the Boers was conducted in the Senate behind locked 0ors. Senator L odge introduced a joint resolution giving to the senior major general of the army, while commanding the army, the rank of lieutenant general, together with the emoluments and pay FIFTY-FIFTH DAY. The Senate passed the diplomatic and | consular appropriation bill after laying i on the table an amendment to give ex- Queen Liluiokalani $20,000 now and an annuity of $10,000. Representative Mahon, of Pe nnsyl- vania, has introduced a bill for the re- | lief of the estate of the late Maj. Gen. Lawton from a charge of $656 for camp y troops of his command in Decem- er, 1898. The administration is showing special anxiety to get the French reciprocity treaty through the Senate this season. IFTY-SIXTH DAY. The Senate chamber and committee rooms were the scene of a conflict of opinion which found no place in the The basis of the disagreement was Senator Foraker’s bill providing a form of government for Puerto Rico and only Republican senators participated in it. Representative Sulzer, of New York, has introduced a resolution of inquiry concerning fortifications Great Britain is said to be goastruciing along our sorthes boundar, FTY "SEVENTH DAY. The oy legislative step in the enmact- ment of the financial bill was taken by | | the House of Representatives, when the | conference report on the bill was adopt- ed by a vote of yeas 166, nays 120, pres- ent and not voting 10. The Senate had already adopted the conference report, so that it remains only for President | McKinley to affix his signature to the measure to make it a law. he Republican senators caucused for two or three hours on the Puerto Rican tariff question, and with- out jeaciing a conclusion, adjourned. FIFTY-EIGHTH DAY. The Republican senators in caucus reached a partial agreement on Puerto Rican legislation. The House bill, ap- propriating $2,000,000, is to be taken up and passed immediately. The bill for a civil government of the island is to be taken up and disposed of as soon as possible, and the tariff bill is to be delayed for the present. In the House committee on military affairs Mr. Sulzer, of New York, called up his resolution directing the secre- tary of war to inform the House what fortifications Great Britain is erecting along the northern frontier of the Unit- ed States, especially at Puget sound and country. An amendment was made striking out the reference to Great Britain and making it refer to “any foreign power.” FIFTY-NINTH DAY. The Senate spent the entire day in débating Puerto Rican relief, and al- { though all the speakers favored the bill to return the revenues to the island, no Representative Ray introduced a constitutional amendment | for National regulation of trusts. The bill, The District of Columbia appropriation carrying $6,603,378, was passed. | House commerce committee submitted four reports on the bill for the construc- tion of a Pacific cable. Government or private ownership the question now be- ing considerec SIXTIETH DAY. The Senate passed the bill for the re- funding of revenue received on impor- tations by the United States, amount- I ing to $2,005,455. Senator McMillan, in the Senate, and Representative Lentz, in the House, have introduced bills providing for | post check notes in small amounts. MINES AND MINERS. The Mines of Sinai—Evidenca That Copper Was Taken From There 7,000 Years Ago. The World's Coal Ouiput. Egyptians had mined the rugged sides of Mount Sinai for copper and tur- quoi thousands of years before loses climbed the mountain to re- ceive the tables of the law, and the gyptians waged war for the possession of these mines. DM. de Morgan with a party of French engineers recently vis- ited these abandoned NO which are situated convenient to the Gulf of Suez, and explored two of the ancient deposits. He found the mineral de- posits in the sandstone region and not in the porphyries, which constitute the great mass of the mountain. These deposits consist of copper and iron-bearing minerals, especially hema- tite, and some gypsum. Among the cupriferous minerals the most valuable were the turquoise, many valuable speci- mens of which have been discovered from time to time in the tomb and treasures of the Egyptians, says the tional Druggist. M. de Mor back to France a collection of mine most of which were turned over i Berthelot, who made a most intc § report on the minerals, in which he stated that the copper-bearing speci- mens were poor in metal and not plen- tiful. Mining such ores must have been tedious and severe labor. The Egyp- tians were still using arms of wood and chipped or ground stones and cop- per was a rare and precious metal, the possession of which was thought to re- pay the most severe labor. Later on wood and stone implements ve place to bronze, which was ma possible by the importation of tin {rom remote regions. abandond These mines have been , for at least 3.000 years, probably on ac count of a constantly growi scarcity of the material and the po y of the residue in metal. The min ably worked from 3.3500 to It is thought that the work mines began nearly 7,000 y The world's output of coal was 620.000,000 tons, 470,000,000 in 18go. The is now the large st C Prous Un 218,- with produced produced and 215,000,000 rmany 100,000,000 tons; > 30,000,000, Fra Belgium 23,000,000 tons. It is remark- able that in 1870 the United States’ out- put was only 17 per cent. of the whole | while now it is 23 per cent. From 1871 to 1895 the output in Great ain increased 45 per cent., while many’s increase in the sz | 115 per cent. The Unit age output has increased 103 per The cause of the present sc ~arcity {| appear to be due to the dustrial and maritime late far exceeded the coal output. More is want in England, at present | put on the market. Coal is found in Cape lony in a dozen places; i in Zululand, Bay; in the C Kronstadt and Vi ransvaal, at Klerksdorp a gung, and at Boksh desia on both banks of The approximate ou tput fields in 1808 was nea Tennessee has phosphate producer of 248 valuable mines in the over 21,000 men are employe business. New mines are bein; daily. 2,000,000 t¢ become the America State are short time, class we can offer most liberal terms. THE HU] HUSTLER Cleans the clothes Horoustly and in a very Adjusts itself to all kinds of washing. Cleanses heavy pieces such as blankets and comforts as readily as it washes the finest laces. Can be operated by a child. THE QUEEN. Same kind of a scribed above, It is arranged so it can be run by hand or power, never gets out of order. The cheapest high- market. Send for circulars and prices. QUEEN CITY WASHING MACHINE CO. RET ANETTA, A Radical Change in Marketing Methods as Applied to Sewing Machines. An original plan under which you can obtain easier ferms and better value in the purchase of fie world famous “White” Sewing Machine than Write for our elegant H-T catalogue and detailed particulars. we can $ave you money in the purchase of a high-grade sewing machine and the easy terms oF payment we can offer, either direct from factory or through our regular authorized agents, tunity you cannot afford to pass. its manufacturers. its construction is unnecessary. You know the ¢«White,”” you know Therefore, a detailed description of the machine and If you have an old machine to exchange Write to-day. WHITE SEWING MACHINE COMPANY, (Dep't A.) Cleveland, Ohio. VV VILLAR BVLVLRVVLVVR For Sale by Harry McCulloch, Eik Lick Pa. H yea the tha bee of of bui to I adv yar will skil this met ion. fice ur R oro: OQ) gage C00 St. er Is is the owner Before grow 1d and Joiner England. atives and will The Hovens soa Magic Cereal Takes the Place of 20f va eecees— Coffee Pure we... Being made from Ma Contains nothing injurious to e old or young. Builds up the wh system, H Natural # St 1 AZ Food Drink Always agrees with the stomach, Contains 25 much nui nt as a good sized piece of Beefsteak. C tains no Coffee or Extract. Ii is rich in color, fine in flavor, and a good blood purifier, For Sale by all Grocers. Prepared and Roasted by HOWER CEREAL COFFEE 00, ARK OR, OHIO. INDUSTRIAL NOTES. Muricipal Ownership of Elsclric Ligh! Plant Saves Money for the Town. Other Labor Items. ownership n, which they ile valleys 1, will | The town of North Highiands, N. J, of its own lighting plant. it adopted munic the lowest bid at w street lights was $ power lamp a year. town issued 2,000 years ago the 0 per Four bonds and erected its own plant, and it now uses si: lights at a ¢ y-eight street of $26 of the lighting plant is about $3.500 on ‘farmers in Philadelphia 120, cor fert 1 , which is tc street lights alo ¢ purchased in o bushels of seed propose to plant in the ong the river en from the British steamship is i by expert agricuiturists t Nile valleys, which have n uncultivated for centuries, will the East. lders, of an agr ndications ance of ns. show rth Caroli some m "lothe is been brok five years hour: day June. at $2.25 per day. he cents an hour. gle which began 13 years ago. oO ye was that the them to give amounts from amounting to fifty I'he statement was made by union organizer in South Carolina: “Tt the Spain; which belong to an English The men wages and a reduction in the hours of satisfy cotton 1. li e as good corn as anywhere in the re passed through the Marie canals 2 wheat, copper and lumber of great Northwest, factures and miscellaneous merchandise This amounting to nearly one-half of the z nual freightage of all the railroads in the Lake Superior region, is increasing annually by leaps and bounds—doubling, in fact, every The boss carpent Cincinnati, ement with the Carpenters’ union to es 5,810 tons oats, flour. the ms He corn, and the coal, enGrnnous tr. contractors and )., have come tablish an eight- at $2.40 on the first of next The present rule is nine hours This is an increase of This ends a strug- for f Sustained prices cotton goods abroad are found in the from in the vages of their operators granted by the spinners in and around Bolton, The raise affects 20,000 oper- five to ten per cent. cover all classes of fine The German Waiters’ Congress, held in Berlin, of the main complaints of the delegates :d hard conditions. One employers compelled up regular monthly their “tips,” often per cent. a textile be but a few weeks before every led laborer in the cotton mills of State and the whole South is a mber of the Textile Workers’ Un- A recent fire in the trainmaste of- of the Pistshure and Lake Erie a among the em- ved the records for s of the trainmen, with s for dereliction. broken out among the tramways at Barce- asK a rais e in England, Scotland g 430.201 miners, have tely days in each the ororcionied de- and mills are going up in The cotton industry ons of tropical people ly to have a boom. strike of iron workers at Boston n, contractors continuing work the bridge finding no diffi as usual. i Struc- culty in eporters and newspaper writers in I "., have formed a union sub- to the International Typo- sal Union. : montis ago there were but gara Falls, N. Y¥ anized bodie ut of d in Union made men. Jutton wor secured uphols have gone kers in boasts of twenty-two 1,100,000 in Massachusetts en- gainful are employed on ays. : onis now has a Tobacco Wor occupations only 37,- Sunda up entirely of co Roc substantial rers to the number of on strike for a living ownership ch it could get arc candle 50 per lamp a vr... The saving to the town through Double Hetion © Washing Machine, Impossible to tear the clothes. machine as de- that Washing Machine on the CINCINNATI, OHIO. How This is an oppor- Address in full. ina niomtinntion lie tienes ctieeectdiincch |FIRE ar and BURGLAR PROOF . . Vault T'ronts and Safes for Walls. Let us know what yeu yan and get our prices. + + THE NAEHER MFG. co., re | TI, OHIO. eT VV YY TT Tv Batibo ae ig ER Is Pure, Strong, Healthful and Thess, Why pay double the price for half the quai- ity and quantity? Guaranteed to give satisfaction, or money refunded, Try it and you will always buy it. FOR SALE BY GROCERS, Don’t buy any other, JERSEY BELLE BAKING POWDER BO., _JEmszvorrv®.. 0 0 REWSY GLEANINGS. The population of London increases 3y 70,000 a year. rmany’s net import of gold duns the whole of 1899 is estimated at $: 750,000. The Transvaal was an unknown land, so far as Furopean knowledge or in« fluence went, prior to the year 1830. _ During the profe 2,000,000 pounds of en caught he Illinois river between Depu pasty 200 distinct muscles in »f which the best of prime condition by over the hum body, us keep about 10 proper usc. Pickied Pw in sardines, not having a place on the . are held to be dutiable as Retin ed or salted, at half a cent a p vare kawanna and it will put in a en Hoboken and Hacketts fon nt The Philippine "nz vy grown until there and of those on the station, have off dred of the sma ersiof C areed to i rest from 1 to May 1, with a half « rsday from May 1 to A “The Flood,” 1 Aetlet in 1876 for ic sale in Bor- was sold once 1 38.600. n. of Tennessee, 1e in a cemetery bears t epitaph: > children, others none; here twenty-one.” >hiladelphia be expend- will be add- > island plant, giving fa- out of war. 1S on and Darling- ships fies to turn es of the ol in the 46 years 0,000 miles on 0,000 a year in 1t Iritain, The United three-sevenths of the and leads with an edu- Fe uc U tar france and States s 1 whole amc cational per capi Francis Helen M. and 8 Sts, has Stroud, 2 veled from it escort other than the trainmen to whose care she had yeen committed. For fancy dress ies in Engla young women are adopting as novel- ties, in honor of soldiers at the front, what are known as 2 and “XIn- fon Jack” costumes, h are said to be picturesque, if not graceful, | OY EOE Tt ted Io al IN tr ea a ha at Tae pag oar Re ERROR LR SH Ne LE hg tg =m b Sans VEDIIInmad ™ —1 22s iy a a gp hy WDA dames Free