REPULSE BRITISH FORGE FOUR OFFICERS KILLED. General Clements’ Force Tompelied to Re- treat, Baltered and Beaten—Battie Resumed at Krugersdorp. Telegrams irom London, dated Fri- day, say: Severe reverses have overtak- "en the British troops in South Africa. How bad was the defeat or series of defeats, suffered in the last 24 hours is not yet known. That General Clements has been defeated, and that badly, is not denied. Lord Kitchener, in a cablegram, says four of- ficers and some soldiers were killed in a battle yesterday. How many soldiers were killed he does not say. Friday evening excitement was trebled in England by a cablegram {rom Johannesburg, sent at 3:25, saying General Clements was engaged by the Boers in the afternoon on the hills a few miles from Krugersdorp. He had asked Johannesburg for help. General French had left hurriedly to assist im. The cablegram said the attack- ing Boers numbered not less than 2,800, and that already the casualties were large on both sides. The scenes at the war office recall those witnessed in the early stages of the war. A constant stream of excited people filled the lobbies, all seeking de- tails of the disaster. The absence of the names of any of the officers of the Northumberland Fusiliers in General Kitchener's dispatch leads to the fore- boding that the four companies of the Fusiliers mentioned are in the hands of the Boers. The war office officials evidently ex- pect a heavy casualty list, but they are hopeful from the fact that the dispatch does not mention the capture of the Northumberlands that such a great ca- tastrophe has been escaped Orders were issued at Aldershot, Mal- ta and other military centers to dispatch all the available mounted infantry to South Africa. The angry English people are de- manding that officers responsible for the disaster at Magaliesburg be pun- ished. The Boers captured 573 British. Che disaster which on Friday over- took the British troops in South Africa on the Magaliesburg, only 22 miles from Pretoria, has sent an unpleasant thrill through the nation. It was made rather worse Sunday night by the iol- lowing dispatch from Aliwal, North, Cape Colony: “A party of Brabant’s Horse, consisting mainly of raw recruits engaged a superior force of Boers on December 13 near Zastron, Orange River Colony, losing four killed, 16 wounded and 120 taken prisoners.” HUGE BALANCE OF TRADE. The Excess in Favor of the United States Largest in History. The commercial record of the United States in 1900 will surpass that of any preceding year both in exports and in the excess of exports over imports, or “favorable balance of trade.” The im- ports will be slightly below those of one or two preceding years, and when considered in their relation to popula- tion show a smaller importation for each individual than at almost any other period in many years. Basing the estimate for the year upon the 11 months’ figures received by the Treas- ury, it seems probable that the exports will reach about $1,470,000,000. and the imports $825,000,000, making the excess of exports over imports $645,000,000. a sum greater by $25,000,000 than that of any preceding vear. The exports will be double those of 1883, three times those of 1872, four times those of 3560, and five times as much as in 1 PANIC AT A FUNERAL. Flgor Gave Way and Sixty Men Fell in Cellar—Many Injured. During the services over the remains of ex-County Commissioner Wilmer Worthington at Forest Grove, Pa., the oor of an adjoining room gave way and about 60 men, mostly members of secret organizations, were precipitated to the cellar. Everybody was hurt, a dozen quite seriously. The accident was followed by screams of terror and panic among the women mourners who sui- rounded the corpse. The services were abruptly ended by everybody rushing from the place. All the mourners who were not hurt turned in to rescue the injured. Many were burned and scalded, a stove containing a kettle of hot water having fallen con the men. Monument to Jennie Wade. The Women’s Relief Corps of Towa has arranged to erect a monument at Gettysburg, Pa., in honor of Jennie Wade, the only woman killed during the battle of Gettysburg. The monumert will be erected on July 3, 1901,the 38th anniversary of the battle. GOV. BECKHAM INAUGURATED. Promises a Clean Administration — Hopes Political. Strife Will Cease. Gov. Beckham, of Kentucky, was in- __2ugurated Tuesday, at Frankfort. In his address he made no reference to the killing of William Goebel nor to any of e subsequent events. e promised a ¢Nean and honest administration in a spiryt of fairness and tolerance, with no g of partisan hate or malice, but with ‘the sincere desire to remove, os ossible, all friction and ill-feeling He said that thority and shall never be called into active gervice except as a last resort in carryitffg out the decrees of judicial tribungls, Marvels of Nature Discovered. inadian Pacific railroad engineers hav: returned to Winnipeg, Man., from an (exploring expedition in the field re- giagn of the Rockies and they report the discovery of magnificent falls, one drop- pi-ig from a height of 1,300 feet, also several glaciers, one of which rivals the great glacier of the Selkirks in area and surpasses it.in the magnificence of its surroundings of mountain lakes of un- usual beauty and of lofty peaks, which will offer great temptation to mountain climbers. These hitherto hidden mar- vels of nature can be made accessible by the construction of trails and these will be built early next spring. The Czar Making Inquiries. It is reported that the first act of the czar since his recovery has been to send to the war ministry for a report on the alleged wholesale slaughter of women and children by Russian troops in Mai:- churia. The czarina was deeply touch- ed by the reports in question and callzd her husband’s attention to them as soon as his condition permitted. 1t is believed that there will be a thor- ough inquiry into the alleged massacres, which, if true, exceed anything in Rus- sian history since the age of Ivan the Terrible. Soldier's Death Penalty Commuted. Privates Benjamin Stanley and Thomas Fesler. oi Company G, Forty-eighth ia- fantry, stationed in the Philippines, wzre convicted recently by court-martial of assault and desertion and each was sen- tenced to be hanged. The President has commuted the sentences of dishon- orable discharge, iorfeiture of all pay and allowances and confinement at hard fabor at Leavenworth penitentiary for 20 years. LATEST NEWS NOTES. The French report an army of 10,000 Boxers marching on Pekin An earthquake shock at Santiago de Cuba broke up two swell balls. The Sisters of Mercy convent at Fort Dodge, Ia., was destroyed by fire. In a recent letter Andrew Carnegie opposes the Hay-Paunceiote treaty. Gen. DeWet again avoids a well laid British trap and eludes his pursuers. Parliament has adjourned. the queen's speech being the shortest on record. London newspapers protest i the amendment of the Hay-Pauncefote treaty. Lord Roberts, with his wife and daughters, has sailed irom Cape Town for England. Friday violent wind and ran storm visited the Pacific coast causing great damage to property. As a result oi special elections many Massachusetts towns have been added to the no-license column. George Gould has sold his steam yacht, the Atlanta, to the government of Venezuela for $125,000. : Two brutal negro murderers ol a white barber were lynched in the jail yard at Rockport, Ind. The military government of Porto Rico has ended and Governor Gener: al Davis sailed for America. The dock laborers at Callao, the port of Lima, Peru, have gone on strike, and all work has been stopped. An Indianapolis gas company is being forced into bankruptcy by Yee stealing of gas by citizens. It is alleged that the shortage of the dead Cincinnati board of education oi- ficial may reach a million. Prince Gustavus Adolphus, eldest son of the crown prince of Sweden and Nor- way, is ill with diphtheria. Since Paris exposition closed that city has been the scene of an abnormal number of hideous crimes Corporal Herbert Chase, Twenty- ninth infantry, was mistaken for a Fili- pino and killed by a sentry. In a lecture at Ann Arbor, Mich., ex- President Harrison says Filipinos are citizens of the United States. Three children were cremated in a Pumirg house at Golinza, Pa., Wednes- day, during the mother’s absence. A scheme is on foot to establish a new government in the heart of South America under French protection. Kruger has been formally notified by whi Holland government that it will not interfere on behalf of the Boers. Great Britain has objected to one fea- ture of the China agreement, causing further delay in Peking negotiations. A iourteen-year-old boy of New York city has been sentenced to 20 years im- prisonment for murdering a playmate. Queen Margaret of Italy has pui- chased a palace, and will devote her time and fortune to charities and art. Senators who were turned down aut the November election seem determined to talk the ship subsidy bill to death. Miss Mary McCready, a demented woman near New Wilmington, Pa., was burned to death at home when left alone. Fire destroved the A. T. Stewart Dine works at East Carnegie, Pa., causing Joss estimated at $75.000, partially by sured. Citizens of Paterson, N. J., are en- deavoring to raise $200,000 to prevent the closing of the Rogers locomotive works. Rev. Dr. Dickie, pastor of the Amer- ican church in Berlin, has arrived in this country to solicit $150,000 for the church building. At an Anarchist meeting in New York Tuesday evening Emma Gold- man threatened the assassination of Richard Croker. The chateau in Belgium of the Prince of Ligny, dating from 1146, was burned, but the paintings and most of the art works were saved. A mine workman near Connellsville, Pa., missed his footing and plunged 300 feet down a mine shaft. His body was crushed to a pulp. Diphtheria is epidemic at Claysburg, Blair county, Pa., and the mortality is heavy. Four deaths in one family have occurred in 10 days. A fatal collision on the Santa Fe rail- road in Kansas is attributed to incapable telegraph operators. One person killed and several injured. The Zschistche tannery at Sheboygan, .. was destroyed by fire, causing a loss of $180,000 and throwing 200 men out of employment. It is now asserted that Emperor Kwang Hsu is a convert to Christianity and that this is the cause of the empress dowager’s hatred for him. Dr. Matzen, professor of law at the University of Copenhagen, has been ap- pointed to represent Denmark in the in- ternational court of arbitration at The Hague. In a tail-end collision on the Pennsyl- vania road at Kittanning Point, Pa. William Pritchard, of Gallitzin, was killed, iq persons hurt and one reported against British soldiers heartily admire Gen. Dewet, the Boer commander, whom they are trying hard to capture. It is proposed to connect all the larg- er towns between Clarion and DuBois, Pa., by an electric car line, over 50 miles in length. The yellow fever situation at Havana shows general improvement. Twenty- eight cases are now under treatment, including only one American. Committees of the Cuban constitu- tional convention are drafting an instru- ment which will effect radical changes in the government of the island. Lappe Bros., of Allegheny, Pa, have purchased the Gondola works at Jean- nette and will remodel it PhaTiony 10 opening a patent leather tannery. Waynesburg. Pa. is to have a busi- ness college. to be under the manag ment of Prof. Lewis Van Orden, of the Business college of Washington, Pa Because she quarreled when he came home Annelo Barelga. in New York threw his wife out of a window 30 i high, but she was not seriously injured. The stone canopy over Plymouth Rock, at Plymouth, Mass.. has been partly shattered by vandals and the whole structure may Sn e to be rebuilt. The French. probably shamed by Gen. Chaffee, have stopped looting the Peking observatory. Secretary Hay's diplomatic victory is acknowledged “in Berlin. The semi-annual dividend of § 50 per share on the preferred ai has been declared by the directors of the Chicago Great Western, payable Jan- rary 31. An explosion destroyed the fine tin- ples at the J. W. Ellsworth shaft No. 1 mines near Monongahela, Pa.. 100 men who were inside escaping through shalt No; 2. The Taft commission has passed an act authorizing Gereral MacArthur ro establish police in Philippine cities and towns and appropriating $130,000 for their maintenance. Philip Nordlund was beheaded at Vesteras, Sweden, for the murder of seven men on the steamer Prinz Car in May. He chanted a psalm as he laid his head on the block The National Civil Service Reform league elected President Daniel C. Gil- man, of Johns Hopkins university, presi- dent, in place of Carl Schurz. Grov Cleveland was elected a vice presides Joseph English Colonial Se ry, has a scheme for federating the British West Indies with the capital at Kingsto There are fears that Amer Chamberlain, the maica mately acquire all these islands MILITARY ACTIVITY AT PANAY ISLE. CROWDING THE REBELS. American Troops Have Lost Only Three Killed and Five Wounded—Commission Work- ing on Tariff Bill. Advices from Iloilo, island of Panay, report that the American troops have been moving northward and westward for scveral days, and that detachments of the Sixth, Eighteenth and Twen sixth regiments have been active ne: their stations. The insurgent losses during the last 10 days there have been five killed, several wounded and 40 taken prisoners. The Americans have lost two killed and three wounded. Large numbers of the natives are swear- ing allegiance to the United States. In recent attack and expeditions in South- ern Luzon the insurgents have lost eight killed, seven wounded and about 20 captured. The Americans have lost one killed and two wounded. Gen. Wheaton reports that 430 natives have entered Calanao for registration. Most of the time of the Philippine commission i now devoted to the tariff bill. Judge Tait says that the new rates would be about 40 per cent. of the existing rates. “It will be essentially a tariff for revenue,” he remarked, “but some industries that are already c¢s- tablished will be given protection. The commission is not considering the ques- tion of the constitutionality of taxing United States products. The precedents ave been established in the case of ith Rico and by the military govern- ment of the Philippines. The bill re- quires the washing of cotton goods so as to eliminate the clay used by Euro- pean manufacturers, which increases the weight. This will incidentally favor American goods. The rate on kerosene will be reduced from 11 cents a gallon to 4. Some American goods will be ad- mitted free, and almost all will come in at reduced figures.” BRINGING VOLUNTEERS HOME. General MacArthur Instructed to Begin the Movement. The war department has begun the movement homeward of the volunteers from ‘the Philippines, so that they may be discharged in this country by June 30. Adjt. Gen. Corbin cabled the fol- lowing i instructions to Gen. MacArthur: “Send volunteers convalescent to the capacity of the next transport return- ing and a volunteer regiment by trans- port following. As you report 69,000 now, the secretary of war directs that vou start home the volunteer regiments until the force is reduced to 60,000, the number fixed before beginning rein- forcement by regulars. Will send you regular regiments to further relieve the volunteers.” Gen. MacArthur replied as follows: “The Thirty-seventh infantry regiment sails on transport Sheridan, January 1, and the Eleventh regiment cavalry on January 15. The movement will con- tinue as directed until completed. The Thirty-sixth regiment infantry is in the field; cannot leave at present. Trans- port Sherman left December 15 with about 500 volunteers convalescents and the transport Warren will leave Decem- ber 22, with the same number. Any remaining will go on transport Sheri- dan, January 11. The war department has taken this ac- tion in anticipation of the authorization by Congress of the enlistment of reguiar regiments to replace the recalled troops. Officers of volunteer regiments in the Philippines have reported a general dis- inclination on the part of the volunteers to prolong their foreign service. BOY’S TERRIBLE DEATH. Companions Tied Him io a Horse Which Ran Away Dragging Him to Death. Dragging at the heels of a frightened horse a boy named Hall was battered to death at Mt. Liberal, Ind. Two older companions, names Pittman and Copen- haver, in a spirit of boyish recklessness, tied young Hall on the horse's back, telling him they would teach him to be- come a circus rider. He was warned to hold on the reins by his companions, who released their hold on the bridle and struck the horse. The animal im- mediately took fright and ran away. The rider lost his hold and fell under the horse's hoofs. His horror-stricken com- panions started in pursuit of the fleeing animal, which was captured nearly a mile away, but not until the rider was kicked and battered beyond recogni- tion. Against American Shoes. The influx of American-made shoes into Germany has prompted a petition from German boot and shoe manufac- turers to the national legislature for a raise in the import tariff on articles of this description. Vice Consul General Hanauer, at Frankfort, s that these manufacturers claim the tariff as a ne- cessity to protect their industry against foreign encroachments. MAIL TRAIN ROBBED. Bandits Make a Heavy Haul After Beating the Postal Clerk Insensible. A bold robbery on the Cottonbelt railway occurred Thursday at Bassetts, Tex., in which Postal Clerk John TH. Dennis was almost killed and the mail pouches of his car rifled of their con- tents. Examination of the car showed that the robbers gained entrance by crawling through a small trap door in the floor oi the vestibule. In the vestibule is a crank with which a person can uncou- ple the car from the other, and it is be- lieved it was the intention of the rob- bers to disconnect and get control of both cars. Tt is impossible to tell what the robbers secured. but it is believed they made a good haul. American University Plans. At the meeting oi the trustees of the American university Tuesday at Wash- ington Bishop Hurst reported that there was between $2,000,000 and $: 000.000 on hand, and urged that every effort should be made to secure $1,000,- ooo during the coming year, as a basis for opening the institution for instruc- tion. Everything was reported to be in prosperous condition. The report of the financial secretary showed that $75,000 will soon be added to the endowment fund. A subscrip- tion of $10,000 was made by a member oi the board whose name was not an- nounced. Bought by the Standard. The Standard Oil Company has ac- quired all of the interests of the Pacific Coast Oil Company. The purchase price is said to be in the neighborhood of $1,000,000. The Pacific Coast Oil Company has been doing business in California for a quarter of a century. Its interests include valuable oil prop- erties in various sections. It owns a steamer which is sed! in transporting oil from the southern coast to its refinery at Alameda, which has a monthly ca- pacity of 23.000 barrels. The company's entire are embraced in the transfer. Starting a New Revolution. Dispatches from Hong Kong, dated Thursday. say: The city was placarded to-day with appeals to the people and secret societies to unite and rise during January and drive out all foreigners. Crowds gathered around the plagards, but no outbreak is reported. Reports come from Canton that Yeung Sung Po, the reformer, has been horribly tor- tured. Though he was strung up (by the thumbs and the toes, he would confess nothing. WASHINGTON, D. C. The Chief City of the Republic Celebrated Its Centenary in a Fitting Manner Wednesday. With imposing ceremonies the Na- tional capital Wednesday celebrated the centennial anniversary of the founding of the seat of the federal government mn Washington. The exercises combined a brilliant military parade, a review by the President from the east front of the Capitol and orations in the hall of the house of representatives, where a bril- liant audience was assembled. By act of Congress the day was made a Na- tional holiday in the District of Colum- bia, the government departments being closed. President McKinley and the members of his cabinet took prominent parts in all the exercises, and with them were the chief executives of a large number of the States and Territories of the union, including Gov. Stone, of Penn- sylvania, the senators and representa- tives in Congress, the ambassadors and minister from foreign courts, the heads of the army and navy and a great out- pouring of the people. Early in the day the President received the governors of States and Territories at the White House, and the model for a new and enlarged White House, to commemorate the day's exerci was unveiled with suitable addresses The ceremonies at the Capitol began at 3:30 p. m. and included addresses bv Senators Daniel, of Virginia, and Mec- Comas, of Maryland; Representatives Payne, of New York, and Richardson, of Tennessee, and a notable historic ora- tion by Senator Hoar, of Massachusetts. A reception by the President to the governors of States at the Corcoran art gallery in the evening closed the fes- tivities, YEAR'S TRADE OF CUBA. Merchandise Valued at $71,681,187 Im- ported During Twelve Months. The division of insular affairs, war de- partment, makes public a statement of the trade of Cuba for the fiscal year ended June 30 last. Merchandise to the value of $71,681,187 was imported dur- ing the year, composed in the greater part of food products and manufactur- ed articles. Of the total importation, $34.347.008 worth came from the United States. The importations from Puerto Rico amount to $1,611,337 and over $3,- 000,000 worth came from Central and South America. The total importation, including gold and silver, was $76,860,- 813. It 1s set forth that since the date of American. occupation, Judy 17, 1808, up to the end of the last fiscal year, im- ports to the value of $113,846,603 have entered the ports of Cuba. The value of exports of merchandise from Cuba, during the last fiscal year, most of which were products of agrical- ture, is set down at $4.522,346. The total exportations of gold and silver amounted to $4.253.206. The exports by countries show: To the United States, $36,012,629: to Puerto Rico. $81.580: to the Hawaiian islands. $6,426. The total exports from the island since it passed into the possession of the United States amounted to to $81.304.5 5 REBELS HoLD THER OWN. Were Not Dispersed in the Recent Battle in Colombia. Advices received from Colon, Colom- bia, regarding the recent fighting be- tween the government troops and the insurgents at Tumaco, the rebel strong- hold, which lasted three days, the insur- gents then evacuating the town, say that the withdrawing insurgent forces were not dispersed. On the contrary, fears are entertained at Colon that this body of rebels will effect a junction with the force operating around Buena- ventura. Telegraphic communication with the interior has been suspended by gov- ernment order, and fighting is proceed ing at various points. Both sides lost heavily in the battle at Tumaco. When the government forces destroyed the rebel steamer Gaitan they also destroy- ed a large supply of ammunition. Noifolk Navy Yard Destroyed. The building occupied by the cou- struction department at the Norfolk Navy Yard was completely destroyed by fire Sunday evening. The building contained all the important papers, models and plans of the construction department. Over 7,000 drawings an:l $100,000 worth of live oak timber were destroyed. The loss to the building anid contents is over $200,000. The origin of the fire is unknown. Locusts Devastating Peru. Locusts are devastating the depart- ment of Ayacucho, Peru, which includ several fertile valleys in the Cordilleras, southeast of the capital. The department | § has a large population, and the losses due to the pest have been enormous. It is probable - that public subscriptions will be asked to aid the sufferers. Hot Fighting in Panama. Advices from the State of Panama say that after a three days’ e engagement Tu- maco, the former stronghold of the in- surgent movement, has been re-occupiz=d by the government troops. Governor Alban has returned to the city of Panama and will hand back un- injured to her owners the British steara- er Taboga, which was seized last month by the Colombian government to trans- port an armed expedition from Panama to the port of Buena Ventura, and was there used in the bombardment of Poinis Bazan and Soldado. Another Ohio Bank Looted. Five masked and desperate outlaws in the early hours of Thursday morning wrecked and looted the iron vault in the John Doerschuck private bank at Shanes- ville, Ohio, drove back citizens with leaden hail, fired bullets into every rais- ed window within range and escaped on a hand car into the night with currency to the amount of almost $4.000. It is the climax of all crimes in Tuscarawas county's annals. Currency Reform. The New York board of trade and transportation has adopted resolutions asking Congress to ma the volume of currency more responsive to the re- quirements of trade and to insure the perpetuity of the gold standard. The board also took strong ground in favor of the Ray bill snapping the National bankruptcy act of 18g AT THE NATIONAL CAPITOL Preparations for the i Inauguration are in progress. Chairman Hull favors a National law regulating marriage and divorce. The President Tuesday nominated George V. 1. Meyer, of Boston, to be ambassador to Italy General Isaac Khan, the new Persian minister, was Tuesday presented to the President by Secretary Hay. Uncle Sam is likely to acquire a coal- ing station, including a strip of terri- tory clear across the isthmus of Panama. The body of Colonel Emerson H. Lis- cum was buried in Arlington cemetery Tuesday with military honors and in the presence oi the President. The Senate has confirmed the nomina- tion of William D. Bynum, formerly of Indiana. to be a commissioner to revis and codify the United States criminal laws. The President has sent to the Senate the nomination of John W. Yerkes, re- cent Republican candidate for gavernor of Kentucky, to be commissionen of in- ternal revenue. A GIRL STUDENTS BURNED T0 DEATH SEVEN LIVES LOST. Fire Destroys the State Normal School at Fredonia, New York—Fire Es- capes Were Closed. From the smoldering ruins of the Fredonia, N. Y., State Normal and Training School, which was destroyed by fire at 6 o'clock Friday morning, one charred body has been recovered, and a revision of the list of missing makes it certain that seven persons perished in the fire, which also entailed a prop- erty loss of $200,000. There were 75 young woman students in the building, of whom six perished. The other victim was the aged janitor. A search for remains is being made as rapidly as possible, but digging over the acre of debris, which is still bura- ing, is slow work. Principal Palmer es- timates the loss at $200,000, with $93,000 insurance. Nothing was saved from the magnifi- cent building, not even the pérsonal ei- fects of the girls in the dormitory. Grief-stricken parents are arriving to assist in the search for their dead. It is stated that heavy wire screens were firmly nailed acress the windows leading to the fire escapes, and the only way the lucky ones escaped was ny crawling through windows adjacent to the escapes and then creeping along the gutter of the mansard roof. Law- yers say there will be damage suits in- stituted against the State because of the fire escape screens. A VICTORY FOR GERMANY. The Note to China on Lines Laid Down by Von Buelow. The negotiations of the powers in re- gard to the joint China note have been concluded satisfactorily, all agreeing to the conditions identically as outlined by Count von Buelow, the imperial chanceiior of Germany, with the excep- tion of the introductory clause saying the demands are irrevocable, which is eliminated. A committee of representatives of the powers has been chosen to regulate the conferences with the Chinese plenipo- tentiaries. Count von Buelow, on the occasion of his first appearance in the reichstag as imperial chancellor, aiter making a statement defining Germany's policy (o- ward China and outlining the Anglo- German agreement, proceeded to give the complete text of the demands which the representatives of the powers in Peking had at that time agreed to rec- ommend to their representatives to em- body in a collective note for presenta- tion to the Chinese government. AGAINST LANDLORDS. Nalinpatict 6 Adopts Resolutions in Dublin—Proposed by William O'Brien. _ Ih the Nationalist convention at D lin, after resolutions had been adopted amending the constitution of the United rish L eague and making the National- ist convention an annual fixture, Will- iam O’Brien moved a strongly worded resolution in favor of the abolition of landlordism in Ireland and the transfer of the soil to the occupying proprietary. Ireland's struggle, he declared, should continue without ceasing until the land- lords were forced to abandon their pres- ent intolerable system of dual contre One branch of the Irish League, con- tinued Mr. O'Brien, will devote its time to bringing to the doors of landlords, land grabbers and their castle allies the inconvenience of landlordism. The res- olution was adopted amid the utmost enthusiasm, TRAMPS TURN BURGLARS. Locked up Town Marshal and Then Dyna- mited Several Safes. Five men, posing as tramps, were per- mitted to lodge in the lockup at Brigh- ton, Ill., Saturday evening. During the night they overpowered the town mar- shal, locked in a cell, and broke into the private bank of Blodett Brothers. Several charges of dynamite were cx- ploded but the vault, which contained a large sum, was only partially wrecked, and the men gave up trying to secure it. The general store of Edward But- ler was next visited. Here the safe was blown open and several hundred dollars secured. The men were entering an- other store when an alarm of fire was sounded from Butler's. Meantime the robbers escaped. A posse with blood- hounds is in pursuit. One Hundred Cadets Drowned. The German training frigate Gneise- nau has foundered off Malaga, 65 miles northeast of Gibraltar. The captain and many of the cadets have been drowned. It is believed that 40 who left in one of the ship's boats iu have not been seen since are also “Fhe total loss is now thought to he no less than 100. Some dispatches say 140. Forty of those saved are badly hurt. 2 MICHIGAN'S TAX RAISING. Gov. Pingree Assembles State Legislature to Increase Corporate Property Taxes. The Michigan Legislature met in spe- cial session Wednesday to consider tax- ation of the railroads, telephone and telegraph companies, express companies and other forms of corporate property on the cash value of their property, in- stead of upon their earnings, as under the present law. Gov. Pingree’s mes- sage estimated that the proposed law would increase the State's revenue irom the railroads alone from $1,240,845 to $2,250,000. Representative Cheever will introduce the tax bill. It provides that the State tax commission shall constitute a board of assessors, and that all franchises and intangible property shall be taxed, as well as physical property. Preparing a Peace Protocol. “Reports from Chinese sources,” says a Shanghai correspondent, “point to the probability that serious negotiations for peace will begin forthwith. It is be- lieved that a short preliminary protocol is in progress of arrangement, leaving many commercial questions to scpar ate conventions to be drawn up later.” Outlawry in Kwang-Si and Kwang- Tunk is increasing. The officials appear to be losing their hold of the situation and are powerless to restore order. Pi- rating on the west river is increasing. Boers to Settle on German Territory. According to Berlin dispatches 30 Cape Colony Boers, now in Amstehdam with their families, have been granted permission to settle in German Sourn- west Africa, the German Government having just assented to the purchase of lands by them in Damaraland and Great Namagquinland. The Boers will leave Amsterdam January sth, Big Westinghouse Scheme. It is learned on good authority that George Westinghouse, of Pittsburg, has bought the entire Buena Vista grant, in Arizona. comprising 7,000 acres of land, and intends to erect, at some point on the Santa Cruz river, colossal reduc- tion works and smelter, and build a rail- way connecting the mines, and redu:- tion works and Nogales, England Wants Indemnity. Owing to the success of the United States in pressing claims for compensa- tion in connection with the Armenian disorders Great Britain is now urgi the Ottoman Government to pay similar claims put forward by British: subjects. It is expected that energetic means will be taken to obtain a settlement. ESTIMATED COST House of Commons Votes $80,000,000—The Conflict to be Prolonged Three Months. Loans Are to be Asked For. . In the house of commons William St. John Broderick, of war, Tuesday, secretary introduced the supplementary estimate of £16,000,000 for the army. He anticipated that the expenditure to arch 31 would be little short of the outlay the government had been incur- ring during the whole financial year. The government's policy was to pursue the war with the strongest possible force and a continuous stream of supplies, so that peace may the more quickly be achieved. . Sir William Vernon Harcourt, Lib- cral, said that the house had not heard a more depressing confession. He thought that now they should deal with the brave burghers remaining, not by perpetually increasing the expenditure, but by a policy of reconciliation. Timothy Healy remarked: “A war begun in braggadocio and hypocrisy has brought humiliation to England and the culprit is in the colonial office.” The supplementary estimates of £ 16,000,000 Sete adopted by a vote of 284 against Sir Michael Hicks-Beach, chancellor of the exchequer, explained that his ex- isting borrowing powers only amounted to £5000000. He moved a resolution authorizing him to borrow by war loan, exchequer bonds or treasury bills £11,- 000,000. The resolution was agreed to. a TOOK $50, 000. Confidence Game Played by Two Smooth In- dividua's—Took Money From Safe in the Presence of Their Victim. Two men called on Father Grosso, superior of a Jesuit institute at Turin, Italy, and told him they were trustees of a rich orphan boy whose father had been killed in the Boer war. They said they wished to place the boy in the priest's care, and that they were cus- todians of $200,000 belonging to the boy, which they desired to leave in Fa- ther Grosso's hands. The priest consented to assume charge of the boy and the funds. THe men produced several bundles of what pur- ported to be bank notes, which they suggested should be placed in the safe. Father Grosso opened the safe and the men placed therein the bundles. They then departed, stating they would re- turn with the boy shortly. Father Grosso waited several days, and when neither the men nor the boy appeared he went to the safe. He found that bank notes aggregating $50,000 were gone and that the bundles left by the men were waste paper. The men are supposed to be on their way to this country, and the New York police are on the watch for them PLEADING. FoR THE BOERS. Liberal Members ot the Mousse of Commons Appeal for Clemency. In the house of commons Sir Robert T. Reid and James Bryce, Liberals, sug- gested general amnesty for the Boers now in arms. Reid said that after 14 months of war, costing £35,000.000 a month, anarchy was prevalent and fam- ine threatened, and may be followed by a native rising. An attempt to place the colonies under military rule, he said, would imperil the very existence of the empire. All ideas of uncenditional sur- render should be discarded. Mr. Bryce ed Sir Alired Milner, governor of Cape Colony, who, he said, was generally distrusted. Mr. Broderich, secretary for war, < fended Milner, and said the government was willing to offer terms for surrender, so long as it could not be interpreted as proof of weakness and thereby causes a prolongation of the guerilla warfare. le. COST OF THE GOVERNMENT. Estimated Cost for the Next Fiscal Year Reaches $743,374.804. The statement of the relative amounts of treasury estimates for the next fiscal year, compared with the estimates for the last fiscal year, and for the next year, compared with the actual ap- propriations of last year, shows esti- mates for appropriations for 1902 amounting to $743.374.804, compared wb actual appropriations for 1901, less ellaneous and deficiency appropria- Ha of $690,600,230. The estimate by bills for the netx year is: Agriculture, $4.660,050; army, $113.010,044; diplo- matic and consular, $1.807,638; District of Columbia, $9,080.703: fortifications, $12,461,103; Indian, $9,250,571; legisla- tive, etc., $25,399,500; military academy, $1,045,750; navy, $87.172,430; pensions, $145, 230; postoffice, $121,267,349: river and harbor, $25,130,000; sundry civ- il. $63,378,113. Patna annual ap- propriation, $124,338,220. GOING AFTER THE POLE. Three Well-Equipped Expeditions Preparing for the Trip Next Year. Telegrams from London say: Evelyn B. Baldwin, of the United States weath- er bureau, who is preparing an expedi- tion in search of the north pole, has ar- rived here to consult with scientists and inspect ships. He will go to the continent at the end of the week. Mr. Baldwin has definitely decided to adopt the Franz Josef land route and hopes to get away next summer The famous Russian ice crusher Er- mack, which is to attempt to reach the north pole in 1901 under the command of Vice Admiral Makaroff, of the im- perial Russian navy, is now being rit- ted out at New Castle for the expedition and Capt. Bernier, the Canadian ex- plorer, is busy in London fitting out the Scottish King. What with these expe- ditions and the German expedition the year JQOI promises to be eventful in the history of searches for the north pole. To Control Angry Utes. A troop of cavalry has leit Fort Du- chesne, Col, in response to an arbitrary call from the Indian agent at the White Rocks agency of the Ute tribe. The Indians are in an ugly mood and are resisting the order for children to main at school during the holidays. parents objected and insisted on having them at home. There are 1.200 In- dians camped at and around White Rocks. Hot-headed bucks threaten to burn the school and agency buildi ings. CABLE FLASHES. The leg etsture of Victor passed a Sl suffrage bill. The Irish party in the British house of commons re-elected John Redmond chairman. Ernest Brenner, vice president of the Federal council. has been elected presi- dent of Switzerland. Australia, The czar is recovering fast and is ox- pected to return from Livadia to St. Petersburg early in January. The Irish party convention at Dublin expresses sympathy for Boers and ex- cludes Timothy Healy from the organ- ization. The Italian chamber of deputies, by an overwhelming vote, rejected a reso- lution to recall the Italian troops now in China. The attempt to introduce Chinese laundrymen into London has resulted in failure, with the result that 40 C hi na- men are wandering destitute and home- less. 0. THES SURRY SERHON AN E'.OQUENT DISCOURSE. Snbject : Our Nation’s Needs—We Should Show More Gratitude to God For His Blessings — Our Lack cf Appreciation of the Lord's Bounty. Copyright 1900.1 WASHINGTO >. C.— Dr. Talmage irse of Christian patriot ism, and shows the resources of our coun- try, and predicts the time when all the world will have the same blessings. two texts are, Revelations the south three gates; salm cxly “He hath not dealt so ‘with any nation.” Among the greatest ne eds of our coun- try is more gratitude to God for the un- parelleled prosperity bestowed upon us. One of my texts calls us to international comparison. What nation on all the plan- et has of late had such enlargement o commercial opportunity as is now opening before this nation? Cuba and Porto Rico and the Philippine Islands brought into close contact with us, and through steam- ship subsidy and Nicaragua canal, which will surely be afforded by Congress. all the republics of South America will be brought into most active trade with the United States. “On the south three gates. While our next-door neighbors. the south- ern republics and neighboring colonies, imported from Zuropean countries 3000 miles BNEY, 5.000,000 worth of goods in a year, 96,000.000 worth went from the United ten £126.,000,000 out of $675.- 000,000, only one-fifth of the trade ours, European nations taking the four fingers and leaving us the poor thumb. Now all this is to be change »d. There is nothing but a comparative ferry between the isl- ands which have recently come under our protection, and only a ferry between us and Bolivia. Peru, Paraguay Truguay. Venezuela, Salvador, Nicaragua, Colom- bia, Costa Rica, Ecuador and Brazil, while there are raging seas and Jong voyages be- tween them and Kurope. By “the mandate of the United States all that will be changed through new facilities of transpor- tation. The Hispano-American congress, just closed at Madrid. will fail in its at- tempt to divert all the trade of South America from us to Europe. In anticipation of what is sure to come I nail on the fr ont door of this nation an advertisement Wanted—One hundred thousand men to build railroads through South America and Hie islands of the sea under our pro- teotio! w ld thousand telegraph opera- w ors. Rr anted—One hundred million dollars worth of dry goods from the great cities of the United States. Wanted—All the clocks you ean make at New Haven, and all the brains you can spare from Boston, and all the bells you can mold at Troy, and all the McCormick reapers you fashion at Chicago, and all the hams you can turn out at Cincinnati, and all the railroad iron yon can send from Pittsburg, and all the statesmen that you can spare from Washington. Wanted cht away, wanted by new and swifter steamers, wanted by rail train, lawvers to plead our causes. Wanted—Doctors to cure our sick. anted—Ministers to evangelize our population. Wanted — Professors to establish our universities. “On the three south gates!” Yea, a thousand gates! South America and all the islands of the sea approximate are rightfully our commercial domain. and the Congress of the United States will see to it that we get what belongs to us. And then tides of travel will be some- what diverted from Europe to our islands at the south and to the land of the Az- tees. TNluch of the $125,000.000 yearly ex- pended by Americans in Europe will be expended in southern exploration, in look- ing at some of the ruins of the forty-seven cities which Stephens found only a little way apart, and in walking through the great doorways and over the miracles o mosaic and along by the monumental glo- ries of another civilization, and ancient a will with cold lips of stone kiss arm lips of modern America, and to have seen the Andes and Popocatepetl will be deemed as important as to have geen the Alpine and Balkan ranges. And there will be fewer people spoiled by for- eign travel and in our midst less of the poor and nauseating imitation of theFrench shrug and the intentional hesitancy of a brainless foreign swe The fact is that many are made vain by European travel, and, though sensible when they embarked, they return with a collar and a cravat and a shoe and a coat and a pronunciation and a contempt for American institutions and the bend of the elbow that make one be- lieve in evolution backward from man to ape. Of the many thousands who now cross the sea annually thousands willon pleasure and business visit southern lands. and so tourists and merchants and scientists and capitalists will on help in this national de- velopment. “On the south three gates.” And what other nation has such openings for commercial enlargement as ours? gain. in this international comparison notice the happy condition of our country as compared with most countries. Rus- sin under the shadow of the dreadful ill- ness of her great and good empersr, who now mote than any man in all the world represents ‘‘peace on earth, good will to men,” and whose empress, near the most solemn hour that ever comes to a wom- an’s soul, is anxious for him to whom she has given hand and heart. not for political reasons, but through old-fashioned love such as bless our humbler dwellings; India. under the agonies of a famine which though somewhat liited has filled hun- dreds of thousands ol graves and thrown millions into orphanage: Austria only waiting for her genial Francis .Joseph to ie so as to let Hungary rise in rebellion and make the palace of Vienna quake with insurrection; Spain in Carlist revolution and pauperized as seldom any nation has been paupetized taly under the horrors of fer king ssination; China shud- dering with a ih of dismemberment. her capital in pos ssession of foreign nations. After a review of the conditions in other lands can you {ind a more appropriate ut- terance in regard to our country than the exclamation of the text. “He hath not dealt so with any nation?” Compare the autummal 1 vests in America this © and the har- vests abroad. Last summer I crossed the continent of Europe twice. and 1 saw no | such harvests as are spoken of in this statement. Hear it, all you men and women who want everybody to have enough to eat and wear. I have to tell you that the corn crop of our country this year is one of the four largest crops on récord. 2,105.000,000 bushels. The cotton crop, though smaller than at some times, will on that account bring N1gger pric and so cotton planters ol the South are presperous. "The wheat fields have provided Liead enough and to spare. The potato crop one of the five largest crops on” record, 211,000,000 bush- els. Twenty-two million two hundred thousand swine slain, and vet so many hogs left? : Jut now 1 give you the comparative =x ports and imports, which tell the story of national prosperity as notning else can Excess of exports over imports, $344.400,- 8. Now, let all pessimists hide them- Ives in the dens and caves of the earth. sh all grateful souls fill the churches with doxology. Notice also J a: hile other countries are. at to the £ lend. “Germany, we are glad to see you in Wall street. i vou must borrow money we have it all ready. How much will you have? o welcome you into our money market Give us good collat- eral. Meanwhile, Denmark, will you please »f $3,000,000 for the island My hearers, there is no nation on SH with such healthy condi- tion of finances. We wickedly waste an awful amount of money in this country, but some one has said it is easier to man- age a surplus than a deficit. Besides all this. not a disturbance from St. Lawrence River to Key West or from Highlands of New Jersey to Cfolden Horn of the Pacific. Sectional Cat ended. The North and South broug into complete accord bv the Spanish war, which put the Lees and the Grants on the same side, Vermonters and Georgians in the same brigade. And since our Civil War we are all mixed up. Southern men have married Northern wives, and North- ern men have married Southern es. and your children are half Mississippian and half New Englander, and to make an- other division between the North and the South possible you would have to do with your child as Solomon proposed with the child brought before him for judgment — divide it with the sword. giving half to the North and half to the South. No: there is nothing so hard to split as a cra- dle. In other lands there is compu marri of royal families, some I princ compelled to marry some disa greeable foreign dignitary in order to keep ori of har tHe balance of political power in Europe. the ill-matched pair fighting out on a smeil scald that which would have een an international contest, sometimes t! i husband having the balance of power an s imes the wi oe is anything that stirs my ad- miration it is 2 man without any educa- tion himself sending his sons to college, and without any opportunity for fiaury himself resolved that though he shall have it hard all the days of his life his children shall have a good start. And I tell you that though some of our people may have great commercial strug- gles there is going to be a great opening for tneir sons and daughters as they come on to take their places in the world. Continuing this international comparison I have to sav to you that we have a bet- ter ciimate than is to be found in any other nation. ’e do not suffer from any thing like the Scotch mists or the English fogs or the Russian ice blasts or the ty- phus of Southern Europe or the Asiatic cholera. Epidemics in America are ex- ceptional, very exceptional. * Plenty of wood and coal to make a roaring fire mid- Easy access to seabeach or mount- winter. ain top when tle ardors of summer come down, Michigan wheat for the bread, Long Island corn for the meal, Carolina Tice for the quec . of puddings Phi sugar to sweeten our beverages, Georgia cotton to keep us warm, in our hand all products and on climates. Are your nerves we eak? Go north. Is your throat delicate” Yo south. Do you feel crowded and want more room? Go west. 1 declare it. this is the best country in all the world to live mm. low do 1 know it? TI have 639,000 new reasons for saying it; 650,000 people in one year came from the other side oi the Atlantic to live in America, and they came because it is the very best country to live in. While making this international com- parison let us 5 forward to the time which will surely come when all nations will have as great advantages as our own. As surely as the Bible is true the whole earth is to be gardenized and set free. Even the climates will change and the Reats be cooled and the frigidity warmed. Many years ago in this city I ‘gazed upon a seene which for calamity and grandeur gne seldom sees equalled. I mean the burning of the Smithsonian Institution. It was the pride of our country. In it art had gathered rarest specimens from all lands and countries. : It was one of those buildings which seize you with enchantment as you enter and all the rest of y.ur life holds you with a charm. I happened to see the first glow of the fires which on that cold day looked out from the windows of the costly pile. I saw the angry elements roar and rave. The shout of affrighted workman and the assault of fire engines only seemed to madden the rage of the monsters that rose up to devour all that came within reach of their chain. Up along the walis and through the doors were pushed hands that snatched down all they could reach and hurled it into the abyss of flame beneath. The win- dows of the tower would light up for a minute with a wild giare and then darken, as though fiends with streaming locks of fire had come out to gaze on in laughing mockery of all human attempts and then sunk again into their native darkness. The roofs began here and there to blos- som in wreaths and vines of flame. Up and down the pillars ran serpents of fire. Out from the windows great arms and fingers of flames were extended, as though destroyed spirits were begging for deliver- ance. The tower put on a coronet of flame and staggered and fell, the sparks flying, the firemen escaping, the terror accumulat- ing. Books, maps, rare correspouier auto- graphs of kings, costly diagrams burled to zinder or scattered tor many a rood upon the wild wind to be picked up by the ex- cited multitude. Oh, it seemed like some great funcral pile in which the wealth and zlory of our land had leaped to burn with its consuming treasures.” The heavens were blackened with whirlwinds of smoke, through which shot the long red shafts of calamity.’ Destruction waved its fiery banner from the remaining towers, and in the thunder of falling beams and in the roaring surge of billowing fire I heard the spirits of ruin and desolation and woe clapping their hands and shouting, “Aba! aha!” I turned and looked upon the white dome of yonder capitol, which rose through the frosty air as imposing as though all the white marble of the earth had come to resurrection and stood be- fore us, reminding one of the great white throne of heaven. There it stood, un- moved by the terrors which thy day had been kindled before it. No tremor in its majest umiis, no tiush of excitement = its veins of marble. Column and capital and dome built to endure until the world itself shatters in the convulsions of the last earthquake. Oh, what a contrast be- tween the smoking ruin on the one hand and that gorgeous white dream of tecture on the other! Well. the on when the grandest achievement of man will be consumed and the world will blaze. Down will go galleries of art and thrones of royalty “and the hurricane of God's power will scatter even the ashes of con- sumed greatness and glory. Not one tower left, not one city unconsumed, not one scene of grandeur to relieve the desola- tion. Forests dismasted, seas licked up, sunk, hemishhieres annihilated. and thundering crash of that last conflagration! But irom that ruin of a blazing earth we shall look up to see the temple of liberty and justice rising through the ages, white and pure and grand, unscarred and unshaken. Founded on the eternal rock and swelling into domes of infinitude and glory in which the balleluliahs of heaven have their reverber- ation. No flame of human hate shall blacken its walls. No thunder of infernal wrath shall rock its foundatidns. By the upheld torches of burning worlds we shall read it on column and architrave and throne of eternal dominion. “Heaven and earth shall wth and lib- erty and j way.” SPORTING BREVITIES. The roads are aw and level in Kan- sas, and as a result every farmhouse has its bicycle. : By the decisive score of 23 to 0, Wat- ertown won the northern New York football championship from Ogdens- burg. James J. Jeffries and Gus Ruhlin have signed articles for a fight at Cincinnati, Ohio, and 14. Extensive improveme nts will be made during the winter to the goif course at the Essex County Country Club, at Orange, N. | : : The board of aldermen of Denver, Col., has passed a bill licensing prize fighting to the extent of $250 for e: ach performance. It is believed in r Paris, that Tod Sloan. who has been debarred from riding in England, will have no difficulty in getting a license to ride in France, The Connecticut division of the 1.. W. will introduce in the coming Leg lature bills amending the lantern law. and providing for side paths, and for free carriage of bicycles on railroads. T shooting has advanced so far within the lines of public favor during the past few years that it to-day knows no special season nor is it re- stricted to any particular class of Si he New Jersey Hockey League has fe en formed. composed of teams from the Casino Club. of Short Hills, South Orange Field Club, Montclair A. C.. and a team from Orange to be known as the Crystal Lake, and a schedule has been arranged. Right End John Dartmouth football elected captain is a member of the junior ¢ a native of Haverhill, Ma twenty-one vears old, five inches tall and wes There are mitories and ¢ n United States devoted to edu they are valved at 4.08.2 between February 1 ng circles in A O'Connor, of the team, has been of the 1901 team. He 5 : ass and He is feet eleven 160 pounds. are 415.660 teaclt 1.793 ‘men ee 283 R¢ women. In 1899 the people of the 1 ent $197.281,603 to ed which is $2.67 per capita tion and $3.20 per pita of dre the cchnnl age The area of the U 501.000 square miles 4.218.401, of which an area of 1,336,841 ited States is 3,- at of China is “China proper” has quare miles. - * . - - - eT - x. - pl aid a half ce stating nu dress box This is Nagle rea she consu “I want Please do May I kh Mrs. Na mas was “Eight laughing applicant Se PP. =, N\ on // ~ ty oN { “Yor ‘em till t em in t “Yes, “My fat you leaj ciple, so T’ll have days sm Conseq minute | picked c was ‘ju so funny the four er from “This is and I m Variou her wri sorting; stantly damaged so melow culled qn bushel v ing som out and within t faint. Then | interfere for her But bi the quiv whispere a family all in to So inv the eve ters anc brother kitchen remainii of the guessed Nora gt: around. was vel You’ ye?’ sal them to-night wonder Nora ¢ dollar ¢ next ds proved posed ¢ ately ar out pay Did she fel “Wou to say took th the wa, or? 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