mn, IMPERIAL EDICT. 0 Stand for Best Terms—Will Ask That “Forts be Merely Disarmed Instead ; of Destroyed. t The een unexpectedly ordered to sign the Chinese plenipotentiaries have fo joint note and have notified the foreign envoys to that effect. The Chinese themselves were greatly aston ished at receiving the imperial instruz- tions. Neither Li Hung Chang nor Prince Ching had expected success in persuading the court under ten days. The emperor's instructions are to agree fully to the note, but to endeavor to get the best terms possible, parti larly in the matter of limiting the num: ber of the legation guards and also as to the places where these are to be lo- cated. The plenipotentiaries are in- structed to endeavor to limit the num ber of army posts along the line of rail- way to as few as possible and finally to request the powers not to destroy the forts, but merely to disarm them. The foreign communities in Pel are greatly satisfied at the decided to of the collective note and the asse that the powers are determined to enter- tain no proposals for the modification of their demands. It is understood Li Hung Chang sent a memorial to tae throne, couched in very strong terms, urging complete compliance. The Germans killed 40 Chinese troops Man Cheng, northwest of P20 Ting Fu. They had no casualties. Among the natives a fecling of great mistrust is being caused, apparently by the high-handed action of the Germans, as the Chinese suspect them of an in- tention to force a serious engagement with the Chinese troops. DIVIDING CHINA. Territory Parcelled Cut Among the Pcwers for its Temporary Government. Telegrams from Pekin, dated Thurs- day, say: The proclamation announcing the division the country around Peking, Pao-Ting-Fu and Tien-tsin to districts, placed severally under the control of the different military cemmanders, has been posted in the German section only. It recognizes the Chinese military and civil governors, but makes no reference to Count von Waldersee. Germany's action is strange. She, for- merly so severe, now recognizes Chines authority. The largest districts have been allotted to the British, German and French troops. Li Hung Chang and Prince Ching, the Chinese peace commissioners, have heard from the emperor, Kwang-Hsu The court objects strenuously to reduc- ing the forts and also to allowing perm nent legation guards. It was decided to hold further communication with the court before seeing the ministers. Many Chinese war junks, laden with stone, have been anchored off Wu-Sung, presumably to block the channel in case of an emergency. TROUELES INCREASING. Russia Now Prohibits Importation of Cer- tain German Meats. Consul Talbot J. Albert, at Bruns- wick, Germany, has informed the state department that a new and important phase of the meat question has arisen between Russia and Germany. Russia has prohibited the importation of Ger- man meat, which has seriously affected one of the principal industries of Bruns- wick, the manufacture of various kinds of sausage, and has been the cause of a ve.opetition by the chamber of commerce to the department of interior at Berlin, calling attention to the commercial treaty with Russia and urging that the imports from Germany should not be barred from the Russian market by any kind of prohibition. ‘he Germans claim that certain products can only be excluded under special circumstances when hygienic or veterinary police reg ulations come into question. PLANS TO ISOLATE LEPERS. Thirly Thousand People Suffering From the Disease in fhe Philippines. An appended report to Gen. MacAr- thur’s review of civil affairs of the Phil- ippines for the past fiscal year gives startling facts regarding leprosy in the islands. According to the estimates of the Franeiscari fathers, says Maj. Guy SER the writer of the report, there are 30,000 lepers in the archipelago, the major portion being in the Viscayas. house to house ‘inspection begun last January found more than 100 lepe concealed in dwellings. These were sent to San Lazaro hospital, in Manila, but many others escaped into the sur- rounding country. A commission is now engaged in selecting a suitable island or islands for the purpose of iso- lating all the lepers. GOEBEL An Important = £ LATEST NEWS NOTES. A pitched battle at Ardmore, I. T,, resulted in twe deaths. France is about to place an order for 200,000 tons of American coal. Chief Justice William T. Faircloth, of Goldshorough, N. C., is dead. John W. Tinsley killed his wife and himself on the eet in Los Angeles, Cal. A bill will be introduced in Congress providing for a naval reserve of 20,000 men. Recent Russian settlers near Ana- moose. N. D., are suffering from a lac of food. Winona, Minn.. has 500 cases of small- pox, and a strict quarantine has been established. Colombia rebels have refused to ac- cept any terms but the surrender of the government. Thirty lumbermen on the Kennebec river, in Maine, rioted over religion and one will die. A dispute in a card game over $2 re- sults in the killing of three men at Ab- beville, S. A destructive fire wiped out half »f the business section of Eau Claire, Mich. Tuesday. The O'Leary club house, at the Chi- cago stock yards, was burned, causing a loss of $60,000. English steel manufacturers and ship builders are talking of establishing plants in America. Three attendants at the Bellevue hos- pital, New York, are charged with the death of a patient. Harry L. Wilbur, a popular Philadel- phia (Pa.) clubman, was unhorsed at a fox hunt and killed. George Fuller, a negro, was lynched near Marion, Ala. e was charged with burning a barn. A general storm swept the English channel, wrecking many vessels and drowning many seamen. A receiver has been appointed for old Town bank of Baltimore, Md. which admits insolvency. Eighteen carloads of mules have been shipped from Virginia to San Francisco en route to the Philippines. Frank Richardson, a wealthy business man of St. Joseph, Mo., was murdered at his home Tuesday night. The statistician reports 10,100,000 bales as the probable cotton production of the United States for 1900-1901. John Kelley and William Hull were drowned by breaking through tlre ice on a skating pond at Norwalk, Conn. President of Barber county (Kan) W. C. T. U. has been locked up for smash- r paintings and mirrors in a saloon. male prisoners in a Brooklyn (N. jail attacked the matron and jjured her before aid was had. “ufaula, I. T., a drunken Indian celebrated Christmas by killing three persons and fatally wounding a fourth. se At Slippery rails caused two street cars to colidle in Pittsburg, Pa., on Christ- as, in which eleven people were injur- The Barre (Vt) chief of police was shot and probably fatally wounded after quelling a row at an Italian anarchist ball. The mouthpiece of the German gov- ernment declares that the Davis amend- ment to the treaty was a slap at Eng- land. Dr. George W. Howland was killed, and C. H. Quigley fatally injured at Flint, Mich., by their horse running away. Prisoners at the county jail at White ins, N 7 attempted escape by but their plans went ting a fire, wrong. About 1,700 employes of the Conti- nental Tobacco Company, at Louisville, Ky., are out on strike for an increase in wages. On January 2, 1901, it is calculated, over $175,000,000 will be distributed in the United States as interest and divi- dends. The Cramps have received the Turk- ish order for a cruiser at a price suffi- cient to pay American missionary claims. > for aid. has ended. two cents. increased. oi his acts. Maxham estate. and Altoona, Pa. Dr. J. C. White. of Morgantown, W Geological society of America, in ses sion at Albany, N. Y o SL Tne 86y » STEMERS It will aneite audi- Ky., in search- Leach Mfr for old records, found a Me. box containing® eight metal patched smokeless powder cartridges 38-55 caliber, corresponding exactly to the bullet found in the hackberry tree and which was believed to have passed through Senator Goebel's body. The significance of the discovery in the fact that Henry Youtsey, convict- ed of participation in the Goebel sination in October, was a clerl auditor's office at the time of the assas- sination, and had access to the v where the cartridges were found, an: that George Barnes, another clerk in the office, testified that he saw Youtszy with a box of cartridges. assas Trouncing the Rebels. United Statés Charge Beaupre, of Bogota, has cabled the state department that he has been informed by the 0- Jombian government that the invading | troops were overtaken by the govern- ment forces at Rosario and that their leader, Gen. Uribide, was defeated at Corazel, in the province of Bolivar. He was retreating with a few remaining followers through the department of Madgdalena toward the Venezuelan line. The war is said to be progress- ing favorably for the Colombian govern- ment. Await the Coming of Christ. Thirty-six persons from various parts of the United States who by recent signs and events have been led to be- lieve that the second coming of Christ is at hand are assembled in convention at Chicago watching, worshiping a praying that they may be in readiness receive the robes of immortality. They are to remain in session until January 3, by which time a number claim they expect to behold the object of their vigil. New Elixir of Life Discovered. Selixir of life, the secret of pro- SS ; : ‘man existence, which has “antiby the chemists in ns, by adventurers t 4 1g y°nd by scientists in a decisive vier dB CE RY simmemortzl, It is reported that 60w zientists at many hundreds wounded. Oo ast been tories by the government foree. ~cy-day utmost importance have been ar po ~ nS » > 5 A | political belief and intimated cin the | At Binghamton, N. Y., two boys set a bear trap for Santa smal | sonating the ancient saint. Mrs. Cornelius L. Alvord, | of the defaulter, has given { worth of jewels to the First { bank in partial restitution. W. J. Bryan at a banquet | . | that he adhered still to his Nationa declare: origina I might be a candidate again. | Rev. J. L. Leonard, pastor of | Providence Methodist Episcopal church St. Joseph, Mo., was fatally burner a fire that destroyed the edifice. McDonald, who shot H. Morris, of Ohio, | Samuel killed F. an« | morning of his self-inflicted wounds. { W. D. Coleman, president of the Li | berian republic, resigned his office, ane 1G. W. Gibson, secretary of state, | elected to succeed him by the legislatur | More than 6,000 persons, four-fifth of whom went to the United States, emi the last 12 months, as against 3,300 11 1800. The prov ement directors of the California Im Company have authorizes the project of building a railroad from Los Angeles to Salt Lake City. A most serious fire broke out Thurs at the East India docks, London ve immense sheds filled with goods including a thousand bales of hemp anc quantities of jute, were consumed. of Philadelphia, Pa., and a leading writ er of ecclesiastical literature, Wednesday of bronchial pneumonia. The Norwegian financial shows great improvement. vear’s end the Swedish banks have suf ficient funds for all purposes. The in terest is high, but business is good. situatios has given 1 an institution for learning for poo boys and girls in New York. will be ready for occupancy by March 1 kidnapéers of his boy to whom he recent ly gave $25,000 ransom, threatened t« akidnap another of his children _unles withdrew his offer of reward fortheir Qetection. A, The Chinese empress dowager has ap- pointed a new boy emperor, but Kwang Hsu will resist and appeals to reformers The Scranton, Pa., street car strike Strikers demanded an in- crease of three cents an hour, but got Grover Cleveland said that Presidents should be elected by the popular vote and that the tenure of office should be Tt is intimated that Mr. Conger, the United States minister to China, will shortly resign because of the criticism The New Jersey training school for feeble minded children, at Vineland, has | received a bequest of $100,000 from the Pat Crowe, alleged kidnaper of Eddie Cudahy, has been located simultaneous- ly in St. Joseph, Mo., and Boston, Mass., Va., has been elected treasurer of the Claus {and caught their cousin, who was per- Jr, wife : 150,000 | parently the disturbed area of that he the | | £ | auditor | K ] | for the war department, died Sunday | i | was orated from Christiana, Sweden, during the winding up of its affairs, including Rev. Dr. Thomas Murphy, one of the most eminent Presbyterian clergyi.en At the - | fights that has occurred in New York John D. Rockefeller, Jr., son of the president of the Standard Oil Company, $250,000 for the founding of The school is now in course of erection and Another letter was thrown into the yard of E. A. Cudahy, the millionaire packer of Omaha, Neb., in which the BOERS GAIN ANOTHER. VIGTORY. KITCHENER’S REPORT. The British Position at Hevoetia Captured. Burghers Take 200 Prisoners and Inflict a Loss of 50—More Invaders. Gen. Kitchener reports as follows from Pretoria, under date of Sunday: Gen. Lytleton reports that our post at Helvetia was captured yesterday morn- ing by the Boers. About 50 were kill- ed and wounded and 200 taken prisoin- ers. Kitchener reports that he is following with a small force in the track of the enemy, Helvetia being reoccupied by Reeves, who has been reinforced from Belfast. Helvetia was a very strong position on the Machadodorp- Lydenburg railway and was held by a detachment of the Liverpool regiment. Two fresh commandoes are entering the colony. Ont has already crossed near Knaapdaar. and the arrival of an- other is momentarily expected in the Steynsburg district. There is not much change in the sit- uation in Cape Colony. The eastern force of the enemy appears to have brok- en up into small parties at Utrecht and to be moving about rapidly in the same district, evidently waiting for support from the north. The last report states that the western force is moving to Car- narvon. De Lisle and Thorneycroft are in close pursuit. French has occupied Ventersdorp. Clements reports that he is opposed on the road to Rustenburg. The eastern line was blown up near Pan, and a train was held up Saturday morn- ing on the Standerton line, near Vaal station, ‘BLOWN TO ATOMS. Remains of Six Men Scattered by a Dyna- mite Explosion. One of the worst accidents in the history of West Virginia railroad build- ing happened at Baker camp, near Dyr- bin, Pocahontas county, on the line of the coal and iron railroad now building out irom Elkins. As the result of a dynamite explosion six men are dead and others are not expected to live. The accident happened at noon Fri- day while the men were at dinner. Some dynamite had been placed about the stove to thaw out and shortly after- ward a terrific explosion wrecked the camp, killed three outright and injured about eight others, three of whom have since died. The dead men were blown to atoms—legs. arms and hands and even parts of their heads, being found in different directions from the little build- ing in which they lived among the mountains. CAPTURED REBEL POSITIONS. American Troops Have Been Successful in Northern Mindanno. A pushing campaign has been carried on by the Fortieth infantry during De- cember in northern Mindanao. The town of Jemeniz was captured, as was also the insurgent stronghold in the mountains, further inland. The coast town of Langarin was captured by a de- tachment of 100 troops, who scattered the enemy, killing and capturing sever- al. A portion of the troops thus en- gaged have returned to Cagayan and joined the campaign which Brig. Gen. Kobbe is personally prosecuting. Gen. MacArthur's proclamation is resulting in many arrests of alleged insurrection- ists in Manila and vicinity, a few of those taken into custody being promi- nent. One prisoner was shot dead and another wounded in an attempt to es- cape. HAZED THEIR TEACHER. Pupils of an Indiana School Nerrly Cause Instructor’s Death. Wesley Dugan, a public school teach- cr near Petersburg, Ind., was the vic- tim of a hazing at the hands of his pu- pils, which came near costing him his life. He was set upon by the larger pupils in his school and carried to the edge of a pond in which it was pro- posed to duck him. Breaking away he ran into the water and waded to a stump some distance from the bank. There he was pelted with stones and clubs till forced to take to the water again and try to reach ‘he opposite bank. He was already numb- ed with the cold and before reaching the opposite bank lost consciousness and would have drowned had not a farmer rescued him. Kentucky Feud Fatalities. Four men have been killed and 10 wounded in Clay county, Ky., fights within the past two weeks, while two other Clay county men were killed and two wounded in a fight just ovér the Clay county line during the same period. The factions are again becoming hos- | tile, and drastic measures may be neces- sary to quell the feudists. BOERS ARE AGGRESSIVE. Gen. Kitchener Failed to Repel the Invaders 1 of Cape Colony—Yeomanry Trupped. London advices say: The paucity and obscurity of the dispatches from South Africa give rise to renewed anxiety. Ap- Cape 1! Colony extends further south than it did | last December, and Gen. Kitchener does 1 | not appear to have had much success | TERRIBLE MASSACRE. Victims to Their Death—Leaders Beheaded—Frightful Scene. Treachery of an Imperial Officer Lured the News of a terrible massacre of the re- LEADS THE WORLD INEXPORT TRAD. GREAT SHOWING. The United States Ahead of the United Kingdom—Gain of 200 Per Cent. form forces in China and the beheading of 27 of its leaders has been received in a dispatch by W. A. Cumrow, secretary of the Chinese Reform Association in America. The engagement took place in the province of Cichila, a populous section of the Yang Tse valley in Cen- tral China. It resulted in the killing of 1,500 men and the complete demoraliza- tion of the reform forces. As a result of the treachery the reform movement has been dropped in all that part of the country. It appears that Long Tom, the reform leader, at the head of a bad- ly armed force of 12,000, paid a visit to Chung Hi Tung, governor of the dis- trict, who, though an imperial officer, was believed to be in sympathy with the reform movement. long was invited to the governor's palace, and with his 12,000 men was march. into the city. They leit all their arms outside the gates, taking the precaution only (0 carry their loaded revolvers. There were 5,000 imperial troops in the town, but nothing was feared from them. delay of a day took place in order that other reform leaders might be sent for, and when the audience with the govern- or was finally arranged, there were 27 in Twenty-five Years. The United Stat stand at the head of the world’s list of exporting nations in 1900. United Kingdom led the United States by nearly $250,000.000, and in 1897 the United States had so i that she was but 1808 the United States took our exports i those of the United Kingdom by near- ly $100,000,000. Kingdom again stood at the head of the list, her exports exceeding those of the United States by nearly $35.000,000. In 11 months of 1900 the domestic exports of the United States exceed those ~f the United Kingdom by $5,473,780. and should this rate of gain be maintained in December the United States for 1900 will show a Jdarger exportation of do- mestic products than any other nation 3 ir the world. : Comparing the growth of our exports during the last quarter of the century with those of the other great nations, we are able to better measure the won- derful progress shown, In in that es seems likely to In 1804 the rapidly gained ,000,000 behind. In first place, year exceeding 1800 the United France shows Wei admitted. Then a disagreement arose. governor had the leaders seized were beheaded. rabble of the reformers. completely by surprise, but the escaped. wounded, but left 1,500 dead on city. The butchery was frightful. PHILIPPINE TRADE. Months was $20,196,938. war department makes ippine Islands for ended May 31, 1900. The value of merchandise of the leading followers of Kang Yu The and taken into the court yard, where they In the meantime a se- cret order had been sent to the imperial troops to descend upon a poorly-armed The 5,000 well- drilled soldiers took the country people latter pluckily fought their way through and They carried away their own the field and scattered in the streets of the The Total Value of Imports During Eleven The division of insular affairs of the public a state- ment summarizing the trade of the Phil- the eleven months imported no increase in her exports of domestic merchandisé in the closing quarter of the century; Germany shows during the same period an increase of about 50 per cent., and the United Kingdom shows from 1875 to 1000 an increase of nearly 40 per cent, while the United States shows during that time an increase of practically 200 per cent. For the 11 months of 1900 exports from this country were valued at $1.- 308,013,780, and from the United Kinz- dom at $1,303,440,000. AN IMMENSE YIELD. Estimate of the Size of This Year's Wheat Crop.—About Other Grains. { The statistician of the department of agriculture estimates the United States wheat crop of 1900 at 522,229,505 bushels, the area actually harvested being 42.- 495,385 acres, and the average yield per acre 12.20 bushels. The production of winter wheat is estimated at 350,025,400 bushels, and that of spring wheat at 172,204,096 bushels, the area actually into the islands during this period is set down at $18,300.608. Gold and sil- ver to the amount of $1,806,340 came in- to the islands, making the total impor- harvested being 26,235,897 acres in the former case, and 16,250,488 acres in the latter. The winter wheat acreage {o- tation $20,106,038. The import from $1,450,807. named amounted to $10,450,003; $17. 634,391 in merchandise and $1,824,612 it gold and silver. The value of the ex ports to the United States is set dowi at $3,504,577. ing the period stated, $3,405808 wort} being shipped to the United States. SMALLPOX IN MINNESOTA. Work May Cease. Smallpox is raging in the lumbe utmost alarm prevails. Several thon ¢ trade the United States amounted lo The value of exports for the period A total of 69,644 tons of manila hemp valued at $10,682,173, was exported dur- Woodsmen Deserting the Lumber Camps and camps of Northern Minnesota, having been taken in from Michigan, and the tally abandoned in Ohio, Michigan, In- diana and Illinois, is finally placed at 3,522,787 acres, and the spring wheat acreage totally abandoned in North Dakota and South Dakota at 1.793,467 acres. : The newly-seeded area of winter “| wheat is estimated at 30,282,564 acres. 1| While this acreage is slightly greater than that sown in the fall of 1899, as es- timated at the time, it is 600,654 acres less than the area that was actually | sown, the discrepancy being due to that remarkably rapid development of win- ter wheat growing in Nebraska with which the department reports failed to keep* pace. The production of corn in 1900 is es- timated at 2,105,102,516 bushels; oats, 809,125,808 bushels; barley, 58,025.833 bushels; rye, 23,095.027 bushels; buck- wheat, 9,566,066 bushels; potatoes, 210,- 026,807 bushels, and hay, 50,110,006 tons. -| The area from which these crops were r sand woodsmen have already fled from the camps in an endeavor to escape the dread disease, and the indications are that unless stringent measures be adopt- ed, there will not be a man left in the 83,320,872; gathered was as follows in acres: oats, 27,364,795; barley, 2,- 804,282; rye, 1,501,326; buckwheat, 637, 030; potatoes, 2,611,054, and hay, 39.- 132,890. Corn, week. in the Deer river country, are unle absolutely no regard for the mandate of the health officers. MANY SEAMEN DROWNED. Sailors Perish. Midsasha was sent to search for he without avail. Captain Matsumoto, her disappearance was cleared up. foundered during a typhoon in Surug Bay, sinking after striking Senniw rocks. ed. Mail Bag Stolen. negotiable paper and an amount of money was stolen from th the Michigan Central railroad time Friday night. CABLE FLASHES. som Dowager Lady Churchill was foun dead in her room at Osborn, England T 1esday. 1.i Hung Chang, the famous Chines {ities of age. Vivar, Spain. 1}in driving back the invaders. A Burgh- | ersdorp dispatch has a mysterious reter- lence to “An unfortunate mistaking of the enemy for Brabant’s Horse,” which | resulted in the sounding of “Cease fire” i {and enabled the Boers to occup, y all the | commanding the Br itish re- {tiring from a difficult predicament. 1 Gen. Clements’ inst Joers in the Magaliesberg region is 4 doubtful, the last dispatch reporting | that “It was considered : able not to positions, the SO success - {force the Boers from their positions.” 1 felegrams from Cape Town, dated | Wednesday. say: A squadron of Yeo- manry, which had been following the {Boers from Britstown, is reported to _ | have been entrapped. There were sev- i eral casualties, it is said, and the re- ) | mainder of the force was captured. J Canadian Lumber Output. 11 Advices sent to the state department { by the United States commercial agent 1 at Stanbridge, Canada, show that the | exports of lumber from Montreal. the | principal port of Quebec, have decreas- | od since last year by not less than 350.- | 000,000 feet. Prices of lumber have fas” higher and the advance in price has been firmly held, the cause being, supposedly, the destructive fire at Otta- { wa last April. | exported from Montreal during the - | season of 1900 was nearly 227,000,000 died feet, as against 280,000,000 feet last year. Gamb'er’s Fierce Fight. One of the 1 fiercest and blcodiest _lin a long time took place in Harlem early Friday. Four men were shot. One died, and another is dying. are looking for them. fr accused of shooting him. for the most part gamblers. British Minister Insulted. Some Turkish soldiers saulted and maltreated grossly the Brit 0 s {at Constantinople. porte for apology and redress. The quantity of lumber Two wounded men escaped and the police One man is an- der arrest and the dead man’s brother has sworn to kill the prisoner, who is The men are - | charge d’affaires, Mr. De Bunsen, and other members of the British embassy The British govern- ment has made sharp demand to the The Ashanti rebellion in rica has been ended by the surrender « the native chiefs. visited Rome during 1600. more than any previous year. poration, limited, suspended and 1 other firms promptly went under. being washed ashore in England as result of the recent great storm. syndicate has been formed for the Damaraland. gen, Austria. define his cause he refuses to as to the agrarians. Owing to the French government hostile action against Catholic order litical support from France. that since the appearance of the bubon disease have occurred in state Major Grower Botha, brother of tl Transvaal commander-in-chief, has a ger. e says the war will last fc years. The Holy Synod of Russia has orde ed that all the churches in its jurisdi an orthodox Russian church in Ne York city. The governments of Chile and A the disputed territory of Ultima Espe anza in Patagonia. marks annually for five years to steamship company for the purpose keeping open winter communication b tween Sweden and Finland. pineries with the ending of the present Many of the camps, especially those quarantine, but the men are thoroughly frightened and at the present time have Japanese Training Ship Founders and 121 The steamer Rio Jun Maru, arriving at Victoria, B. C., Friday, brings news that the Japanese training ship Tsukis- hima Maru has been lost with all hands, numbering 121, near Namadzu, Japan. She was long missing and the warship It was not until wreck- age from her, together with the body of her commander, was washed ashore that the mystery of r he | ed remnants of a body already dispers- ar Not one of her company escap- A mail pouch containing $100,000 in unknown Wyandotte, Mich., passenger station of | diplomat, is failing fast from the infirm- Two persons were killed and 11 seri- ously wounded at an election riot at 3ritish Af- It is estimated that 1,000,000 pilgrims n The London and Globe Finance Cor- Many bodies and much wreckage are At Cape Town a strong international of each,” he say {a- velopment of the mineral resources cf Lainer and Kindlinger, German tour- ists. were killed by falling into an abyss | in while ascending Mount Schwartzenber- Von Buelow, the imperial chancellor of Germany, is called the “sphinx” be- attitude the Pope threatens to withdraw his po- Lord Curzon, viceroy of India, says plague in 1898 25000 deaths from the Rumors of a cabinet crisis the Mysore rived in Rome with dispatches for Kru- tion take up collections to help build gentina have signed a protocol agreeing to take no aggressive action concerning The corn crop of 1900 was one of the four largest ever gathered, while the oat crop has only once been exceeded. On rl the other hand, the barley and rye crops are the smallest, with one excep- tion in each case, since 1887; the buck- s | wheat crop is the smallest since 1883, and the hay crop the smallest with one exception since 1888. CHINESE LOST HEAVILY. Report of the French Engagement.— Tuan and Chuang Arrested. Field Marshal Count von Waldersee in a dispatch from Peking says: “The French troops encountered east of Cho- chan, between Peking and Pao-Ting- Fu, a Chinese force numbering 2,500 r | men with artillery. The Chinese fled in the direction of Kuan-Huen. They suffered losses and left behind them five standards and four cannon. The Chinese probably consisted of the reunit- vA . a The Chinese government has arrested Prince Tuan and Prince Chuang on the borders of the Shansi and Shensi prov- inces. Yu-Hsien has been ordered to return to Sian-Fu forthwith, to be exe- cuted, it is supposed. It is inferred from these reports that the imperial au- o | thorities are preparing to concede the demands of the joint note for the pun- e | ishment of the instigators of the trouble in China. A FILIPPINO REFUGEE. 0 Aguinaldo’s Former Advisor Now in Ncw Vouk Says Rebel Chief is Alive. Rafael del Pan Fontela, a Filipino d }; CUT HIS THROAT. Had Recently Been Transferred From Bar- anquilla, Colombia, to Singapore. Ill Health the Cause. W. Irvin Shaw, who had been filling the position of United States consul at Barranquilla, Colombia, and who was recently appointed consul general to Singapore, committed suicide in a hotel at Philadelphia, Pa., Tuesday. He open- ed a femoral artery and slashed his throat and wrists with a knife. Ill health is suoposed to have effected his mind. - For three years he had attended to his duties as consul at Barranquilla while revolutions shook the Southern republic. Heat, fevers, and the ardu- ous duties undermined his health and he asked for and obtained leave of ab- sence early last August. His dislike for the old post increased and he sought another appointment and was successful in his quest for a new station and, a month ago, was named consul general at Singapore. Mr. Shaw was about 38 years old. He was born in Clearfield county, Ae where he practiced law for several vears. He was a warm personal friend of former Governor Hastings and many other prominent State officials. He was for a long time Republican county chairman. He had no financial troubles and his friends and relatives are dumfounded at his ending what promised to be a brilliant future . FNOTHEER MINERS’ STRIKE. Fight of a New Miring Hamlet of Concern in All Penn ylvania Fields. Six hundred miners of the Bakerton Coal Company at Sterling No. 12, near Barnesboro, Pa% on the Pennsylvania railroad, are reported as on strike, by National Organizer Edward McKay, who visited the miners’ headquarters there. The strike arises from the re- cent introduction of mining machines, and five mines of the company have been forced to suspend operations. Op- erations of the company are new and of considerable magnitude. A new town is being created there. The coal company is an interest of Duncan, Spangler & Co., extensive coal operators of Central Pennsylvania, and ex- Gov. Hastings is largely interested. The miners are demanding extra remun- eration for the extra labor entailed by the nse of machinery. President Ber- nard Rice of District No. 2 of the Unit- ed Mine Workers of America is in charge of the campaign. Questions are involved in relation to the mining wage scale that are likely to cause vexation in all of the Pennsyl- vania fields and which it will be impera- tive to adjust. Organizer McKay ex- plained that the Bakerton miners dig what is known as “B” vein coal. The use of machinery in this vein is new. The pick mining rate is 60 cents a ton. By the introduction of machinery it is necessary to rip down 10 inches of top to give the men working room. On this account the deadwork is much in- creased by the use of machinery, re- quiring additional miners, extra powder and extra labor. YAQUIS FIRED AND FLED. Many Mexican Soldiers Killed in an Indian Ambuscade. KEYSTONE STATE REWS CONDENSED PENSIONS GRANTED. Railroad Company Organized at Connellsville Ncw Brick Plant to Locate at Brook- fieild—New Bottle Factory. Following pensions were granted last week: Jacob Everhart, Johnstown, $10; Samuel Kuehner, Carbon, $6; David G. Schmidt, dead, Washington, $2; Isracl Shatfer, Kittanning, $8; Juliette Bacon, Hatch Hollow. $8; Mary Ann Mosier, Rubles, $8; Nellie Rockwood, Union City, $8; Eliza Fraser, Saxonburg, $3; Nancy Hook, Meyersdale, $8. Seventy-year-old Gustave Kindt, an ex-convict, said to be known to the po- lice of many cities of the country, was arrested in Philadelphia Christmas for burglary. When caught he was equip- ped with all the tools of an expert cracksman. While serving a term in Sing Sing prison he invented a device for simultaneously opening and closing all the cells. Two trolley cars on the Lebanon valley street railway, crowded with Christmas shoppers, collided between Lebanon and Annville. A number of persons were injured, some seriously. An 18-months-old baby was trampled upon by the panic-stricken passengers and is not expected to recover. A new company, known as the Flem- ington and Astor Railroad Company, has been organized by some capitalists from Connellsville, who are interested in the Tyr-Connell Coal Company, 10 build a line into a large tract of coal land in Harrison county, W. Va., where new mines will be opened up. The inmates of the Western Pennsyl- vania Hospital for the Insane at Dix- mont, Tuesday night held their annual Christmas ball in the large reception hall in the institution. Mary, Queen f Scots, and other historical women and several kings and poets were represent- ed by some of the patients. It is the belief that shaft No. 1 of the Ellsworth mines, Washington county, the scene of the recent explosion, has been filled with gas which comes from an abandoned oil well from which the casing had been pulled. The Ellsworth company is sinking air wells to ventilate the mine. Margaret Necuwahl, of Greenwood, Blair county, abandoned her four beau- tiful children by leaving them in a street rar. The youngest was a babe of a Tew months and the oldest only 5 years of age. They were taken in charge by the police and sent to the county alms- house. The J. V.Rose & Sons Fire Brick Co., owning large beds of shale and clay in Brookfield township, Mercer county, have decided to erect a plant for the manufacture of building and founda- tion bricks with a capacity of 50,000 a day. It will employ over 100 men. The Pittsburg Seamless Bottle Com- pany, of Pittsburg, which operates three plants in Pittsburg and the Mononga- hela valley, has been looking over a plot of ground at Everson, near Scottdale, and will locate if given a bonus of $8,- 000 and a free site. The Sodom shops of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad at Connellsville, which employed about 140 men, burned with all the machinery and immense stores of oil, waste and other materials kept there for the Connellsville division. Loss, $40.000. An unknown assailant shot at Chief Aonther slaughter of Mexican troops at the hands of Yaqui Indians hds oc- curred in Sonora, Mexico. While Col. Francisco Peinado and a small body of men were crossing the country near La Misa, they were suddenly attacked by the Indians from ambush and fiev offi- cers and a number of men and Indians were killed outright, Col. Peinado him- self being seriously wounded. The sol- diers had no knowledge that the In- dians were in the immediate vicinity and the attack was such a surprise they had little time to prepare for it. Nothing is known about the attack, but that the Indians fled to the moun- tains after firing a few volleys. Gen. Torres has sent a brigade of cavalry to follow the Indians and news of a fight is expected daily, as the In- dians are further from their base of supplies than they have been for a year before. Another Boy Kidnapped. The 35-year-old son of Mrs. Raymond Thiervy, of Dollar Bay, Mich., has been kidnaped, evidently in the hope of se- curing a ransom. It is believed the boy was taken by a well-known character in the copper region, and the sheriff, with a large posse of citizens, is scour- ing the country, hoping to catch him before he gets beyond the state line. It is thought he is heading for Canada. ~ Our Trade with Denmark. Denmark’s trade with the United States is growing rapidly, showing rec- ord figures for 1900. Imports have trebled since 1896 and now exceed $20,- 000,000. The increasing commerce be- {ween the two countries is inducing many Danish-Americans to return to ! Copenhagen to represent American duce American goods. Beu;ht a Small Island. The navy department has purchased e | refugee, has arrived in New York from Canada. When the war began he was Aguinaldo’s chief adviser. He founded the Filipino junta in Madrid and has been attempting to set up a similar or- ganization at Montreal, Can. He says i | dead is nonsense. He has a large fc lowing, and every man under him there to ao or die. demands of the Filipinos Fontela, who was wyer and edi- tor in Manila, says he will never : 3 | back while the United States is pre- “1 dominant there. He says he came to this country to be free, and that the loyal party in the Philippines, of which a | Biiencamino and Paterno are the lead- ers, is doomed to failure. “As the force , “amounts to are double zero.” < their united forc An Indian on a Rampage. News from the Brule Indian Agency, South Dakota, reports that Han:d- some Elk, the most dangerous and des- his wife in a brutal manner with a neck voke. It is thousht she will die. * Elk seized another Indian Bear Bird's daughter, and alped her. Then arming himself with his rifle and 's | other firearms. he went into the hills. s, | a short distance from his home, approach him. Spanish Cabinet Crisis. ic Senor Sagasta, former premier, change of ministry is inevitable on ac- count of the differences in the cabinet itself, as well as in the ranks of its sup- 1e Tr »r | porters. _ Many Ministerialists assert that the Azcarraga government will continue. T- | Should it fail its only possible successor ¢- | would be a Silvela ministry. Ww Stage Held Up in Arizona. The Hot Springs stage, running bHe- tween Hot Springs and Hot Springs Junction, in Central Arizona, was held up by a lone highwayman and the con- tents of the express box rifled. robber did not attempt to molest the r- The Finnish senate has voted 60,000 | mails. a It is rumored that an important con- of e- | the mines near Hot Springs forms a part of the booty. “The impression that Aguinalde - is| 1 The war has just! begun, unless America accedes to the, zero, | perate redskin of the Northwest, beat’ woman, | and | left word that friend or foe must not} increase. | who has | finally broken silence. declares that a! The, signment of gold dust from one of from several natives of Guam, for lin gold. a small island in the harbor of San Luis d’Apra, Guam, with a view ! to its use as a site for a naval coaling station. The island is 130 acres in ex- tent, and is said to be well adapted to ts proposed use. The Ncw Eread at Paris. Among all the exhibits of bread and bread-making at the Paris Exhibition the one which interested the most was a system of milling and baking combin- ed. It is well known that all food sub- stances when ground to a fine powder | have a tendency to hecome oxidized. As is the case with coffee, which is the best when freshly roasted and freshly ground, so it is with cereal flour, which is never so aromatic or so nutritious as at the moment when it is first made. The Schweitzer system, in regard to | the milling cperations, is a return to | the old system of millstones, with the | exception that corrugated steel grinders take the place of the millstones of the olden days. These grinders are so ac- curately adjusted as to admit of the making of the finest flour, while avoid- ing actual contact of the two grinding | surfaces. The simplicity of the appa- ratus, its cheapness and the ease with which it can be installed command this system particularly for domestic use and for the supply of villages and small communities. Nevertheless, it is capa- ble of being operated on an extensive scale, as is demonstrated by the large | establishment at La Villette, Paris, { where more than 100,000 pounds of bread are made per day from flour not | more than 24 hours old. Chemical analysis show that the flour | made according to the Schweitzer sys- {tem has more than twice as much phos- phate material as that made by the or- dinary roller process. The importance of this fact in respect to nutrition should not be lost sight of, and we must admit that nutrition, not whiteness of color, is the principal object of breadmaking. —Paris Messenger. In China Christmas is a sun festival. stice. It is called the festival of the Winter Sun, nr sometimes the festival of the Tree Spirits or in other localities the festival of the Forest Dragon. It is an occasion of much merriment and one of the accompanying formalities is the renewal of the “ghost papers.” Secretary Griest’s report declares that the Baker ballet law in ambiguous. | |:55es and this is doing much to intro- | and has connection with the winter sol- | of Police Meyers, of Bellevernon, Sat- urday morning. There were three men together and he gave chase, and al- though he thinks he wounded one they all escaped. Engineer F. I. Burbank, of Altoora, was held responsible by the coroner's jury for the railroad wreck at Kittan- ning Point, in which William M. Prich- ard, of Gallitzin, was killed and several others injured. Berjamin Bishop, of Penryn, aged 42 years, died at St. Joseph's hospital, Lan- caster. Some time ago, while feeding his hogs, Bishop was viciously attacked by a boar, which bit him severely on the leg. Blood poisoning resulted At Ridgway burglars blew open the safe in the Philadelphia and Erie Rail- road station, but secured nothing. The night crew at the freight station start- | ed to investigate, but were forced to retreat by revolvers. The Philip G. Cochran memorial chapel at Dawson was dedicated Sun- day. It cost $15,000 and was erectad in memory of Philip G. Cochran, presi- dent of the Washington Coal and Ccke Co., by his widow. Alonzo Harmon, a young man who has been confined in the Clarion county jail, charged with forgeries committed on business men, by means of checks, has confessed. He implicates weil- known citizens. Trainwreckers turned a switch at Cumbola, near Pottsville, and derailed an engine and eight freight cars of the Reading railroad. Fireman «William Tamplin, of Tamaqua, was seriously in- jured. : Lehigh county's 26 public school dis- tricts will join in an action to test the governor's veto of a part of the school appropriation which reduces the county’s annual allowance by $7.581.93. At Lancaster, the Ebenezer Baptist Church was organized. The Rev. J. T. Hamilton, of Steelton, aiter baptizing three persons, stood in the icy water and preached a sermon. Thomas Lemon, of Latrobe, has just completed the optioning of 5,000 acres of coal, lying along the I.oyalhanna creek between New Alexandria and La- trobe, at $50 per acre. George Urban, of Lemont, was found dead near the railroad track at Union- town, and it is thought he was mur dered. A woman and two children were cre- mated in a conflagration which destrov- ed the residence of a family named Har- riger, near Sigel, seven miles north of Brookville. The total valuation of property, real and personal, of Beaver county is $28.- 448,310, or $548.468 in excess of the previous triennial assessment. Patrick Quinn's infant child at Madi- son Mines, Westmoreland county, was | scalded to death by upsetting a bucket | of boiling water. | At Waynesburg, | the safe in W. E. Hill's book store and | got $200 in money. Three negro sus- | pects are under arrest. thieves blew open | | Francis Lowman, of Titusville, Pa, a | structural ~~ ironworker employed - at | Mingo Junction, had his throat cut with | a dagger in the hands of Thomas, alias “Ginger” Blue, colored. | A.J. Staub has purchased a tract com- | prising 10,000,000 feet of lumber from the Jacobs Creek Oil and Lumber Com- pany, of Jacobs Creek, Fayette county. Mrs. Mary Kilgore, of Greensburg, has left to the trustees of the First Pres- byterian church z0 shares of Southwest railroad stock, valued at $3,4%0. Louis Harmon escaped from the Cla- rion jail, where he was confined on a charge of forgery. The mortuary statistics for the Dis- trict of Columbia during the past 12 months show a startling record of tu- berculosis of the lungs. The mortality from all causes was 5.053, and of these 713 were victims of consumption—an average mortality from this one disease of 13.69 for zach week in the year. The astonishing total of $485,000 has been realized from Kipling’s “Absent- Minded Beggar” in various ways. the proceeds going to the families of the i men fighting in South Africa. This is _ at the rate of $10,000 a line, which doubt- / less breaks the poetry record. THE MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. WaeaT—No. 2 red 0@ TM Rye—No. 2...... 60 61 CorN—N 43 44 42 42Yy 12 421% 291; 29%; 285; 291 9 400 870 8¢0 1500 1525 Clover No. 1...... 1375 1425 Frep—No. 1 white mid.,ton.... 18 50 19 0¢ Brown middlings. .. .. 1525 1550 Bran, bulk....... 157 1625 321 @ 28 241 25 18 19 1% 15 12} 124 Hess—per b.........covnnnn $3 T@ 74 Crickexs— dressed. ..... 18 14 Ecas—Pa. and Ohio, fresh...... 24 25 Fruits and Vegetables. Beans—Navy, per bushel....... $210@215 PoraToes—Faney white, © bu.. 45 50 CABBAGE—per barrel. urn 100 Ox1oxs—per bushel ... . 75 85 BALTIMORE, FLour 3 80@ 4 00 WaEAT—NO. 2 red 71% 7234 Corx—mixed .... lg 4234 3014 31 2 23 25 26 PHILADELPHIA. FIOUR...i on vicina, $ 3 30@ 3 40 WueAT—No. 2 red.. 7234 73 Corx—No. 2 mixed... ay iL 42 0Oars—No. 2 white. . .. 3034 31 Burrer—Creamery, extra. Faes—Pennsylvania firsts...... 25 NEW YORK, Frouvr—Patents....... .& 3 90@ 4 25 WaeAT—NoO. 2 red 761 CorN—NoO. 2... 451g OArs—White western. 31 35 BurTEr-—Creamery. . i7 25 Ecas—State and Penna . 19 2214 LIVE STOCK. Centra: tock Yards, East Liberty, Pa. CATTLE. Prime heavy, 1500 to 1600 lbs... $ 5 40@ 5 60 Prime, 1300 to 1400 1bs..... 500 1528 Medium, 1000 to 1200 1b: 415 435 Fat heifers........... 360 410 Butcher, 900 to 1000 II 330 485 Common to fair.... 280 320 Oxen, common to fat.... Fo 9250.54 BO Common to good fat bulls & cows 2 50 3 60 Mileh cows, each oa 20 00 35 00 Extra milch cows, each 55 00 HOGS. Prime medium weights......... $5 05@ 5 10 Best heavy yorkers and medium 5 15 Good to choice packers 05 5 10 Good pigs and light yor! 520 Skip pigs......... 3 90 Prime heavy hogs 510 Common to fair. . 5 00 Roughs.. J 4 10 Bags sous one 3 90 SHEEP. Extra, medium weight wethers.$ 4 00@ 4 20 Good to choice +865 390 Medigm. ...... 300 3:0 Common to fair 150 82 LAMBS, Lambs, extra spring 5 60 Lambs, good to choice, spring 4 25 Lambs, common to fair, spring.. 4 25 4 90 CALVES. Veal, extra Veal, good to choice Veal, common to fair . Veal, common heavy........... REVIEW OF TRADE. Reports for the Year Now Closing Show it to Have Eeen a Prosperous One. Good Scason for Grain. R. G. Dun & Co.'s “Weekly Review of Trade” says: Commercial failures during 1900 will number about 10,630, with liabilities of $137,000,000. Of this number, 2.300 were in manufacturing for $49,750,000; 7,800 in trading, for $60,000, c00, and 530 brokers, transporters, etc., not properly belonging in either of the other classes, for $27,250,000. , Besides these, there were 60 financial concerns with liabilities of $54,000,000, swelling the total to 10,690 in number and $170,- c02,000 in amount. This shows a large increase over the preceding year, when all failures numbered 9,393, and liabili- ties were $123,132,679. However, 1899 was a year of exceptional prosperity in business, and while trade was then stim- ulated by rising prices, the succeeding year had to bear the fruit of reaction. So general preparation had been made by Eastern business “interests for a squeeze in money near the end of the vear, that the expected advance did not occur, and collections in the interior were so good that banks made general complaint of the scarcity of mercantile paper offered for discount. More talk of a general reduction in coke an cheaper ore after navigation opens might be calenlated to unsettle quota- tions of the finished products, but iron and steel continue the even tenor of their way. In every department of this industry more business is offered than can be accepted unless purchasers are willing to give much time for delivery. One large foreign contract was lost on this account, and at many points do- mestic operations are delayed by inabil- ity to secure material. Instead of the agitation for cheaper steel rails preva- lent a short time ago, producers are said to contemplate an advance. Do- mestic contracts in this line exceeded 50,000 tons at Chicago, and among for- eign orders is one for 17,000 tons for Australia, with many smaller sales. Structural material is wanted for build- ings and bridges, with noticeable activ- ity in this department for export. Wheat (including flour) shipments for the week aggregate 4,011,105 bushels, against 4.123.350 bushels last week, 3,- 610,557 bushels in the corresponding week of 1809, 6,202,625 bushels in 1833, 5,405,061 in 1897. and 2,707.790 bushels in 1806. From July 1 to date this se: son wheat exports are 904.151.4535 bus! els, against 103.004.1903 bushels last sea- son, and 121,528.709 bushels in 1898-ga. Corn exports for the week aggregate 3.868.165 bushels, against 5.465 578 bush- els last week, 3,226.250 bushe's in this week a year ago, 3.650.745 bushels in 1808, 4.086.866 bushels in 1897, and 2,- 742,004 in 1865. From July 1 to date this season corn exports are 04,240,169 bushels, against 111,587,145 bushels last season, and 80,050,630 bushels in 1898-00. During the vear the colporteurs of the Young Men's Bible Society, of Pittsburg, Pa.. have sold over 2,000 Bi- bles printed in foreign languages to foreigners in Pittsburg. Brunken So'dier’s Deed. Frenzied by drink, James L. McDon- ough. a private soldier at Fort Wash- ington, D. C., Tuesday afternoon at- tacked a sergeant and four privates at the post who had attempted to place him under arrest, and stabbed three of the party with a bayonet which he had concealed under his coat. At a late hour McDonough was tak- en into custody by the metropolitan po- lice in one of the suburban districts. Six masked men cracked a bank safe at Madison, O., but were frightened away before they secured any booty. In China Christmas is a sun festival. and has connection with the winter sol- stice. It is called the festival of. the Winter Sun, or sometimes the festival of the Tree Spirits, or in other localities the festival of the Forest Dragon. It is an occasion of much merriment and one of the accompanying formalities is the renewal of the “ghost papers.” In 1899 the German railways consum- ed 8.000 tons of carbide for the illumin- ation of cars. The consumption of car- bide in Germany for 1600 is estimated at 10,000 tons, equal to 7,000,000 gallons of petroleum. » E per - - = ® a co . >» 2 tion, Nc from Islan will 1 5 3 SLL Gein A “ a 5 Q Nth